What's wrong with today's IT?

What's wrong with today's IT?

What's wrong with today's IT?Last week I wrote a long article titled Building Tomorrow’s Organization – without today’s IT? The purpose of that article was to walk through a ‘what if’ scenario centered around designing the organization of tomorrow without a single IT professional.

I’d like to thank those that left feedback for providing exactly what I was looking for…commentary and a thoughtful reaction to what I wrote.

The purpose behind that article was to highlight an extremely important issue facing IT today.   That issue is a simple one to say and a difficult one to ‘fix’.  The issue, to me, can be summed up in one sentence:

Most IT groups have become blinded by process, procedure, technology that they’ve forgotten their main role – make the business run better.

While most IT professionals are smart and try as hard (or harder) than any other employee within an organization, they are also one of the most constrained groups of people found in the modern organization.

Think about all the regulations facing modern organizations.  Nearly every one of those have some form of technology component that places another brick in the wall surrounding the technology and information found within IT.

That’s what’s wrong with IT today…we’ve built walls around ourselves with processes and procedures…and we’ve forgotten that there are people on the other side of that wall. People that need our help. People that want our help.

The Challenge of IT Today

The major challenge that CIO’s and IT groups face today is balancing processes, procedures, security, regulatory requirements and the ever changing world of technology with the need to be flexible, agile and proactively provide innovative approaches to technology for the organization.

This challenge is rarely faced successfully by most IT groups, at least in my experience.  IT professionals have been trained to focus on process and procedure.  On top of that, most IT pro’s are extremely overloaded with a workload that could easily be offloaded to 2 or 3 people.

If we (IT professionals) want to ensure a long and healthy career full of interesting and fulfilling work, we’ve got to find a way to overcome the above challenge…or we’ll find ourselves on the sidelines of tomorrow’s organization.

So…how do we overcome this challenge?

Meeting the challenge – Future-proofing IT

In order to meet the challenge facing IT today, we’ve got to take a long hard look at what we have done, what we are doing and what we’ll need to do in the future.

I’ve got some ideas on future-proofing IT.  I wrote about Future-Proofing the CIO role in the Cutter IT Journal article with my co-author Gene De Libero.  I’ve mentioned a few ideas in previous posts as well. In fact I ended the Building Tomorrow’s Organization – without today’s IT? article with one of these ideas.  I wrote:

Start looking at bringing humanity back to IT.  Focus on your people, their skills and the human side of IT and start focusing on what those people can do for the organization.

Bringing Humanity to IT isn’t the only answer…but it is one that will start to help.  If IT professionals and managers can begin to move the focus away from process and procedure and focus more on the human side of business, things will change.

Now, before you start screaming at me that process is important…I completely agree with you.  But process for process sake is just plain wrong.   Keep pushing your processes and you’ll find Shadow IT will take over the majority of technological initiatives within the organization.

Keep pushing process and you’ll find yourself and your team pushed out of relevance and your role will diminish and your future will become quite bleak.

Rather than process, push people.