CIOReview
| | November 20179CIOReviewIT SERVICE DELIVERY MODELS EVOLVING WITH BUSINESSIntelligence are emerging as MVPs to the business. What is happening is not as key as it is to understand why.The business values two things-information and the people that can get it for them. BI is a space that is evolving rapidly and you are seeing lots of IT people migrate towards it. You are also seeing savvy business people flock to its shores given the power of the analytics it provides. So what is really happening here? IT is "going native." Technologists are evolving into business people. We have to know the workflows, the key data elements, the sales channels and the mind of our business partners to deliver value using BI. IT is becoming business savvy in a way that is unprecedented and we are enjoying the experience of seeing the value of our work in action.Business people are also stepping out of traditional roles more. They are putting down their spreadsheets and understanding data, its structures and how it gets processed and normalized. They have to do this to acquire the power of their own analytics. Business people are actively at the table building dashboards and client portals to enable the power of technology.So then in turn...What does the application development and systems support of tomorrow lookalike? It's less clear than the infrastructure side but the pattern is the same. Tools and access to data are paramount concerns. If we structure delivery models around this premise we should see hybrid teams of business technology folks solving problems with analytic tools. Developers can still build UIs and the backend but the focus is BI and business data consumption. Staffing has to reflect that need. Technologists and business folks have to embrace the Kum Bai Ya moment here and find ways to put old assumptions aside and solve complex issues as members of the same team.Technology is a disruptive force. As an IT person it's easy to say and hard to practice. We should spend less time worrying about "Who moved my Cheese?" and more contemplating "do I even like cheese?" Ultimately, the so called "IT" staffing models of tomorrow need to embrace the notion that technology is as much part of the business today as it is part of information services today and in the future. Technologists and the business people have to find ways to put old assumptions aside and solve complex issues as members of the same team
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