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Marc serves CIOs. He is a leading expert in the design of IT organizations, focusing on their structures, processes, governance, and culture and has helped redesign more than 200 IT shops. In addition, Marc tracks how services firms help transform IT . . .
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Displaying results 1-25 of 118 results
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, October 22, 2009
Forrester has assembled job descriptions for several roles within the Office of the CIO — the group of IT leaders who report to the CIO and provide services outside of applications and infrastructure. Based on analyst expertise and a sampling of actual . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, October 22, 2009
How do you reduce the costs of IT? To answer this question, Forrester interviewed 21 consultancies that provide cost-reduction services. What did we find? Nearly all consultancies suggested upgrading governance and establishing foundational pieces before . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, September 22, 2009
Paraphrasing Winston Churchill, committees are like democracy — the "worst form of government except for all those others." However, an enterprise IT executive committee is critical to making IT decisions that span the entire company. Consisting of the . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, August 21, 2009
Transforming an IT organization typically requires dramatic changes to processes, structure, governance, and culture. To determine how best to do this, Forrester reviewed the results of several transformation projects and the methodologies of a number . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, July 8, 2009
Redesigning the applications organization is the next major target for IT restructuring and is particularly attractive when cost reduction is needed. Infrastructure organizations have already gone through several stages of consolidation and standardization. . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, June 4, 2009
Transforming an IT organization involves changes to structure, processes, and even culture. Many firms use consultants for these high-risk, highly complex projects. Occasionally, consultants take actions that hurt the projects and their relationships . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, March 23, 2009
Reducing vendor costs requires a strong vendor management function. The problem in many firms is that vendor management is fragmented, resulting in little consistency in the selection and management of vendors. One global financial services company changed . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, March 20, 2009
To be credible within the organization, IT must execute projects and provide basic services with competence and predictability. Without this, the business will not trust IT to be a partner in business change. This report — the third in a series of four . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, March 5, 2009
Today's economy requires most IT organizations to reduce their costs. Ironically, the roles most essential to this process are also viewed as overhead. Several strategic roles, including architecture, vendor management, and relationship management provide . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, January 8, 2009
Forrester evaluated seven leading IT organization redesign consultancies against 40 evaluation criteria and found that all seven show an extremely high level of competence. Compared to most firms that do this, they are superior in their overall designs, . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, December 3, 2008
A key element in the IT organization's ability to effect business change is the state of the business, which includes factors such as financial status, level of interest in IT, trust in the CIO, and business execs' knowledge of the possibilities and limitations . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, December 3, 2008
Forrester asked 72 IT professionals about the importance, enablers, and costs of culture change. Our analysis broke down culture change into eight enablers that included rewards, policies, and peer actions. Some of our findings: Leaders' actions and statements . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, September 3, 2008
CIOs are in a unique position to drive business change. Their responsibilities span the enterprise, and the systems they manage are critical to nearly all business processes. They can use this base of influence to initiate business change or merely to . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, August 14, 2008
Near-term demand for hot roles in IT will be driven by the need for local and cross-discipline knowledge, changes in technology, greater emphasis on managing risk and the enterprise, and a limited supply of key roles. For example, business architects . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, July 30, 2008
Top executives believe that culture affects job satisfaction, decision-making style, and communication inside IT. However, culture is typically not something organizations deliberately create — instead, it results as a byproduct of other activities such . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, July 11, 2008
Relationship managers amplify the power of the CIO and prevent surprises.
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, July 9, 2008
As IT organizations grow, they run into the limitations of people, processes, and technology. Small IT shops face limits in management experience, dedicated roles, and the ability to control the pipeline of work. Midsized shops hit limits in CIO capacity, . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, July 2, 2008
The transition to a new organizational model is as important as the design of the model.
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, April 15, 2008
IT shops within small and medium-size businesses (SMBs) are less standardized, more constrained in capacity, more oriented toward the utility archetype, and infrequently view technology as a differentiator. Their people are less specialized, do multiple . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, Alexander Peters, Ph.D., February 28, 2008
More so in 2007 than in recent years, IT departments and their business partners in North America and Europe are generally in sync on strategic priorities. From our survey of more than 500 IT executives on both sides of the Atlantic, we found that the . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, February 21, 2008
CIOs frequently change the structure of the IT organization to reduce costs, improve services, or increase responsiveness. Getting the organization design right is essential; the wrong design can degrade business relationships, reduce effectiveness, and . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, January 17, 2008
Trade publications and consulting firms have been singing the praises of a new type of IT organization model — the demand/supply (D/S) model. D/S organizations separate IT resources that manage demand from those that supply IT services. They have the . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, Alex Cullen, January 10, 2008
Business expectations of IT continually change, driven by business context and needs and the embedding of technology in their strategy and operations. CIOs realize that with these changing business expectations, the IT organization can't stand still. . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, October 23, 2007
The structure, processes, and culture of an IT organization can be barriers to success; therefore, CIOs should periodically assess their IT shops and make improvements. This report uses the lessons learned from more than 200 Forrester engagements to describe . . .
For CIOs
by Marc Cecere, September 11, 2007
Federated IT shops need to increase cross-business-unit coordination to address enterprise projects. Twenty-three of the 25 organizations we recently reviewed stated they were increasing their investment in processes and systems that cross the enterprise. . . .
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