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From Resource, November 2006
Copyright by LOMA


Harnessing the Business Potential of Information Technology
Pressure is mounting; find out how your company can be more successful in harnessing both the strategic and operational value of new generations of technology.
 

By Tammy J. McInturff  

Executives must consider two time horizons to get the most value from Information Technology (IT) investments—the short and the long term. Getting this balance right is challenging and most companies end up focusing too much on only one horizon. At the ACORD LOMA Insurance Systems Forum, noted business consultant, author, and speaker John Hagel III discussed new approaches to strike an effective balance between opportunities in the short-term and the long-term. According to Hagel, by mastering these approaches, companies will be much more successful in harnessing both the strategic and operational value of new generations of technology.

Hagel shared with attendees some perspectives from his interactions in executive boardrooms around the world. “When I walk into executive boardrooms, I’m very impressed with the diversity of experience, expertise, perspectives and issues that all of these executives are wrestling with,” he said. “But I’m also struck by one element that is becoming increasingly common and prominent in all of these discussions and it is a sense that pressure is mounting. In conversations with these executives, I have been surprised by one image that keeps coming up in a number of different contexts and that is the image of the Red Queen from Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass, the sequel book to his Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. In Through the Looking Glass, the Red Queen said, ‘It takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place.’ Executives increasingly relate to that frustration of the Red Queen running faster and faster just to stay in the same place.”

The perception of growing pressure is not just an illusion and it is not something that is temporary in terms of its impact. Hagel said this growing pressure is driven by some very long-term secular trends that are reshaping the business landscape that we operate on. “In particular, it reflects two fundamental forces that are at work in reshaping both the opportunities and the challenges that we all have as businesses,” he said. “One of those forces is information technology and the continuing rapid pace of innovation in terms of the capabilities that information technology brings to our businesses. In particular in its economic impact, information technology is systematically and pervasively reducing interaction costs. The costs that we all incur in terms of finding resources, getting information about them, coordinating activity and monitoring performance; all of those costs are going down systematically worldwide and that is a huge opportunity for all of us in business. It makes life easier at one level; but at the same time information technology is giving customers unprecedented access to information about vendors enabling them to make choices about vendors, monitor and negotiate performance from vendors and to switch from one vendor to another if their needs aren’t being met. So at that level information technology is increasing pressure on businesses. We have to continue to move those performance levels in order to satisfy the customers that we are serving. Information technology innovation is continuing to reshape the economics of our businesses.”

Hagel said another trend that he has observed is a public policy trend and this has been playing out for decades on a global scale. “Over decades we have seen a public policy trend worldwide to removing barriers to entry, increasing the opportunity for new entrants to come into markets. That public policy trend of liberalization means that the few safe harbors that we used to rely on in terms of business strategy that had to do with regulatory barriers are rapidly eroding. We face competition from unexpected quarters on global basis and we have to recognize that.”

Performance Trends

Hagel noted that in today’s business world, profitability is harder to generate and survival is harder to achieve. To illustrate this point, he discussed long-term performance trends. “Over decades we have seen an erosion in the ability to generate profitability as companies,” he said. “When you look at corporate profitability as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) you are not looking at absolute profits but profits as a share of total economic activity. Profits as a percentage of GDP in 1950 in the United States were 18 percent but over the last 50 years that number has declined significantly. In 2002 profits as a percentage of GDP in the U.S. were six percent. So over those 50 years there has been a long term decline of our ability to create and capture profitability in our companies relative to total economic activity.”

