October 12, 2008   Sign In |  About ebizQ |  Contact Us |  Join ebizQ Gold Club
Business Performance and Optimization Syndicate This
Print this article    Email this article    Talk Back!    Write to Editor

The Holy Grail of IT today

01/15/2006

By Graham Frost, Managing Director for Northern Europe, InterSystems

Despite conflicting views regarding the current performance of the global economy, the recent difficult times that businesses across the globe have faced have caused a number of permanent changes within the IT sector. Chief amongst these is a much greater focus on Return on Investment (ROI) and the benefits that technology will deliver. A disillusionment with ‘IT for IT’s sake’ has developed in many quarters. This was most significantly marked by the publication of “Does IT Matter?” by Nicholas Carr, author of the infamous Harvard Business Review article in 2003.

ADVERTISEMENT
Our Popular Webinars
The Smart SOA™ approach to governing WebSphere MQ Applications with IBM WebSphere Service Registry and Repository
BPM for Insurance: Are You Staying Competitive?
Enterprise Service Bus: The case for 'e'SBs
Know Thy Enterprise: Increase Effectiveness With Business Activity Monitoring (BAM)
How Secure is Your Data? Learn about PCI Solutions
You Can Implement Today.
More Webinars

An even more onerous task, that of deriving ROSI or return on sunk investment from assets, is now being put upon those involved in IT too. Businesses want to use existing information and applications to build and develop new systems that will address new business initiatives and enable the organisation to grow, without ripping out the technology already in place.

So, despite the new rise in IT spending, ROI and ROSI, whether through cost savings or productivity increases, will continue to be the benchmark that sets vendors of technology products and services apart. This means that while organisations will still want to implement and work with companies that provide innovative solutions, they now also need to ensure that the systems they implement can demonstrate and provide clear business advantages that take into consideration previous investments.

Of course if sounds obvious, but one of the key ways for organisations to achieve Return on Sunk Investment is to work with companies and technologies that focus on maximising the technology that exists within the business – i.e., that has already been implemented and is already running at the heart of the organisation.

Typically, a business will already have a number of disparate and incumbent databases and information sources in place – for example an ERP system, a CRM solution, and an HR and payroll function. However the problem is that they are disparate – the data and information contained within them is not integrated and can’t be used to generate knowledge on the organisation as a whole, thus enabling it to improve its processes, productivity and customer services for example, and ultimately evolve and grow.

This is where integration technologies fit in. In essence, they can help businesses unify and integrate back-end data stores to turn disparate data into knowledge. They enable businesses to synch up and harmonise their sunk investments in IT systems to make the information on all of them more accessible and meaningful to the relevant people, without the need for ‘rip and replace’. Literally ripping out old technology to replace it with new can be extremely costly and risky, therefore seriously unpopular with shareholders and the Board.

Page 1

More Top Stories
Demand for BPM Skills Heating Up Gold Club Protected
Simplifying the Complex Gold Club Protected
Application Management: Consider the End User Gold Club Protected
A Look Back at 2007: Cutting Complexity Out of the Agile Organization Gold Club Protected
The Integration-Centric Business Process Management Suite Gold Club Protected
Best Practices for Strategic Alignment Gold Club Protected
More Top Stories
Print this article    Email this article    Talk Back!    Write to Editor
Information Integrity in an SOA: Putting the Trust Back Into Information
Date: Mar 13, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM ET
(16:00 GMT)

Replay Now...
Roundtable: Technology Trends for 2008: BPM and SOA
Date: Jan 30, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM ET
(17:00 GMT)

Replay Now...
view upcoming webinars

IT Business Insider is made possible by IBM

IT Strategy Center is made possible by Symantec

Marketing Solutions | Feedback | About ebizQ | Unsubscribe | Privacy Policy | Site Map

Live Chat