Delivering Efficiency and Cost Reduction: Long Terms Tactics Wrapup

In the last several posts we have covered how you should deliver IT cost reductions with long term tactics that also enable you to build capability and capacity.  If executed well, you will also yield some longer term benefits such as a better workforce balance or elimination of redundant or low value systems. These tactics require relentless leadership and focus by you. You must keep them in the forefront and ensure you are progressing on them everyday. Your patience and influence are required as well. You must obtain business support for efforts that often have a longer cycle than the business team is used to supporting.  If you are both consistent and persistent in your approach, and employ these tactics, you will make a material difference, in some cases a massive difference, that will make your business far more competitive and is simply unattainable through other approaches.

We discussed that these long term tactics are executed by first laying a groundwork for sustainable improved cost through quality. Second, you build a highly productive and well-balanced team in order to meet a world class cost profile. Throughout you leverage metrics-based, transparent framework with continuous process improvement that enables you to progress and achieve world class performance. A concurrent effort with building a high performing team is to migrate to a modern, consolidated infrastructure and well-architected core systems. We will discuss this effort today and wrap up our efficiency discussion.

Nearly every IT shop that has quality or cost problems has a proliferation of archaic systems and fragmented, legacy infrastructure. The causes of this are myriad but generally result from: poor or shifting business vision and sponsorship (e.g., when you have 3 different sales executives in 4 years, IT delivers 2 and 1/2 application systems trying to match the business variances and results in multiple systems that never do what was needed); an inability of the business to invest in a steadfast manner (e.g., IT projects run out of funding, or funding shifts, thus every year projects are half completed resulting in the old systems staying in place with the new systems going in); a stagnant IT team with poor best practices and leadership that allow multiple mediocre solutions where one good solution would suffice.

As the IT leader, you must tackle the business causes first before setting out to fix this area. Draw up a compelling vision of what the systems should provide. Research and gather the facts on the costs, time to market impacts, business productivity, feature loss and quality issues due to the current multiple mediocre systems. Map out a new process and authorization where you get the multi-year business support and sponsorship to execute the vision. Going from three mediocre overlapping business systems to one well architected systems with better quality will enable efficiency and productivity gains across the board — in your shop and in theirs. This is a vision that you should get everyone to rally around. Ensure there is a investment process that enable multiyear funding and review of major projects and conversions that also tracks to ensure the benefits are delivered. The CFO should be your partner in this. It is in his interest to see that everyone meets the costs reductions and other benefits promised. And it is in yours as well, because often you accumulate the layers of barnacles by only doing 80 or 90% of a project and not doing the final steps of decommissioning the old systems. By having a multi-year project process with benefit review or scorecarding in place, there will be far more impetus to ensure projects are completed and old systems removed.

Assuming you address the business sponsorship and project process issues, you must also address poor leadership and implementation on your side. First and foremost, IT cannot be a place for ‘hobbies’. That is, you need to ensure that all those pet technology projects and explorations that are not absolutely critical to a business capability or technology implementation that has real, near term benefits, are killed. Otherwise, they are a distraction and a multiplication of your technologies and thus costs.

Second, require every major application area and infrastructure component to map out current world and a future world where they are consolidated and at best practice. Then sit down with each team and your architectures and lay out the trajectory to get from today to best practice. Estimate the benefits from the transition. Ensure you capture the gains from your productivity and quality improvements. Then pick the top 3 to 5 areas and target them as major transformation initiatives for investment and turnaround. Garner the business support, get the approvals, make it part of your IT goals and communicate the importance to your team. And of course execute them. But also, in the other areas that mapped out their trajectories, work with them to come up with ways to make progress without major funding. Identify and execute the quick ROI projects that enable you to save within the year or almost within the year. Work with vendors to come up with creative ways to overcome the investment hurdle to move your technology to a best in class platform. And every time you can come up with efficiencies or savings elsewhere, turn around, pull the next best consolidation and replatforming project off the queue and get it going. As these projects execute and land, it will drive a virtuous cycle of additional savings and quality that will enable you to more rapidly transform as well as to shift, over time, more and more resources to the point of the spear where you are attacking the business problems and needs.

The long term tactics will take 9 to 12 months to achieve some results and 18 to 24 months to yield impacts, but once you really start executing and implementing, the compound gains can be enormous. Given IT can be a very large cost center within a corporation, IT can often one of the top contributors to cost reductions. And given IT systems availability and quality drive customer service, IT improvements can be the biggest push behind improved customer satisfaction. These are huge wins for you company. So, as you are faced with cost efficiencies demands of todays environment, leverage the near term and long term tactics described to put you and your company in a winning position.

So, we have spent nearly two months covering the very important topic of cost efficiency in IT. Every IT shop today is faced with these demands. You now have the tools to drive this far more effectively. Let me know where things have gone awry or where more detail is need to handle the complexity of your situation.

Best,

Jim

 

Delivering Efficiency and Cost Reduction: Long term tactics II

We have spend the past several weeks covering how to deliver efficiency and cost reduction in IT, and particularly how to do it while maintaining or improving your capabilities. In my last post we discussed some two long terms tactics to drive efficiency but also at the same time to achieve improved capability. In this post we will cover the another key long term tactics that you can leverage to achieve world class cost and performance: leveraging metrics and benchmarking.

Let’s assume you have begun to tackle the quality and team issues in your shop. One of the key weapons to enable you to make better decisions as a manager and to identify those areas that you need to focus on is having a level of transparency around the operational performance of your shop. This doesn’t mean your team must produce reams of reports for senior management or for you. If fact, that is typically wasted effort as it is as much a show as real data. What you require to obtain effective operational transparency is the regular reporting of key operational metrics as they are used by the teams themselves. You and your senior team should be reviewing the Key Process Metrics(KPMs) that are used by the operational teams to drive the processes day-to-day and week-to-week. These would include things such as change success rates by team or a summary of project statuses with regular project reporting behind each status.

