IT Governance – 5 Myths to Break this New-Year
It is imperative as Employees / Staff in the Organization to understand and break some common myths to fully support Governance Initiatives and this article is first on the series aimed at providing those insights before your start on the IT Governance Journey.
Myth 1: Governance is Top Leadership`s Business and
Bureaucratic
While it is true that IT
governance is the responsibility of the board of directors and executive
management, it consists of the leadership, organizational structures and
processes that Organizations IT sustains and extends the
organization`s strategies and objectives. The Whole Objective of Governance is
to ensure that the entire organization is in alignment with the Corporate
Strategy & Objectives and everyone has a role to play to ensure successful
business outcomes. Bureaucracy does not pay off in the long run and the
Executive Council & Board are candid of the fact to set the Right Strategic
direction & leave it to the Steering committee to manage the implementation
of effective Governance.
Myth 2 : Governance needs a Formal Framework like Cobit
to get envisioned results
Though Cobit provides clear guidelines and best practices
for effective Governance, it all starts with the Overall Intent and approach of
the Organization embarking on Governance
Best Practice Frameworks aid your Governance but not serve
as substitute for the ownership/drive and commitment of the Senior Executive
Management to provide seamless delivery utilizing optimum resources and
managing risks to achieve planned business outcome. So you need to have
the Basic 4 elements 1. Leadership 2. Organizational Structure 3.
Processes 4. Management of Organizational Change (MoC) before deep diving into Best Practices.
Myth 3 : Culture of the Org can be taken for Granted once
Leadership Buy-In is obtained
This is one fundamental reason that Governance initiatives
fail miserably. Though Leadership buy-in is vital, Culture of the Organization has far more impact in the overall scheme of things. What worked for one organization might not suit the other
(one size does not fit all) because of various factors like Culture, Risk
Appetite, Business Strategy & Leadership Style. Substantial effort needs
to be planned through a MoC (Management of Organizational Change) Program to
ensure that all stakeholders understand the impact and are committed to
contribute to the overall Organization`s strategy and objectives.
Myth 4 : It’s all about Metrics/ Dashboards and Surveys
that the Executive Council is interested
Organizations have become very good in meeting SLAs,
Operational Metrics & great CSAT ratings. Gone are the days that
meeting your agreed contractual obligations and prerogatives is sufficient to
sustain momentum. Executive Board and Senior Management are interested on 5
major areas. 1. Strategic Alignment 2. Value Delivery 3. Risk
Management 4. Resource Management 5. Performance Measurement. So beyond
the traditional Metrics and dashboards there is a shift of focus to Balance
Score Card (BSC) & Higher Internal Metrics for all governance
areas to continually improve and deliver agreed business Outcomes. The
Ultimatum is not the numbers but achievement of planned business objectives.
Myth 5: Governance requires substantial investment &
resources not aimed for Small or Medium Sized Business
Many organizations are not prepared to embark on Governance
Initiatives claiming a simple reason “ Oh that requires huge investment &
more resources which we cannot to afford as a small organization”.
Governance Initiatives is aimed to make your investments and
efforts yield right business value and has to be embedded on your day-to-day
practice. This can be done with the existing resources, leadership and org
structure. It only requires the thought process to look at broader strategic
objectives and how results affect various stakeholders (Customers,
Shareholders, Employees & Vendors). Start simple with an Outline and then
improve upon the maturity over a period of time. After all every big
accomplishment starts with a single step :-)