Survival rates are something that many CEOs pay close attention to and continually monitor. Survival rates measure the average lifetime of a company as it goes on the S&P 500. “If you look back to 1938 businesses were still wrestling with the throws of the depression,” Hagel said. “It was a very challenging business environment. But in 1938 if you made it on to the S&P 500, you had an average lifetime of 75 years on that list. That is a pretty nice run and certainly well beyond the lifetime career of any executive in one of these companies. But over time, company survival rates have also dropped. In 2004 the average lifetime of a company on the S&P 500 was 15 years, an 80 percent reduction in the average lifetime of a company over that 60 year period. Although there are some ups and downs along the way, it is a long term downward sloping line with no sign of relief. And on a more personal level, if you look at any executive position whether it is CEO, CIO or any of the other chief positions in large companies the average tenure of those executives is diminishing over time. It is harder and harder to stay in those senior level positions. So pressure is mounting and whatever we are doing in terms of managing our companies really isn’t working. Companies are stuck and in fact the Red Queen is too optimistic. She was running faster and faster and she managed to stay in the same place. What we are seeing in these performance trends is you run faster and faster and performance still diminishes.”

Business and IT Alignment

There are a lot of factors that are contributing to performance shortfalls. Hagel said, “One of the most significant obstacles to performance improvement is the gap between the IT organizations and business line management,” he said. “In the last 25 years there have been a lot of efforts to try and close the gap and achieve more alignment within the senior management teams, but the gap still persists. It is very hard to eliminate and even harder to close.”

Hagel explained that at one level the friction that exists between business and IT is totally understandable because in part companies have set it up to be that way in terms of incentive structures and employee motivation. The friction allows two very legitimate points of view to be brought to the table.

IT executives are under an increasing amount of pressure to reduce costs in the IT operations of the business and to achieve compliance with a growing set of requirements. This pressure has led to a really deep focus on long term architectures to help reduce costs, increase efficiency, ensure compliance, and in a somewhat paradoxical way it has actually led to more risk adverseness about incorporating new technology into the enterprise. “All of our enterprises are more and more dependent on IT for their operations,” said Hagel. “If you are worried about disruptions in operations, one of the last things you want to do is bring in a new set of technologies because that is one of the easiest ways to risk disruption. So there is a lot of risk adverseness emerging in IT organizations.”

Line management executives on the other hand are under pressure to deliver near term business results in their operations and that has led them to focus more on action, particularly action that yields short term results and benefits to their operations. “In an interesting kind of flip line management executives are becoming more open to thinking about bringing new technologies into their operations if there is a credible business case with quick ROI,” said Hagel. “So IT and business executives often have very legitimate different points of view but closing the gap is one of the biggest challenges to improving performance. Given this mounting external pressure one of the paradoxes is that rather than bringing management teams together often it is intensifying some of the friction. Everybody hunkers down in terms of their own agendas and the bottom line is that while we are seeing ever increasing, impressive IT innovation the lead time in terms of deploying that in a systematic basis throughout our enterprises is actually increasing.”

Web Services and SOA

The gap between business and IT has the risk of slowing down the deployment of new technologies and in particular two related elements of new technology—Web services and service oriented architectures (SOA).

There are many different definitions floating around for Web services and SOA. Hagel argued that everyone has their own definition for these two terms and their definition tells you more about who they are then about the technology. He said, “The way I think about Web services is as a set of technologies that are really about helping to facilitate automated connections across applications and databases. It does this by relying on a new set of standards that have emerged using XML as the core technology standard. What is impressive about these standards is that they have emerged with very broad support throughout the technology community and increasingly throughout the enterprise community.” 

Loose coupling is an element in Web services and it is particularly important in terms of business value. Basically, loose coupling is a philosophy about how you connect. “If you really want to enhance flexibility and the ability to enhance and innovate over time, loose coupling is an important way to think about connections,” said Hagel. “What it basically means is that when you design modules of resource you want to put all the information required to establish the connection in the interface and make it as standardized as possible so that anybody can quickly get a sense of what this resource can do, how to connect to it and how to use it rather than having to have a deep understanding of what is behind the interface in terms of the resource itself. Loose coupling in turn leads to another element that is critical for Web services which is the notion of shared services—IT resources and services can be shared across an ever broader range of uses within the enterprise and again across enterprises.”

Service oriented architecture is another technology concept that is getting a lot of attention right now. “When I talk to business line executives there is a bit of an allergic reaction to the word architecture,” Hagel said. “Architecture in their minds means big, complicated, hard to change, expensive and increasingly a barrier to movement of the enterprise, actions and initiatives that executives want to take. There is a new generation of architecture that is represented with SOA that is actually quite interesting in terms of its business opportunity.”