The ability to produce and manage using metrics depends substantially on the maturity of your teams. You should match the metrics to be reported and leveraged to your team’s maturity with an eye for the to master their current level and move to the next level.

For example, for production metrics you should start, if a Level 1 or 2 organization, with having basic asset information and totals by type and by business along with basic change success volumes and statistics and incident volumes and statistics. A level 3 organization would have additional information on causal factors. So in addition to change or incident statistics there would be data on why (or root cause) for a failed change or a production incident. A level 4 organization would have information on managing the process improvement itself. Thus you would have information on how long root cause takes to complete, how many are getting resolved, what areas have chronic issues, etc. Consider the analogy of having information on a car. At the lowest level, we have information on the car’s position, then we add information on the car’s velocity, and then on its acceleration at the highest level.

These three levels of information (basic position and volumes, then causes and verification metrics, then patterns and improvement metrics and effects) can be applied across any IT service or component. And in fact, if applied, your management team can move from guessing what to do, to knowing what the performance and capabilities are to understanding what is causing problems to scientifically fixing the problems. I would note that many IT managers would view putting the metrics in place as a laborious time-consuming step that may not yield results. They would rather fly and direct by the seat of their pants. This is why so many shops have failed improvement programs and a lack of effective results. It is far better to take a scientific, process-oriented approach and garner repeatable results that enable your improvement programs to accelerate and redouble their impact over time.

Another advantage of this level of transparency is that both your team and your business partners can now see measurable results rather than promises or rosy descriptions. You should always seek to make key data a commodity in your organization. You should be publish the key process metrics broadly. This will reinforce your goals and the importance of quality throughout your team and you will be surprised and the additional benefits that will be gathered by employees able to now to a better job because they have visibility of the impact of their efforts.

And when you do develop key process metrics, make sure you include metrics that have business meaning. For example, why publish metrics on number of incidents or outage time (or conversely system time availability) to your business partners? While there is some merit in these data for the technical team, you should publish for the business in more appropriate terms. For availability, publish the customer impact availability (which would be the total number of transaction failed or impacted to a customer divided by the total number of transaction that typically occur or would have occurred that month) plus the number of customers impacted. If you tell the business they had 50,000 customers impacted by IT last month versus you had 98.7% system time availability, it now becomes real for them. And they will then better understand the importance of investing in quality production.

In essence, by taking a metrics-based approach, we in IT are then following in the footsteps of the manufacturing revolutions on process that has been underway for the past 60 years. Your team should know about the basics on Continuous Process Improvement and Lean. Perhaps give them some books on Deming or others. We should run our shops as a factory for all of our routine or volume services. Our businesses must compete in a lean manufacturing world, and our work is not handcraft, it should be formalized and improved to yield astounding gains that compound over 12, 24 or 36 months.

On a final note, once you have the base metrics in place, you should benchmark. You will have one of two good outcomes: either you will find out you have great performance and a leader in the industry (and you can then market this to your business sponsors) or you will find out lots of areas you must improve and you now have what to work on for the next 12 months.

 

Have you seen success by applying these approaches? How has your team embraced or resisted taking such a disciplined approach? What would you add or change?

 

Best, Jim

Not Quite Y2K for IT, But Prepare for the London Olympics

Today in a quick conversation with a colleague we discussed the importance of preparing for the London Olympics for those firms serving markets that will be affected by the Olympics. In addition to the expected transportation crunch around London, there will be peaks in many service areas from ATMs to local financial transactions and purchases to inquiries for information. If your firm is serving the London or UK market, or is a 2012 Olympics Sponsor, I have compiled a quick checklist and schedule of activities to ensure your systems and operations are prepared. You can also use this checklist of course if your firm is engaged in similar events such as the World Cup or Superbowl or just for general improvement of performance at peak times.

To ensure you have your services ready and able to operate smoothly during a peak such as the London Olympics, you should you first perform a capabilities analysis of those services and operations that will be under load. This entails having a good set of service volume (both normal and current peak), service performance, and service quality (how many transactions fail or have issue). Your business should have forecasts for the additional peak load during the event. Similar to the recent royal wedding, which was the busiest debit and credit transaction day in the UK, for services used by consumers expect higher load. It is likely that this load will be greater than what systems have previously support, and last thing you (or your business) would want is a failure in the middle of the Olympics with the lost revenue and reputation implications. And remember to not just look at your systems but also ask key suppliers for their plans. This includes higher level services provided by third parties but also basic ones such as network and cell phone carriers. Find out what planning and testing they have done or will do prior.

Once you have gather the data for your systems and operations, and projected a forecast, the next step is to test. You likely will want to do this testing subsequent to the normal business peak of the upcoming season and yearend — so plan for January and February to do extensive testing. Look to uncover at what point your system breaks and what breaks it. If you system shows significant signs of stress at current peaks or fails at only 5 or 10% load above current peaks, you should work quickly to remediate and improve the performance and capacity. Take this time to also address wherever you see significant defect rates in your systems or operations. Is there a high number of retries? Are sessions lost being lost? Are calls being dropped or abandoned? Any elevated level of defect should be addressed as these could skyrocket in a high peak situation, effectively a very public and impacting outage even if the system is still running. Once you have corrected the defect and performance bottlenecks, retest to ensure that there is not a performance issue lurking immediately behind the one you just fixed. And plan to implement you change at least 2 months before the event so you are not trying out an updated system for the first time on highest peak load.

