Chapter 17 17-1 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.

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Developing IT Capabilities Chapter 17 17-1 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

Transcript of Chapter 17 17-1 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.

Page 1: Chapter 17 17-1 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.

Developing IT Capabilities

Chapter 17

17-1© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.  Publishing as Prentice Hall

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IT Capability Management Terminology

Capability – ability to marshal resources to affect a predetermined outcome.

Competency – the degree of proficiency in marshalling resources to affect a predetermined outcome.

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IT Capability Management Terminology Continued

Processes – well-defined activities within capabilities.

Procedures and Methods – How-to or step-by-step instructions for implementing a process.

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Three Enduring Challenges of IT (Feeny and Wilcox, 1998)

Uniting Business and IT Vision

Delivering IT Services

Designing and IT Architecture

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IT Capabilities needed to meet the Enduring Challenges

Leadership

Business system thinking

Relationship thinking

Architecture planning

Making technology work

Informal buying

Contract facilitation

Contract monitoring

Vendor development

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Converting IT Capabilities into Organizational Value

Strategies are needed to build IT Capabilities.

IT Capabilities must be identified, developed, and managed.

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Framework for Developing Key IT Capabilities

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Figure 17.1

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Step 1: Create a Capability Management Office

Create a set of activities, structures policies, and governance principles.

The Capability Management Office should be the focal point for capability development and management.

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CMO Management Activities

Define and assign responsibility for all capabilities.Develop strategies for the development of these capabilities.Ensure that adequate resources and funding are provided to develop them.Secure software support for these activities.

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CMO Management Activities Continued

Adopt a continuous capability improvement approach.

Develop organizational training plans.

Report the status of organizational capability performance.

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Step 2: Identify Essential Capabilities Aligned with Business Goals

Capabilities should not be aligned to current business practices only.

Identifying capabilities is an introspective analysis of key activities that IT must execute effectively.

Capabilities should be described in business terms.

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Step 3: Subdivide IT Capabilities into Key Processes

The result of this step should be sets of well-defined activities that can be measured and managed.

Consider an outside-in approach to capabilities management such as Six Sigma, ISO, CMM, or CobiT

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IT Capability Wheel

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Figure 17.2

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Competencies and Processes

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Table 17.1

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Step 4: Assess the Maturity Level of IT Capabilities

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Level 1 (initial): Software development follows few rules. The project may go from one crisis to the next.

Level 2 (repeatable): Software development processes are repeatable. Some basic project management used to track schedule and cost.

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Step 4: Assess the Maturity Level of IT Capabilities Continued

Level 3 (defined): Software development across the organization uses the same rules and events for project management. Same processes used even under schedule pressure.

Level 4 (managed): Software development controlled using precise measures. Adjustments to projects are made without a loss in quality.

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Step 4: Assess the Maturity Level of IT Capabilities Continued

Level 5 (optimizing): Quantitative feedback from previous projects is used to improve project management.

Maturity levels must be effective in driving continuous improvement.

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IT Capability Progress and Performance Chart

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Table 17.2

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Step 5: Link IT Skills to IT Capabilities

Skills such as (1) business, (2) technical and (3) interpersonal (Feeny and

Willcocks, 1998) are mapped to IT capabilities.

Mapping is used by companies to identify the levels for each role that is needed.

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Conclusion

Improvement of IT capabilities and processes will result in enhanced IT investment benefits.

When IT departments identify and develop those capabilities and processes that are vital to the business to advance maturity levels, then the rewards may be dramatic.

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