Service oriented architectures start with a mindset shift in terms of how to organize technology resources. Hagel explained that, rather than focusing on software that is designed in advance for a specific context and installed where it is expected to be used, services are designed without knowing in advance the exact uses and tasks that they are going to be called upon to support. Instead they are accessed wherever and whenever they are needed. The location of the software becomes largely irrelevant from a user perspective.

According to Hagel, another important aspect to SOA is that the services concept encourages technologists to shift from a very granular view of individual actions performed on data, to view the modules and services as being much more closely aligned and mirroring the way that business executives would describe their activities. “Also important in this is the notion of being helpful in coordinating processes and activities across enterprises,” he said. “Previous generations of architectures were known as enterprise architectures, because as soon as you got to the boundary of the enterprise it became really hazy about how you were going to connect in to all the other resources that were available in business partners and other kinds of companies. SOA is enhancing the opportunity to collaborate with business partners by adopting a much broader sense of architecture, shared services that are not just available within one enterprise but are potentially accessible by business partners as well.”

The Business Case for SOA

Business executives are naturally suspicious about service oriented architectures. They’ve been through generation upon generation of hype in information technology. “There has always been the panacea that is just around the corner that is going to help us all get to that nirvana of high performance and stay there,” Hagel said. Some business line executives are concerned that the move toward service oriented architecture is just the latest hype. “I have my own concerns about this,” Hagel added. “If you listen to some of the more enthusiastic evangelists they make it sound like SOA is going to answer everybody’s problems immediately.”

Although SOA obviously won’t solve every problem, there is a compelling business case around SOA and it comes at three very different levels. There is a short term level, which is driving the early developments of Web services and SOA. The business case here is about eliminating operational inefficiency that still exists in a lot of enterprises. For example, many companies still have people who are focused on taking data and information out of one set of systems and manually reentering it into other systems, which can cause lead time lags and possibilities for error. “There is this operating inefficiency from swivel chair integration that Web services and service oriented architectures really address,” Hagel said.

The automating of these connections across diverse applications and databases is now possible with a set of technologies and standards that are simpler, less expensive and more flexible to use than previous generations of integration technologies. In addition this set of technologies operates as an overlay. Most enterprises have a very diverse set of legacy systems in their operations and this technology does not require you to rip that out. Instead, it creates an overlay that can access those resources, present them as services and enhance reusability. “You can implement these overlays in an incremental way targeted to very specific business inefficiencies that limit the amount of investment you have to make and then focus on near-term wins,” said Hagel. “Rapid and tangible payback in the form of cost savings is really driving a lot of the early deployment of Web services technology and the building of these service oriented architectures.”

However, that is only the first step. Hagel explained that there is a second business case that comes into play which is moving from savings to flexibility and agility. “Many executives were motivated to deploy this technology with the prospect of early cost savings but found over time as they deployed this loose coupling, it actually creates much more flexibility in the operations,” he said. “For example an insurance company that implemented these shared services using Web services was able to reduce the time required to introduce a new insurance product by 30 percent because of this loose coupling and the ability to access shared services that were already available.”

Then there is a third element of the business case which is only starting to emerge in most companies. According to Hagel, it is the notion not only that this technology is creating opportunities for flexibility but it is also enhancing potential for innovation, because it is enabling two levels of experimentation in business operations that are made possible by modular, more loosely coupled architectures. The experimentation at one level comes from recombining modules of services in different ways to deliver more tailored value in response to changing business needs. Then secondly, there is an opportunity to do more experimentation within the individual service modules and an opportunity for rapid incremental innovation that occurs as a result. “An insurance company in their call center operations dealing with supporting brokers was able to use this experimentation at two levels—the recombining of service modules and playing around with the different ways that activities were performed within the individual service modules. This company was able to reduce the cost of supporting the brokers on a particular set of issues by 60 percent over time,” said Hagel. “So, the early business case, the reason companies are moving to deploy this technology, is really about very mundane cost savings. It doesn’t require you to rethink the business or make major changes to how you do business today. But as companies start to deploy these technologies within the enterprise it is creating options to transform the enterprise as we know it. My belief is it is leading ultimately to the most basic question of all for senior management which is what business are we really in. We have an opportunity to reimagine what business we are really in.”