Your final step is event preparation. Here you need to ensure you have adjusted your change practices and schedules as you would for any critical period (i.e., perhaps a change freeze for systems underlying key services at least a week before and throughout the Olympics). Ensure you are fully staffed (the Olympics is during vacation time) so that if something occurs you do not have a gap in key man coverage. Ensure additional capabilities (such as greater language coverage in call centers) have been planned and implemented. Either leverage your current command center of put in place a command centre as you would for a critical implementation. Have the command center manage both a business channel and a technical channel where you report a regular, appropriate intervals, the volumes and performance of the critical services. If you do have an issue, you will improve your time to respond and hopefully to restore as your command center will already be on top of it.

This should lead you to a successful Olympics (and perhaps a gold medal!).

As you wrapup, ensure you capture the peak data so you can understand how your systems and operations behave under stress. This will enable you to pinpoint where you should invest your next set of monies to get improvement (this is always helpful).

I look forward to your success and quiet delivery (staying out of the newspapers).

Best, Jim

Delivering Efficiency and Cost Reduction: Long term tactics

We have spend the past several weeks covering how to deliver efficiency and cost reduction in IT, and particularly how to do it while maintaining or improving your capabilities. In my last post we discussed what are some of the recent technology industry trends that enable reduced costs at the same or improved capabilities. In this post we will cover the first two of the long term tactics that you can leverage to achieve world class cost and performance: quality and a high performance team.

The first and really most important area to tackle is quality. If a factory had a quarter of the output that it produced was defective and became scrap, it could no long compete in the lean manufacturing regime of today’s industry. Yet frequently, IT shops have defect rates of 10%, 20%, or even north of 50%. And much of the time and effort of the IT team is actually spent fixing things as opposed to new work or proper maintenance. You need to regard every defect in your shop as waste and as a cost to you and your business. You should tackle this waste wherever it occurs in your shop. It is not uncommon for more than 50% of large projects or programs to be over schedule and over budget. It is not uncommon to see shops where more than 10 or 20% of the changes result in some other problem, typically impacting production and service to the customers. These areas must be addressed with rigor.
For projects and programs, are you following a robust project methodology? Do you have proper sponsorship and governance? Are you leveraging a strong analysis and requirements management methodology and toolset? Are you taking advantage of modern methodologies that solve the tough parts of a problem first, get good prototypes out early for user review and avoid the big bang and timeliness issues of a waterfall approach? Are you giving your project managers a full toolset along with the industry training and empowerment to make the right calls? If not, then you are likely experiencing issues and delays on more than 25% and perhaps more than 50% of your projects. And that is where your money is being wasted. When a fully staffed project team is waiting for requirements signoff, or when requirements are being changed again, too late in the project cycle, you are burning project monies while the resources idle or have to do rework. By introducing a rigorous process and robust tools and metrics, you will be able to avoid most issues before they start and for those that do occur, you will know precisely why and be able to correct it for the next project.
For your production services, you should insist on at least a 98% change success rate and if you wish to be a 1st quartile shop you need to drive to a 99% or 99.5% change success rate. This means that for every 200 changes only 1 or 2 fail. These success rates can be achieved by ensuring you have an effective but not burdensome change process and you have rigorous change testing and planning (including a backout plan). Have your operations and service management experts participate in and provide guidance to those making the changes (either the application areas or the infrastructure teams). And ensure full root cause on any change that fails with the requisite actions to prevent re-occurance being completed. Publish simple and straightforward reports on change and project success and quality. By measuring quality your team will get the message and place much more emphasis on getting it right the first time. And remarkably, by focusing on quality first, you will get a strong reduction in cost (whereas if you first tried to reduce costs then to improve quality you would make little progress on either). Accompanying this thrust with simple but bedrock true messages such as ‘Do it right the first time’ and ‘Spend it like it is your own money’ go a long ways to get the spirit of what you are trying to get accomplished across. You must mean it though and you must back up doing it right, even if it costs more initially. Remember you are looking to establish a quality culture and achieve longer term returns here.

The other long term tactic we will discuss today is achieving a highly productive and well-balanced team. First, understand that while you are implementing longer term team plans you should leverage some or all of the near term tactics for staffing that I identified in the October 31st post. The long term tactics are straightforward and are based on you attaining a staffing mix that is composed of a balanced mix of top performing individuals who, for your company, are in the right geography and at critical mass sites.

Some key truths that should be recognized and understood before setting out to build such a highly productive team:

– top performing engineers, typically paid similar as their mediocre peers are not 10% better but 2x to 10x better

– having primarily only senior engineers and not a good mix of interns, graduates, junior and mid and senior level engineers will result in stagnation and overpaid senior engineers doing low level work

– having a dozen small sites with little interaction is far less synergistic and productive than having a few strategic sites with critical mass

– relying on contractors to do most of the critical or transformational work is a huge penalty to retain or grow top engineers

– line and mid-level managers must be very good people managers, not great engineers, otherwise you are likely have difficulty retaining good talent

– engineers do not want to work in an expensive in-city location like the financial district of London (that is for investment bankers)

– enabling an environment where mistakes can be made, lessons learned, and quality and innovation and initiative are prized means you will get a staff that behaves performs like that.

With these truths in mind, set about building the team by addressing your workforce strategy (sites and mix); upgrading your recruiting and performance management; and revising your goals and rewards. Then execute these relentlessly while you up the training and coaching. As this begins to bear results you will then need to prune the poor performing managers and filter out the low performing staff.

