IT Investment Strategy: Offensive or Defensive Approach?

Introduction

The right IT investments at the right cost could help you to counter the effects of inflation in the long run. Implement the appropriate digital strategy and technologies against economic headwinds and the prospect of a recession to:

1.Permanently bring down business expenses
2. Enhancing both employee and customer experience
3. Take advantage of disruptive developments
4. Perform better than rivals during a slump

To be offensive with the investment strategy, there has to be a well-sought-out plan. Below are the ideas that could help you to make an ideal offensive investment strategy:

Strategic Digital Focus

digital objectives, outlining how far they want to use digital approaches and technologies to enhance measurable business outcomes.

The most important thing is to distinguish between digital transformation et digital optimization strategies.

Make sure digital initiatives are chosen wisely so the business doesn’t spread its focus and resources too thinly, regardless of the strategic aspirations and related strategic plans. CIOs must invest in four essential, mutually reinforcing capabilities: strategy, governance, architecture, and IT delivery to realize corporate goals.

The maturity level of your IT function in each of the four capabilities can be determined via diagnostic evaluations. Then, based on the enterprise’s ultimate digital ambition, align your goal maturity level and transformation program.

Decide on the Significant Digital Expenditures

In general, some digital expenditures are probably going to be particularly significant:

  • Creating a future vision of the demands of digital services is essential if you don’t want to convince your board that “Competitors out-innovated us with digital products and services.”
  • Efficiency and productivity that help speed up and streamline the organization. Businesses that create and implement digital business capabilities and spend ahead of revenue forecasts in areas like data and analytics, cloud computing, security, and other predictive and autonomous capabilities will gain particularly from supply-side shocks and inflation increases.

Right Resources

Longer term, what is required is a sustainable pipeline for talent development and acquisition, set up to guarantee the correct talent is present at the appropriate time and location. And while the pandemic prompted an abrupt transition in work arrangements, one thing has been constant: To draw in and keep digital talent, the employee value proposition (EVP) must be attractive.

In the long run, you also need to identify the specific talent difficulties of your company to create a strategy and set of measures designed to handle them. The following are crucial components of this future-proofing of the IT workforce:

  1. Determine and rank the need for digital talent and abilities.
  2. Create talent-related strategies:

Recruitment. To make sure you find and employ the best high-potential talent profiles.

Renewal. To guarantee ongoing worker capability renewal in support of the shifting demands of digital business.

Retention. To deliver on key factors that influence employee engagement and create a holistic incentives plan to inspire and keep employees over the long term.

Since former employees might rejoin the company in the future or turn into valued customers, partners, or brand ambassadors, efficient offboarding is as important as onboarding new hires.

Find Ways to Save Money

CIOs will probably be pushed to make immediate cost cuts when approaching costs strategically. They will need to accomplish that with the least amount of harm to the organization’s short-, medium-, and long-term health.

Make sure you are not compelled to merely self-fund digital efforts through cost reductions from other budget areas to prevent underfunding for digital initiatives owing to cost concerns. Digital is not a zero-sum game, and achieving scale through digital efforts takes more substantial investment than that produced by IT budget savings.

Manage IT Vendors

Vendor talks may become more challenging in an inflationary environment, but technology bids must always be sufficiently detailed to allow CIOs and their teams to disentangle terminology and uncover hidden and omitted expenses. To efficiently evaluate new and renewed acquisitions and negotiate complex negotiations, use tools, and financial models.

As an illustration, Gartner advises using a four-step process to analyze and bargain multiyear software and SaaS deals. They are:

  • Engage stakeholders in usage and implementation forecasting.
  • To compare multiyear, and prepay possibilities, request vendor pay-as-you-go (PAYG) bids.
  • To compare prepay options, compute the net present value (NPV) of PAYG payment streams.
  • Utilize models of NPV-to-prepay analysis as leverage to negotiate better terms and prices.