Challenges of SOA

There is a lot of potential for SOA to really improve business processes but there are also challenges in deploying SOA. Hagel highlighted some common challenges in deploying SOA. One challenge is the misunderstanding and mistrust that still exists between IT executives and the business line executives. The second common challenge is that IT departments have become overwhelmed by the development of massive, architectural blueprints, mapping out in detail how these service oriented architectures are going to affect all parts of the business. And on the other side, the business line executives are under delivering on the business impact that is available for the technology. “There is a lot of under performing on the business line executives in terms of a lack of a systematic view of the opportunity and assessment of where the highest impact can be,” said Hagel. The development of these business services using Web services and SOA has been hampered by a lot of inefficiency. Hagel said that this is due in part to the fact that the services are often defined at a too granular level and are often hand coded in ways using traditional procedural programming languages that limit the ability to enhance and evolve these services to meet changing business needs.

Hagel discussed an approach that can be helpful in overcoming some of the challenges encountered by the early adopters of service oriented architectures. This approach focuses on helping to make connections not only between IT and the business but also connections in terms of managing near term business impact with positioning for much longer term economic opportunity. Hagel said this approach challenges two of the most basic assumptions that still prevail in a lot of executive suites. “It is conventional wisdom that the best way to manage performance is to develop a very detailed business strategy and make sure that is iron clad and then move out into deployment and operational initiatives,” he said. “There is another perspective that says for senior management the primary time horizon to be focused on is a one to five year time horizon. We are all familiar with the five year plan. Anything less than one year you delegate down the organization anything more than five years you don’t spend a lot of time thinking about.”

FAST

Hagel discussed an approach which challenges both of those assumptions. It says we should be moving in parallel, not sequentially, and should be looking at two very different time horizons simultaneously. The approach is called FAST, which is an acronym for the four key elements—Focus, Accelerate, Strengthen, and Tie it together.

Focus

Focus is that first element of the FAST approach and it addresses the disconnect that exists between IT and business in a lot of companies today. “If I go into the IT organization there are these elaborate detailed blueprint maps of SOA playing out over many years,” Hagel said. “Then when I walk into the line management offices and they tell me things are so uncertain that they can’t possibility figure out what the business is going to look like five years from now much less any longer. I think the way to resolve that disconnect is to reset expectations and to say there is an need to develop a long term, high level sense of direction that plays out over a five to ten year period and really is focused on three levels of uncertainty. One is the question of what is the market going to look like over time? How is it evolving? Second, what are the implications for the kind of business we need to be in to continue to be successful? And third what are the IT architecture requirements that are going to help to support that kind of business need? Without that high level view we lack a broad sense of direction that is required to really make some of the difficult choices in resource allocation.”

With so much uncertainty in our business today, Hagel said that the temptation is to spread resources very thin across a lot of different initiatives. The result often is that none of those initiatives have the critical mass of resources required to really maximize impact. “They are all under performing and the result is rather than reducing risk, we are actually increasing risk,” he said. “By focusing attention on a long term direction of five to ten years you also perform the useful function of surfacing assumptions. Every executive, even though they may say they are focused on short term action, has a set of assumptions that they are operating with about where the future is going to be. The problem is by believing that the future is too uncertain, you avoid the need to articulate your long term plan. And without articulating it there are no challenges to it and no alignment built around those assumptions at the senior management level. It also helps business executives to get a better sense of where IT is headed by focusing on this kind of five to ten year time horizon. And at the same time it gives IT executives a much richer sense of the broader business context in longer term business tracks. But the key is to avoid getting too detailed too quickly. The challenge is finding a way to articulate that direction in as concise a way as possible. It should be articulated in just one or two sentences.”