So build a workforce strategy that matches the size and scale of your company. If your company is global, you will need a global workforce. If it is domestically focused, be domestic but look at near shore engineering locations as well. Establish the proper contractor staff mix based on function (again see the near term efficiencies staff post). Ensure your locations match up to where you can draw talent. For example, minimize expensive in-city locations. Choose instead locations with good commuting, very good nearby engineering universities and vibrant nearby communities. You will be rewarded with better quality engineers and lower attrition. Do you have 12 locations each with 50 to 150 engineers? Consider consolidating to 3 or 4 sites each with 300 to 500 engineers. And one or two should be global or near shore sites. And ensure you set it up so any significant IT function is done in two locations (thus eliminating the cost for BCM and establishing opportunities for work handoff between the sites yielding faster time to market). Establish strong intern and graduate programs with the universities near your key sites. If you are overweight with senior engineers, ensure that your new hires are graduates or junior engineers (even if by mandate). As you compose the plan, engage you senior business leaders to ensure you have support for the changes and potential synergies with other business sites or locations. Ensure they understand you will always locate client-facing personnel with the client, but IT ‘back and middle office’ staff will be where it is best to recruit and retain IT talent.

Make sure your recruiting practices are up to snuff. You should be doing a thorough filtering of technical talent while also ensuring that you are getting someone who can work well with others and has the same key values of quality, initiative and responsibility that you are seeking. Leverage team interview or top-grading practices as appropriate to ensure you weed out those that do not interact well (especially management recruits or team leads). Invariably, management in a IT organization can improve how they handle performance management. Because most of the managers are engineers, their ability to interact firmly with another person in a highly constructive manner is typically under-developed. Provide classes and interactive session on how to do coaching and provide feedback to employees. Even better, insist that performance reviews must be read and signed off by the manager’s manager before being given to improve the quality of the reviews. This a key element to focus on because the line manager’s interaction with an employee is the largest factor in undesired attrition and employee engagement.

Even if you execute your workforce mix and your recruiting and performance management flawlessly and you do not align your goals and rewards (and incentives) you will not get the change you desire. Quite simply, your smartest team members, will observe what you reward, and if you do not reinforce the values you are looking to achieve (productivity, quality, initiative, etc), you will not get the changes desired. So, gather your senior team. Work together to revise and update the vision and goals of your organization. Ensure they are big enough goals (e.g., Not ‘ Save $40M in costs’ instead ‘ Become top quartile in quality and efficiency in IT for our industry and company size by 201x’). And then line up quarterly awards that are very public that reward those who exemplify the values and results you are looking to achieve. The organization will then align their efforts much more keenly to your vision and goals.

Now that you have the foundation in place for long term results, execute and improve every quarter. You will need to begin pruning. And as you add new and better capability to your organization through improved recruiting techniques, you can afford to prune those marginal managers that you couldn’t lose before. This will provide another round of lift for your team productivity as they are replaced with better internal candidates who have grasped the new values and effort or better filtered external talent.

In the next post on long term tactics, we will talk about the metrics and benchmarking you will use to ensure you stay on track an enable you to identify additional and continual improvements. But you are on your way now.

What areas would you change? What pitfalls do you see or have you encountered? Post a comment and let me know. I look forward to your feedback.

Best, Jim

 

Delivering Efficiency and Cost Reductions: Industry Trends and Impacts

Over the past two weeks, I covered how you should deliver IT cost reductions in the near term. And if executed well, you will also yield some longer term benefits such as a better workforce balance or elimination of redundant or low value systems. But how do you deliver material improvements in cost and efficiency that are sustainable and material? First, you must put in place long term tactics that you will relentlessly pursue. I will cover these long term tactics over the next two weeks but first I thought it important to understand the impact of technology trends on IT and how they are affecting how you should tackle cost reduction in IT.

To quickly recap, the CIO must understand the IT business trends of the past several years where:

– Cost reduction and efficiency have become a prevalent drumbeat for almost any IT shop in the past 4 years

– Businesses are becoming more and more reliant on IT to deliver the services and enable the business operations

– Technology, almost without regard to industry, is becoming a larger and larger portion of the product

and thus, cost reduction must be done such that you improve capability to ensure the viability of your business. This is no mean feat.

But there are several technology trends in the past 5 years that enable you to possibly achieve cost reductions while increasing capability. These technology trends include the consumerization of technology, smart phones and mobility, and more automated workflow and application tools, and virtualization.

IT in the ’60s and even ’70s was originally the domain of government, universities and the defense and space industry. From the ’70s, it was truly a corporate domain until the ’90s with the widespread use of the PC and the adoption of the Internet. But even with the greatly increased personal use of computing, technology was still heavily driven by corporate computing. In the past 5 years though this has changed with the growing consumerization of technology. The best chips, the most scalable software, the largest databases and systems are now delivered for the consumer devices, not for corporate systems. So, it is important as a corporate technologist to recognize this trend and to always be looking to leverage the consumer devices and hardware and the approaches to building consumer systems and networks back into the corporate environment. Some good examples are the increasing implementation of bring your own device (BYOD) by large companies. Instead of IT dictating and maintaining a set of corporate client devices, the shift is to allow employees to use the device they prefer and enable corporate computing on their device through a secure sandbox application such as Good Technologies. And IT benefits from reduced cost and maintenance of these devices while employee productivity and satisfaction increase. Small to mid-sized companies can take advantage of cloud offerings of generic corporate services for email and functions such as sales management and HR. The key for large companies is to be able to shed your legacy equipment, systems and processes fast enough to take advantage of such offerings. I am familiar with one global corporate technology company which is currently trying to implement a client computing approach from 2002, complete with physical tokens (instead of software tokens on the employee cell phone), restricted and standard corporate hardware for mobile devices (instead of BYOD) and crippled capabilities (instead of implementing a sandbox and enabling the rest of the device). The result is a disgruntled workforce that thinks IT doesn’t get it and a more costly configuration.

