You don’t want your brain surgeon doing a hip replacement, but you sure want them to know your full medical history before you start.
This is part 2 of a 3 part series that addresses the value your technology department adds and why you shouldn’t put every problem through to them. Read part one here
Those of you who have been following me for a while will be well aware of the message I am pushing – that applying a strategy first approach to your technology selection means your business will get the tools it needs to make your business more efficient.
In my last article, I covered off why you shouldn’t burden your technology department with delivering every single tool you need because they’re domain experts, not generalists. You don’t want to distract from their core role of delivering the products and services you sell.
Mohammad Shalan described it well by highlighting that Technology has two disciplines:
It might not seem like much of a distinction (by default, BT is IT), but there is a big one. IT is concerned with the data relevant to your company. Whether that be customer information, product information, or staff data, it’s all the heart and soul of what your business does.
Where as BT is just about doing a process better. Your business can survive without BT, it can’t exist without IT.
Before you argue this statement, take a moment to consider your marketing engine (BT) vs your customer database (IT):
Leave your technology department to look after that customer database. But don’t discount their value when it comes to choosing the BT you need.
Your IT department might not be marketing experts, but you definitely want them in the room when you are discussing new tools.
Why?
Because they’ll help you identify the tool that is going to work best with their information technology – like your customer database. And that is important.
If the tools you buy can’t integrate with your internal IT, you’re going to be faced with one of two options:
Neither of these are good for business.
Assuming your technology department can’t help you in BT purchasing decisions is the second biggest mistake you can make. The biggest one is never talking to them at all.
In the final article I’ll be exploring the value business architecture can play in your decision making, and why it’s a competency that’s not unique to your business.
Thanks for reading. I welcome all comments as they add perspective and diversity to advance the conversation. Check out my other articles and share your thoughts!
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In our last blog we looked at how you can clearly identify problems, so you have a strong grip on the complexity of the problem and its boun…
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A costly and common mistake: underestimating the power of problem statements.
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But don’t worry.
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