Then companies should test of those one or two sentences by asking if they are helpful in making difficult near term choices that executives are facing. They need to be concise enough and detailed enough to make those choices, without getting carried away with trying to map out in great detail where the future is headed.

From an IT architectural view point it forces executives to define the most basic principals. Instead of focusing on detailed architectural blue prints, they can focus on identifying the basic principals that are going to shape and affect the long term IT architecture given this broader sense of where the business is headed and where the market is headed more broadly.

Accelerate

The second element of the FAST approach is accelerate and it is about accelerating operational initiatives. Hagel said that here you shift time frames. “We are no longer talking about five to ten years we are talking about six to twelve months,” he said. “The key question it poses for senior executives is over the next six to twelve months what are the two or three operating initiatives within the company that will have the greatest impact in terms of accelerating movement towards that longer term direction. The question as you start to identify those two to three operating initiatives is what is the critical mass or resources that are required for those operating initiatives? Do they have the critical mass; if not how do we identify that critical mass and deploy it to support those two or three efforts? And what are the operating measures that are going to be helpful to us in measuring progress and determining whether we are successful or not over a six to twelve month time horizon.” As these are defined, IT executives work with their business counterparts to determine how service oriented architecture deployments can be focused and accelerated to maximize the support for these operating initiatives. In the process it gives an opportunity to test and refine some of these high level architectural principals as well as figure out the most productive deployment approaches that can be used to really maximize impact. It also gives an opportunity to more effectively build the business case for necessary investments and SOA platforms by making clear the connection between these two or three key operating initiatives and the architectural investments.

Strengthen

The third element is strengthening capabilities. Here the key question for executives is what are the key organizational bottlenecks that are preventing you from moving faster against those two to three operating initiatives? What can you do over the next six to twelve months that is going to have a meaningful effect? “One of the key bottlenecks to faster movement towards SOA is the difficulty in connecting very narrowly defined data and processing services with much broader business processes driving the business,” said Hagel. “There is a need to systematically define a business service layer that can help to simplify the interaction between the business processes and all the diverse technology resources that are available in the enterprise. So as an example taking the insurance policies that are generated by an agent or producer and making certain that those policies conform to company standards before they get entered into the policy issuance workflow. IT groups can further reduce the investment required and accelerate time to value by sourcing preconfigured business services that are consistent with the activity and process definitions adopted by industry standards groups like ACORD.”

Hagel explained that these preconfigured services also need to be built using executable XML tags rather than relying on procedural programming languages to make them easier to maintain and deliver the promise of ability to adapt and enhance over time.

Tying it Together

The fourth element is to tie it all together. By tying all the elements together companies create the potential to really deliver even more value by carefully monitoring the progress against each of these streams and extracting as much IT learning as possible to sharpen the effectiveness of those streams. “Business and IT executives need to come together on a regular basis to review progress against performance milestones and when obstacles and shortfalls are encountered to test and refine the assumptions about the future direction of the business,” Hagel said.

Looking to the Future

Hagel discussed mounting performance pressure, the gap that exists between IT and business line management, the existence of a new generation of deceptively disruptive technologies that offer potential to really enhance business impact and a fast approach that can help to harness the full business potential of these new technologies and deepen connections between business and IT executives and between near term business results and longer term business impact. He said that this isn’t just an economic imperative it is also a competitive imperative.

Although some believe that IT is diminishing in terms of strategic advantage, Hagel said he did not believe that was the case. “If you look at the capabilities of these new technologies you can both reimagine your business in ways that were never possible before and rapidly incrementally innovate in ways that are very difficult for competitors to follow, much less catch up,” he said. “Those who really understand the potential of this new technology have an opportunity to create sources of strategic advantage that in many respects are unprecedented. While those who are still caught up in the patterns of the past are going to end up even more vulnerable to the mounting performance pressure that we all face.”  

 

Contact Resource at resource@loma.org

 

 


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