Make a Technology Roadmap

An enterprise’s IT ambitions are explained in a technology roadmap, which serves as a strategic road map for the corporation in achieving its goals. It frequently includes accompanying documentation and visual images that explain how something progresses from its current state to the desired result.
The goal of technology road mapping is straightforward—to foresee technological trends and demands and map your adoption pathway—but the process can be difficult. When mapping emerging technologies, that enterprise architecture (EA) professionals may not be familiar with, it can be particularly difficult.

Best Practices:

  • By locating templates, taxonomies, and tools that encourage uniformity, effectiveness, and clarity both inside and across them, you may establish a disciplined process for the creation and evolution of roadmaps.
  • By customizing roadmaps to a particular audience, you can give stakeholders the appropriate level of detail and generate excitement about the direction.
  • To speed up decision-making, maintain traceability across roadmaps, and use business outcome KPIs.

By publishing and actively promoting roadmaps to their intended audience, you may make it easier for people to find and use them, which will increase adoption and utilization.

 

Wahbe Rezek

Conseiller, IA et Deep Tech

Basé à Amsterdam, Wahbe possède une solide expérience en gestion de projets et de changements informatiques, notamment à la Ville d'Amsterdam et chez ING. En 2019, il est devenu Program Manager au sein de la division Financial Markets d'ING, spécialisé dans l'IA. Depuis fin 2022, Wahbe a fondé Future Focus, une entreprise proposant des services de conseil et d'implémentation en IA, aidant les clients à maximiser le potentiel de l'intelligence artificielle. De plus, il occupe le poste de Conseiller IA et Deep Tech chez Innovature, où il apporte des perspectives stratégiques et des conseils sur les technologies d'IA de pointe.

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Jesper Bågeman

Partenaire, Technologie

Jesper est un passionné d'informatique engagé à apporter un changement positif grâce à la technologie. Il dirige selon trois principes fondamentaux : favoriser de véritables partenariats avec les clients, intégrer la durabilité dans les opérations et accorder la priorité à l'autonomisation et au bien-être des membres de l'équipe. Le dévouement de Jesper à ces valeurs garantit qu'il obtient des résultats percutants.

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Tiby Kuruvila

Conseiller Principal

Tiby est un expert technologique respecté, reconnu pour ses contributions dans la gestion de projet et le développement technologique. Son dévouement au progrès technologique et à la gestion des relations clients en a fait un atout précieux pour stimuler la croissance des entreprises et maintenir la satisfaction client dans divers secteurs.

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Meghna George

Responsable des ressources humaines

Meghna se consacre à façonner les pratiques RH et à favoriser une culture de croissance et d'autonomisation, guidant ainsi Innovature vers un avenir plus radieux. Forte d'une expérience impressionnante en ressources humaines, Meghna a dirigé avec succès des services partagés RH et géré le portefeuille des HRBP pour de grandes unités de prestation. Son expertise couvre la planification stratégique, la gestion du changement et le développement des employés, faisant d'elle une force essentielle dans la promotion de l'excellence organisationnelle.

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Unnikrishnan S

Vice-président

Unnikrishnan possède une riche expérience dans la réalisation de projets logiciels percutants et la mise en œuvre d'initiatives technologiques stratégiques. Sa connaissance approfondie de la gestion de projet, des opérations et de l'engagement client produit systématiquement des résultats significatifs, faisant de lui un leader de confiance dans le domaine de l'informatique.

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Gijo Sivan

PDG, Monde

Basé au Japon, Gijo possède deux décennies d'expérience dans les technologies web modernes, l'analyse de données massives, le cloud computing et l'exploration de données. Il joue un rôle essentiel dans la construction de la réputation mondiale de l'entreprise, en particulier au sein de l'industrie informatique japonaise, et apporte une vaste expérience dans les domaines de la vente, de la gestion des livraisons, de la gestion des partenaires, des opérations et du conseil technologique.

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Ravindranath A V

PDG, Inde et Amériques

Ravindranath est un cadre expérimenté reconnu pour sa maîtrise mondiale de la stratégie informatique, de l'infrastructure et de la prestation de services logiciels. Axé sur l'innovation, il traduit les concepts commerciaux des clients en solutions réalisables dans des secteurs diversifiés tels que la banque, le commerce de détail, l'éducation et les télécommunications.

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