And as far behind as some large companies are in implementing a consumerized and modern client infrastructure, their application areas are often further behind. And these applications have not taken advantage of the dramatically improved capabilities of workflow and application construction. Companies are overloaded with either legacy fully proprietary and custom systems that are often poorly architected and brittle or they have packages implementations that have been overly customized and are many versions back resulting in a massive backlog of feature improvement and update required. And all of this is expensive. To get to a better future with lower costs and greater speed and flexibility, the technology team must be willing to take this application portfolio and do four things:

– identify those core proprietary or customized legacy systems that are critical to the business and offer unique competitive capabilities and work with the business to make the investment to architect them properly and bring them into the modern era

– cull those over-customized package applications or legacy systems that do not provide competitive value and once and for all, stay on the straight and narrow path of a vanilla release of packaged or cloud-based software. And avoid wasting any further resources or time in these areas.

– leverage the advanced workflow and application building tools in a rapid development or scrum approach to go after areas of operations and the business that have been long neglected in terms of automation, workflow and technology. By applying these new tools, where before only very large functions could be automated or addressed by technology, now, functions and their processes as small as 5 or 10 staff can be easily defined and automated with a matter of 6 to 8 weeks. Thus generating a rapid improvement cycle for the business. With this much better and more timely ROI, you can set up small SWAT teams to tackle inefficiencies throughout the business divisions driving operational cost reduction and quality improvements that could have never been addressed with your previous techniques.

The final technology trend is of course, virtualization.  And with virtualization (and TCP-IP) the IT industry is coming is full circle with its roots back to the mainframe constructs of the 1960s. In essence, with virtualization and cloud computing, we are going back to the future, where computing is one utility pool and all end devices can access it. The difference is of course that we have a heterogenous pool with global accessibility versus a homogenous pool within one corporation or even just one department. By effectively employing virtualization (in fact mandating all applications must be virtualized on compute and storage), you can reduce your infrastructure server and storage costs by 30 to 50%. If you are one the few that has not yet begun virtualization, get on the bandwagon. And if you are still below a 50% virtualization threshold (e.g., less than 50% of your compute or storage capacity is virtualized or pooled), then get going.

In sum, the technology trends of the past 5 or 10 years will help you get to lower cost with increased capability. But our legacies, particularly at large corporations, hold us back from leveraging these technologies. This is where IT management leadership is required. You must accelerate the conversions, cull those systems that cannot make the leap and are not critical for the company. And most importantly, ensure your engineers and design leads adopt these approaches with vigor and energy.

My next posts will cover further the long term approach to reducing costs for IT. In particular we will focus on how to use improved quality to eliminate rework and cost for your team.

Best,

Jim

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Delivering Efficiency and Cost Reductions: Long term approach

In the last 4 posts we have covered how you should deliver IT cost reductions in the near term. And if executed well, you will also yield some longer term benefits such as a better workforce balance or elimination of redundant or low value systems. But how do you deliver material improvements in cost and efficiency that are sustainable and material? First, you must put in place long term tactics that you will relentlessly pursue. To make a material difference here, you must be both consistent and persistent in your approach.

First, you lay the groundwork for sustainable improved cost through quality. Second, you must achieve a highly productive and well-balanced team in order to meet a world class cost profile. Third, you must have in place modern, consolidated infrastructure and well-architected core systems. And then finally, by leveraging a metrics-based, transparent framework with continuous process improvement you will achieve and then sustain the world class cost edge.

Cost reduction and efficiency have become a prevalent drumbeat for almost any IT shop in the past 4 years. I think it is important to recognize that just taking short term actions to achieve efficiencies for this quarter or this year are inadequate for today’s business environment. Because your business, regardless of the industry, is becoming more and more reliant on IT to deliver the services, enable the business operations. If you fall behind here because of cost-cutting, you are now impacting the viability of the business. Most importantly though, the technology, almost without regard to industry, is becoming a larger and larger portion of the product. Thus, if you do not build up better IT capability than you impact the future of your business. So, cost cutting must be done such that you build capability while reducing costs, no mean feat.

I think it is important to recognize that in many industries, the technology approach is now changed forever due to several key factors. The impact of consumerization of technology, mobility and smart phones, the growing scope of pseudo-automated workflow and application tools, and the economic upheaval of the past 3 years have changed dramatically how technology can should be applied. I will review these industry inputs and their impacts further tomorrow.

And then later in the week, I will map out the specifics for each of the four elements of achieving a sustainable and material cost advantage in IT over the long run.

IT Cost Reductions — Near Term tactics: Staff efficiencies

This is the fourth and final near term tactics post on a topic ever present in today’s economic climate: cost reduction. Though the US economy grew by 2.5% this past quarter and despite some willingness by companies to invest in IT (while there is a reluctance to invest in staff),  the overall corporate climate is to continue to cut costs. In this climate, IT must also deliver efficiencies, and you as a corporate leader must demonstrate that IT will do its share.  As I mentioned previously, first ensure you understand the business drivers behind the cost reduction for your company so you can appropriately shape your program in IT to meet those needs.

Assuming you have that understanding, I have recommended 5 near term areas that should provide real savings and also tighten up your organization to make it a leaner and more effective shop. It is important to note that most shops can achieve 3% to 15% reductions by executing these tactics and if done well, the changes will actually improve your longer term capacity and positioning.

As covered in the previous posts, the first area to tackle is what you spend on vendors and services or third party spend. Nest is to tackle making sure you have a ‘clean’ shop as well as pursuing consolidation and utilization efficiency initiatives. The final area, and perhaps most important area to address is staffing.

