Fred Mapp, former AMD CIO
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Instill business process management principles in your
IT department
Last issue we began our discussion of the Seven
Initiatives for attaining maximum business value from IT. Initiative 1,
"Align IT strategies with business strategies," could be summarized
as describing how to plot your course to achieve maximum business value.
This issue, with Initiative 2, we're refining the tools you'll need to
get started and stay on course.
As an aside, you may notice that I use the word "discussion" to describe
my columns. That is precisely what I hope the result will be. We've inserted
an email link at the end of each column to allow you to ask questions
and add to the dialogue. I look forward to hearing from you.
You know where you want to go. What's next? Once you have determined
an overall vision and business requirements, you'll need processes to
make things happen. A familiar example is the top five or ten goals that
most companies establish. How do you communicate to your people the steps
they need to take to achieve these goals? What ties their responsibilities
to the vision? The answer, of course, is processes.
De-mystify your vision. You can
begin with a vision for the IT department that's designed to fulfill the
overall corporate vision. And remember that the vision itself is a product
of a process. There's nothing mystical about it. Quite the contrary, it
should be simple, practical, and easily understood. At AMD, I've established
a Vision System supported by a practical, actionable strategy and metrics
to check progress. We continue to develop and refine our IT vision, goals,
strategies and metrics that support the corporate vision and goals.
Everyone should share your vision. It's absolutely critical that
you bring everyone on board for this. At the Malcolm Baldrige National
Quality Program where I worked some years ago, their evaluators considered
it critical that the companies they were evaluating were able to effectively
share the vision with every employee. In fact, I noticed that during the
assessment process evaluators often talked with employees in the halls
or the cafeteria. If those employees they talked to weren't familiar with
the company's vision, goals or strategies, the company lost points on
the evaluation.
Bring your people on board. It's not always simple to convince
your people of the importance of your vision, mission statements, and
other high-level initiatives. At AMD, we implemented the financial and
procurement modules of SAP-a part of our strategy to fulfill AMD business
needs -in about nine months. It was an enormous task, and we couldn't
have done it without everyone on board. We involved people from the business
units early in the process. It was amazing how quickly they became interested.
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"The technology can
wait until the processes are mapped to the business needs."
- Fred Mapp, former AMD CIO
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Consider your processes. Once the vision has been established
and communicated, you need to make sure you have the processes and people
in place to make things happen. How antiquated are your processes? Do
they make sense? Can they be streamlined? It's often a waste of money
to automate old processes. Also, you'll find that it's difficult to automate
processes that don't exist. It's quite probable that your processes will
need work.
You can't have too much expertise. It takes expertise to create
new processes and manage projects. Do you have people with the right skills
and proper process management certifications? Trained, certified people
and an understanding of the importance of standards like PMI and SEI certification
are some things that most successful IT organizations have in common.
As an example, to prepare for the SAP implementation, we helped a lot
of people receive process management certifications. And we still chose
to bring in some outside experts to help validate our move to SAP. You
need this kind of expertise in order to proceed logically with facts and
data instead of emotion. I've heard it said that emotion is great for
weddings and birthday parties, but not for decision making and changing
business processes.
No need to innovate. You should understand that sometimes you
don't need to blaze a new trail. Most of what you want to accomplish as
an IT organization has probably already been accomplished by someone else.
Surveys, studies, comparisons, benchmarks, and consultants - they're all
essential to your progress. Why go on a trip without directions if the
course is well mapped? I always say, "you don't know what you don't know."
Without properly trained people and extensive research, there's a whole
lot you don't know.
Once your people are trained in process management, they'll understand
the importance of documenting processes and measuring their effectiveness.
Without documentation, you're operating very informally, relying on memory
and habits. Without metrics and measurements, you can't possibly know
how effective you are. You won't know when you need to change course.
You don't know what you don't know.
Hold off on the implementation of technology. I realize that for
many of us the instinct is to roll up our sleeves and tackle a big project,
to bring in some new applications and servers and get rolling. This is
the opposite of what you need to be doing. Without sharing the vision,
goals, and proper process management, IT projects are doomed to mediocrity,
at best. Be patient. Chart your course, put the necessary processes in
place, and learn to measure their effectiveness. The technology can wait
until the processes are mapped to the business needs.
Want a list of specific considerations for getting
Initiative 2 off the ground in your organization? Download
the pdf.
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