Stop Throwing Money Away In Your IT Department
Following these best practices is not a silver bullet. They also will not guarantee success everytime. They will however, provide you with the necessary tools that provide you the greatest chance for success.
Today we will review a few best practice IT management techniques.
Align IT and Business
Align IT projects to specific business strategy goals and objectives. Do not start or continue IT projects that are not aligned with the business strategy.
Qualified Leadership
Make sure that each project has a full time leader with overall responsibility and authority for the project. The project leader should be qualified to manage the project size and complexity.
Be Competitive
Use information technology to improve your business competitive advantage.
Define Metrics
Define and track measurable objectives that are necessary for the success of the project. Review these metrics monthly and adjust the project as needed.
Leverage Current Technology
Leverage the investment of your current systems when developing a new system.
Project Organization
Project teams or sub-teams should contain 2 to 7 team members with a mix of technical and business specialists. Keep the project team organization small and agile.
Keep It Simple
Use the simplest possible combination of business processes and technology to achieve your goals.
Work In Small Units
Project work should be broken down into small units. A task should not exceed 80 hours and should not be less than 8 hours. The project should produce workable systems every 30 to 90 days.
Keep It Small
Break the development of big IT system projects into smaller functional projects to reduce the complexity and lower the overall risk of a big system project.
Project Administration
Provide each project team with a coordinator or administrator that help project managers and leads keep project plans and budgets up to date and accurate.
Understand Your Capabilities
Don't take on an IT project when the complexity exceeds the companies capabilities.
Start From Scratch
When restarting failed projects, start from scratch. Don't use the original design and project organization that failed the first time.
Copyright (c) 2006 Dennis Sommer
Dennis Sommer is a widely respected and world renowned authority on sales, leadership, and strategy performance improvement. He is a leading business adviser, author, and speaker providing clients with practical strategies that improve business and personal performance. Dennis has over twenty years of management consulting, sales, technology and business leadership experience. He has delivered over 200 successful client engagements for Fortune 1000 companies. Please contact Dennis at: dennis@btrconline.com or http://www.btrconline.com.Alina Blog33782
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