Before we get into the details of what to pursue, I need to highly emphasize that leadership is absolutely critical to ensure efficiency and reduction initiatives do not cause morale or productivity issues that compromise any gains. I have seen many such efficiency efforts have reduced impact or even result in broader disruption to the IT team and the business at large. So, understand that you are doing delicate work here that requires thoughtful decisioning and messaging as well as strong execution.

To achieve staffing efficiencies, there are three near term areas to focus. The first areas is to eliminate high priced contractors or consultants. We discussed this as part of getting a handle on third party spend but you should take a second look at it as you analyze your workforce. You should have metrics in place that tell you what your spending for consulting services is for the past quarter, the past year, by vendor, by IT area. Similarly, you should have spend metrics with number of contractors, their cost per hour or day, and by vendor and IT area. You should know how much more a consultant or contractors costs you versus a similarly skilled employee. In some cases it can be 50% to as much as 300%. If you have significant numbers of contractors or consultants providing services in areas that are not discretionary or project-driven (e.g. production or IT operations or maintenance areas), then you likely have the wrong staff mix. Can you shut down or defer discretionary projects and shift your staff there to displace contractors doing routine work? By properly balancing your workforce (an 85-95%/15-5% staff to contractor ratio for production work or a 50-80%/50-20% ratio for project work) you can optimize your cost base. By replacing contractors that cost you 50% to 200% more than you staff, you can accrue large savings very quickly.

In addition to optimizing your staff mix, you also should do a performance-based reduction. First and foremost, you must get your messaging and goals and vision nailed down before you start this. If you do not, then your organization will be rife with rumors and your best people will immediately be exposed to attrition elsewhere. Poorly executed reductions in force invariably result in a greater proportion of the best staff leaving rather than poor performers if the vision, goals and messaging are not well-communicated. Note the recommendation is for a performance-based reduction, not an arbitrary reduction in force, or a last-in first-out reduction, or anything that is not primarily merit-based. At this point you may be saying, but we have a good team, we are already stretched, we do performance management HR stuff every year, how can we absorb a performance based reduction? My response would be that if the rest of the organization is doing staff reductions, then you need to step up also. And even if only some of the organization is doing this, you should bite the bullet and do the performance reductions. Why? Because your HR processes rarely work as well as you think, and you likely have built up more bad apples and poor performers than you realize or your managers care to admit. And never let a good crisis go to waste. These bad apples and poor performers, even if few in number, really cost you and your organization. The Wall Street Journal had a great recent article explaining the outsize negative impact of bad apples. So, come up with the right messaging — that is, your target organization is a high performance organization; that these actions must be taken as a prudent step given these economic times; that these are all that is expected (but of course no guarantees); that merit and performance are the primary criteria; that you will continue to invest in training and adding key staff where it is critical (and you must back this up and do it); and that you will drop contractors first where possible (again, you must then do this).

Huddle with your managers and HR. Look for at least a 2% reduction, that is the typical minimum amount of deadwood in your organization. Ensure that where you have weak managers, HR and a strong set of peer managers closely reviews each manager’s 2% candidates to ensure no favoritism or bias. Ensure customer views of staff performance are included (but only as one of many factors of performance). And then execute in a timely and decisive fashion. Once completed, refocus the team on the job ahead. Now that you have eliminated the deadwood, many of staff will walk with a lighter step because Joe, the problem guy, is no longer causing problems. He is gone with the rest of the performance problems, and productivity and quality should rise.

The final area to address is training and graduates/interns. Typically, in cost cutting the first areas to get slashed are training and intern and graduate programs. This is penny wise and pound foolish. The ability to keep and attract the best and most productive staff is dependent on their ability to learn and do more. If you kill training, your skilled staff attrition will cost you far more than the training save. Further, how do you get improved productivity without the training? Similarly, graduate and intern programs require long runways and consistent support to have proper effect. Slashing them one year and reinstating them next year will not impress any top graduates. You are cutting off typically your best and lowest cost recruiting tool.  Again, the long term costs will far outweigh the savings.

So, instead, take the following actions. For training, huddle with your key vendors and work with them to see if they can provide greater discounts or free training. Can they come on site and offer seminars or classes for a group of your engineers (getting a better environment and  lower unit cost delivery)? Unless absolutely necessary, change training from one of your team traveling to a class to having the vendor or institution bring the trainer to your site (or videoconference) and train 10 to 14 of your staff. Thus reducing your training costs but increasing its impact. Don’t send 5 team members to one conference. Send 1 or 2 and have them take great notes, do a trip report, and hold a seminar for the team when they get back. They will treat it more serious, value it more, and generate excellent team interaction as a result. For graduate and intern programs, reduce the number of school visits, perhaps slightly reduce the number of graduates or interns, but really protect this investment. You are likely spending more for a few contractors for short term results than you are for your entire intern and graduate program which gets you long term results and high performance future.

So, in a nutshell, you have three key areas for near term staff efficiencies: balancing your workforce mix, performance-based reductions, and training and graduate investment alignment. But they must be done only when you have established clear vision and goals and you execute robust messaging so you avoid the engagement pitfalls. In sum, you can get significant near term cost reductions in this area if you execute it well as a leader.

What other areas would you tackle? Have you seen well-executed or poorly executed staff efficiency initiatives?

I will cover in much greater detail how you achieve much greater staff productivity and cost improvement as a long term initiative in the next few months.

Look forward to your comments.

