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Alex serves Business Process & Applications professionals. His coverage includes Lean strategies, sustainability, and ERP governance and organization. He is alsoa leading expert on best practices for making business technology organizations more effective . . .
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Displaying results 1-25 of 29 results
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., Wolfgang Benkel, November 6, 2009
The workbook defines 10 generic profiles of technical services and associates provisioning processes and activities with each of them. The activity-based descriptions enable IT executives to establish the link between technology assets, resources, and . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., November 6, 2009
Business technology (BT) changes IT's roles within the enterprise, forcing IT leaders to deploy business service processes and technology demand management. CIOs are embarking on the IT-to-BT journey by concentrating their efforts on the consolidation . . .
For Vendor Strategy Professionals
by Thomas Mendel, Ph.D., Alexander Peters, Ph.D., October 29, 2009
As smart executives delve into the core of Lean Thinking, the role of technology in Lean-based performance improvements becomes abundantly clear. Senior executives expect their chief information officers (CIOs) to drive improvements in the effectiveness . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., October 27, 2009
As smart executives delve into the core of Lean Thinking, the role of technology in Lean-based performance improvements becomes abundantly clear. Senior executives expect their CIOs to drive improvements in the effectiveness and efficiency of technology . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., October 6, 2009
Senior business executives recognize the value of technology in supporting business operations and expect CIOs to help drive process improvement efforts — all while tuning and elevating IT's relationship with the business. CIOs from various industries . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., September 21, 2009
Competitive pressures, both locally and globally, have put business process management (BPM) at the top of corporate agendas. Business executives are tasked with finding new ways to drive strategic efficiency and increased levels of business innovation. . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., July 24, 2009
As businesses become infused with technology, CIOs are expected to provide portfolios of business technology (BT) services, which sustain the competitive advantage of their firms. To improve IT's responsiveness to this increasingly complex and dynamic . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., June 2, 2009
Evolving business, political, regulatory, ecological, and financial challenges are accelerating the utility industry's transformation to a new business technology model. As the industry adapts to these pressures and new technologies such as X Internet . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., April 9, 2009
To help IT executives who want to address business satisfaction through a systematic approach, Forrester has developed a list of questions to guide them through the deployment of a list of business satisfaction questions.
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., April 9, 2009
IT executives increasingly implement marketing initiatives to improve the communications with their business customers. But these efforts often focus solely on the brand aspects of the services under the IT's control without understanding the business' . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., March 20, 2009
Today's business execs have high expectations for technology's contribution to their organizations, but they tend to be dissatisfied with IT's delivery. In order to close this gap, IT must be able to understand the components of business satisfaction . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., February 4, 2009
Budget pressures and business expectations are squeezing IT as CIOs grapple with balancing efficiency and business enablement. CIOs can strengthen their position by mastering the business management practices identified by Harvard Business School's Evergreen . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., December 24, 2008
In a time when resources are scarce and expensive, the portfolio of business services constitutes a powerful framework for maximizing the business value of IT capabilities. This portfolio must display a holistic but sharp picture of how IT's capabilities . . .
For CIOs
by Alex Cullen, Alexander Peters, Ph.D., December 18, 2008
Business execs have high expectations of technology — but lower confidence that IT can deliver to these expectations. This is the new business technology alignment gap — a gap between expectations for technology and confidence in the IT organization. . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., October 17, 2008
The catalog of business technology (BT) services is a subset of the enterprise BT portfolio, aimed to present all live enterprise technology services from a business perspective. It consists of two logically connected building blocks: the catalog of business-facing . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., October 10, 2008
The business technology service portfolio is a management tool that enables firms to develop a holistic perspective of their technology usage and maximize business value. To develop its potential, IT executives must implement a demand-supply model, making . . .
For CIOs
Topic Overview: Service-Oriented Architecture For CIOsby Randy Heffner, Alexander Peters, Ph.D., August 15, 2008
The worst CIO misunderstanding about service-oriented architecture (SOA) is to think of it only as another technical initiative for software reuse. Although SOA's reuse potential is real and good, its business impact goes much further: In Forrester surveys, . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., July 30, 2008
A new business-technology-as-a-service (BTaaS) model enables IT to get more involved with business innovation and less with pushing the IT machinery through the Sisyphean develop-to-operate technology cycles. BTaaS establishes a strategic framework for . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., Phil Sayer, July 9, 2008
The convergence of technologies and new types of competition is forcing telecom operators (telcos) to integrate IT into business functions, providing interesting case studies for what Forrester has described as the move from IT to business technology. . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., May 13, 2008
Each wave of technology change challenges IT's management practices. Two forces coming together will frame IT's next set of challenges: ubiquitous computing and business technology (BT). Each will affect the CIO's organization differently, but the end . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., May 13, 2008
A global manufacturing firm had a highly fragmented IT organization with redundant functions, nonexistent standards, and a management structure that viewed IT as a cost rather than as an enabler of success. This case study describes how a new CIO transformed . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., Lewis Cardin, May 1, 2008
Every IT organization must develop and maintain a strategic plan; without one, IT will struggle with being the "master of its own destiny" — it will not have a means to document and communicate priorities and constraints nor to get business support for . . .
For CIOs
by Alexander Peters, Ph.D., Lewis Cardin, May 1, 2008
This sample strategic plan for a fictional company can be used as a template for companies wishing to create their own strategic plans. Use the May 1, 2008, "Best Practices Strategic Plan" report for guidance through the powerpoint.
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 Alexander Peters, Ph.D., January 18, 2008
Maximizing IT's contribution to business results requires reliable governance structures combined with mature processes for evaluating investment options and making prudent decisions. But if the evaluation of initiatives vying for funding is too narrow, . . .
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