The Citizen (KZN)

Your info officer holds key

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS FLY: CIO MUST BE INVOLVED IN ALL THREE PHASES OF FORMING STRATEGY

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The cloud should play a central role as an enabler of innovation.

According to a report by Pricewater­house Coopers, increasing­ly chief informatio­n officers (CIOs) will hold the key to unlocking competitiv­e advantage, business benefits and relevant customer engagement, and with this shift comes growing pressure on, and higher expectatio­ns of, the informatio­n technology (IT) function.

Andre Schwan, deal solutions manager at T-Systems South Africa, says the role of the CIO has been changing over the past 15 years.

“From as early as 2007, the ability to increase the organisati­on’s revenue opportunit­ies was already recognised in management studies, with this shift picking up momentum over the last few years. This has snowballed in the past decade and the role has become one taxed with a seemingly inhuman combinatio­n of requiremen­ts,” he says.

Sonja Webber, lead delivery solutions manager at T-Systems South Africa, notes there are three phases in the strategy that can assist to support business.

“Firstly, during the design phase, it is very important that the CIO understand­s the strategic imperative­s of an organisati­on, because they are no longer designing just technology, but also business processes,” she says.

The second phase is defining an organisati­on’s core strategy, where the CIO needs to understand the business impact of changes, not just on the technology and process layer, but also on the organisati­onal change layer.

“The third stage is to establish how IT can enable the company’s strategy through the appropriat­e technology. It needs to be understood a strategy is a living component, so a reiterativ­e review needs to be done. A strategy cannot be defined once and remain dormant. This is where cloud comes into play,” says Webber.

Schwan adds that the cloud plays a central role in the strategy as an enabler of innovation, as cloud platforms can underpin an organisati­on’s ability to innovate at speed and drive the business strategy.

“The cloud enables greater business agility as it offers a platform well suited to rapid developmen­t, distributi­on, deployment and experiment­ation with new technologi­es in such a way that the company does not have to go through long investment decision cycles,” he says.

“The cloud platform is built to support modular design, creating the smallest and simplest ways to deliver business processes and reusing and combining them to create capability for the company.”

Furthermor­e, he points out that the cloud environmen­t assists rapid scaling and increased interopera­bility, as well as allowing the initiative­s to either succeed or fail quickly and cheaply.

“The cloud allows you to have a practical test bed for the execution of your strategy, so you have a very quick, but visible, result of whether the strategy is working from a technology perspectiv­e,” he says.

Webber explains that an outsourced aggregator of cloud services can assist the quest to deliver on the business strategy with additional innovation, a greater access to skills and broader research and developmen­t spend.

“An outsourcer has a lot of experience in managing multiple facets of IT, not just from a technology perspectiv­e, but also understand­ing business and how IT fits into it.

“They will bring a lot of experience when it comes to cloud complexity in general. Instead of you having to build skills, pricing models, ask for budget, do planning, build strategy for multiple platforms and multiple technologi­es, a cloud aggregator can build it and manage it on your behalf,” she concludes. – Citizen reporter

 ?? Picture: iStock ??
Picture: iStock
 ??  ?? LOOK TO THE CLOUD. Andre Schwan, deal solutions manager at T-Systems South Africa.
LOOK TO THE CLOUD. Andre Schwan, deal solutions manager at T-Systems South Africa.

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