Best, Jim

 

 

 

IT Cost Reductions – Near term tactics: Consolidation & Utilization

This is the third near term tactics post on a topic ever present in today’s economic climate: cost reduction. Though the US economy grew by 2.5% this past quarter and despite some willingness by companies to invest in IT (while there is a reluctance to invest in staff),  the overall corporate climate is to continue to cut costs. In this climate, IT must also deliver efficiencies.  As I mentioned previously, first ensure you understand the business drivers behind the cost reduction for your company so you can appropriately shape your program in IT to meet those needs.

Assuming you have that understanding, I have recommended 5 near term areas that should provide real savings and also tighten up your organization to make it a leaner and more effective shop. The first area to tackle is what you spend on vendors and services or third party spend. The second area to tackle is making sure you have a ‘clean’ shop. These are covered in the previous posts. These should yield savings of 3 to 10% in the first year if applied effectively. But you will need to do more. The next two tactical areas to pursue are consolidation and utilization.

In almost every shop, just based on natural growth, company acquisitions, or inadequate discipline, you end up with multiple solutions for the same processes or business services. And also in almost every shop, there are the future architectural diagrams where everything becomes unified and integrated at some point in the future. This typically occurs after one or two decades and several miraculous projects. What you should do as the IT leader is make some tough decisions where you have multiple systems and significantly more expense with little added value. I recommend starting with the IT systems. This would include everything from asset management to change and problem management to systems management tools. Gather suggestions on where the most problematic or redundant systems are in IT from your staff. It is likely that the areas with most overlap are also the ones with the most friction and religious fervor. One example I encountered was three different PC software configuration management systems including one that was built and maintained in-house!

We assembled a team that included representatives from each of the competing groups, added some strong analysts (including from finance) and basically did a product bake-off. It was also easy to establish that our bank was not going to be producing and marketing PC configuration software, but instead that we would ensure the critical features the in-house solution delivered would be required of the off the shelf solution. The bake-off was completed, we selected the single solution, and then we ensured that the leadership commitment was fully communicated so everyone knew we were driving to a single solution quickly and fully. This yielded significant in-year savings. A quick survey of your shop will find areas where having two or more is of no significant added value at additional cost, and those areas where it may add value or it may have high hurdle costs (e.g., multiple development tools). My recommendation would be that you have singular toolsets for all IT production processes (change, problem, etc), financial processes, and HR and administration processes. Systems management and asset tools should be multiple only where there are compelling reasons to do so. If IT cannot agree and leverage singular solutions, how will you convince your business partners they do not need multiple loan, banking, or general ledger applications? And the IT consolidations can generally be done more quickly and smoothly than business systems consolidations. So start within the IT shop.

For business system consolidations, most of these initiatives could not be classified as near term. So I will primarily cover this area when I talk subsequently on your long term efficiency and quality approaches. For the near term, though, get in place a full inventory of your business systems and identify their costs by system. Then take that information along with the identified overlaps and sit down with your business partners, particularly those knowledgeable on how the business operations work, and discuss what should be done with the overlaps. You may be surprised but occasionally the business team will say, ‘With that cost, we think we can turn that system off as we do not really use it and it is not worth it’. Chalk it up as a win, decommission the system and count the savings.

In addition to consolidating or eliminating redundant systems, another near term tactic is to address poorly utilized resources. Every sizable IT shop should have a team of performance experts for their major resource pools. If you have a mainframe, than you should have a least one senior engineer for every 5,000 to 10,000 MIPs that on an ongoing basis, goes through all of the work running on the mainframe and identifies poor code, improper parameters, wasteful routines, etc. There are a plethora of tools that your most senior performance management experts can use to identify where the waste is. And most of the fixes are relatively simple and low cost. And you will quickly save hundreds of MIPs, gigabytes, terabytes, etc. You will not have to make that next purchase of the mainframe or servers or disk. Instead, you will recapture your current capacity. You should put in place these performance management teams that identify such waste, provide the detailed solutions to your application or infrastructure engineering teams to implement for each major resource pool: mainframe, server, disk, and network. And the requirement should be that they identify and help implement every quarter savings worth 3 to 5 times the cost of the team. Make sure you provide the sponsorship of the efficiency implementations with your application and engineering teams. But, if you provide that backing, you should find strong utilization savings within 3 to 6 months. And even better, you will find performance improvements in your systems with wall time reductions in batch, better user response times, less latency — all because you eliminated wasteful processing that was hogging resources.

We are almost complete on the near term efficiency tactics — I will be covering staffing in the final segment. I should point out that the two areas discussed today: consolidation and utilization, can only be address if you have adequate senior engineering talent and leadership. And you must give them the leeway to identify waste and issues without incurring penalties but instead garnering your support to fix them. This is a critical leadership requirement. You must encourage your engineers to fix the problems and provide them the support to fix them. Going forward you must also insist on high standards so you do not create more problems, but when you are starting to fix things, you do not help your cause if you punish the very team who is trying to fix the issues.

What savings have you been able to achieve by consolidating systems? Where you able to execute them and achieve the savings in the short term? or did it take longer?

Do you have any good performance management approaches to share? As the industry moves to cloud computing, efficient utilization and management becomes more critical (but should be easier). What are your thoughts on how to ensure you are getting the most efficient use of your resources in the cloud environment?

Next week I will post the last near term efficiency tactics topic. I look forward to your feedback.

Best, Jim

 

IT Cost Reductions – Near term tactics: A ‘clean shop’

Our current topic is ever present in today’s economic climate: cost reduction. This is the third post on this critical area. Despite some willingness by companies to invest in IT (while there is a reluctance to invest in staff), IT must also deliver efficiencies. This is the second post on the near term tactics that you should employ to deliver the required cost reductions and efficiencies. As I mentioned previously, first ensure you understand the business drivers behind the cost reduction so you can appropriately shape your program to meet those needs.

Assuming you have that understanding, I recommend 5 near term areas that should provide real savings and also tighten up your organization to make it a leaner and more effective shop. The first area to tackle is what you spend on vendors and services or third party spend. This is covered in the previous post. The second area to tackle is making sure you have a ‘clean’ shop. Invariably, unless you have world class inventory and lifecycle processes, you will be able to save 1 to 3% of your budget by cleaning up. So, what is a ‘clean shop’?

A ‘clean shop’ is one where you are in control of all of your assets from PCs to mobiles to telecomm lines to software. Let me relay an interesting example of what was found through cleanup efforts. The first one was during a full data center cleanup, and not only did we find plenty of legacy server and telecomm gear that was little used or perhaps not used in 6 or even 18 months, but we uncovered DS-3 circuits that were live but no longer in use that the company had been paying for for the past 8 years! Typically, the larger the company, the more cleanup to be had. Start with making sure your inventory processes actually work, and not just the commission process but probably more importantly, the decommissioning process. Assign a small SWAT team to work your major corporate sites. Their job should be to go into every major site and sweep it of legacy, unused equipment. You may have endusers hoarding equipment no longer used in the hopes that they might need it for a new employee. If so, make sure your billing and processes do not penalize them to turn the stuff in. Hold an amnesty day by site. Publicize how much was collected and how much the company will save on maintenance, property taxes, and so on. Make sure your SWAT decomm team takes care of completing every decommission task, including getting the inventory updated and getting the decommissioned items off your vendors’ maintenance bills.

With the decommissioning processes corrected and the sites starting to be cleaned, go broader. Tackle your data centers. You should walk a few of them. If there is old equipment and boxes piled around, you have excess inventory that is costing you. Ensure your engineering teams know they must run a ‘clean shop’. Again, assign a SWAT team to decomm with server, network and storage engineers represented. Have someone from your finance team participate, you may up with required writedowns on equipment no longer in production but still on the books. That is fine, if the company is in cost reduction mode, there are invariably writeoff mechanisms for the corporation overall. And remember, for every server or device you unplug, you will get power and cooling savings.

Next, go after the user equipment, but partner with your business unit CFOs. Develop and give the the business units some nice reports that show how many users have two PCs (or more), how many have two cell phones (or more), how many home lines (even ISDN in this day and age !) that the company is paying for, and how much their business unit can save by getting rid of the excess equipment and inappropriate services (e.g., only the CEO should have the line to their house paid for). But make sure you have run a quick report on IT and you have your house in order. And make sure that when users start turning equipment in, you can decommission or reuse it effectively and it comes of their internal bill or costs.

Last, but not least, tackle software licenses. Most often the case is that you are over-licensed — all those PCs turned in mean you can recycle their software licenses for new users. And you may find you are paying maintenance for old  software that is not used, or the maintenance assumes a much higher number of devices. Software asset management is a very complex and consuming area, but it is also an area where IT shops spend significant sums.

So, by cleaning up your IT assets, and putting in place good asset management processes, you should be able to save at least 1% to 3% of your annual budget. In the next post we will discuss the 3rd near term cost reduction tactic to employ — with staffing, but not in the manner typically implemented.

Have you tried any of the ‘clean shop’ techniques? What were the results? Any practices that really improved the results?

Best, Jim

 

IT Cost Reductions – Near term tactics: 3rd Party savings

As I outlined in the previous post, cost reduction is ever present in today’s economic climate. And that includes IT. But, it is worthwhile to note, that during this ‘jobless’ recovery, businesses are investing in IT and other infrastructure to boost productivity and reduce costs. Thus, IT is one of the few areas where investment is occurring (versus hiring more staff). While you may have some investment increase coming in, what are the near term tactics that you should employ to deliver the required cost reductions and efficiencies? As I mentioned in the previous blog, first ensure you understand the business drivers behind the cost reduction so you can appropriately shape your program to meet those needs.

Assuming you have that understanding, where do you start? I recommend 5 near term areas that should provide real savings and also tighten up your organization to make it a leaner and more effective shop. The first area to tackle is what you spend on vendors and services or third party spend. In order to address this area you must understand the details and trends behind your third party (3P) spend. This can be anywhere from 30 to 70% of an IT shop’s total budget. And, unfortunately it is often not well-leveraged. Use your finance and procurement team to get the spend facts and trends. And then engage your team to ensure they understand that you will be driving a new level of leverage from this area. The first rule with any vendor is: they must deliver to the same high standards you hold for yourself and your team. And the second rule is: partner effectively together. How do you get savings in this area? Start by calling the every significant vendor in and explain to them the pressures facing you and your company and that you need their ideas on how to cut costs. If they are any good, they have been waiting for this call. If they are really good, they have proposals at the ready. Remember they will suggest that you must give them more revenue to save you money. While there may be a great idea buried in that sales pitch, avoid the suggestion and ask them to save you significant monies on your current costs and their current revenues. Tell them every area of your budget is getting reduced and they must contribute. Assign strong members from your team to each vendor, partnered with your procurement organization and review and track every savings proposal. Assign the vendors appropriate challenges — do they provide contractors? how about a 10% per hour rate cut? Many of the big banks have already done this (and perhaps 15 or 20%). Look to reduce the maintenance fees, identify unused licenses and return them for refund or maintenance reduction, negotiate for bigger discounts for anything you buy. Eliminate distributors and middlemen where ever possible. Use a procurement benchmarking service to ensure you are getting a good discount. Make every purchase a level playing field with competition. Make sure you personally review every major 3P contract and new deal — and when you do, ensure it is up to a high standard. Ensure your team understands these new principles. You should be spending your company’s money as if it is your own.

Is your team using consulting services? or expensive senior level contractors? These may be required for specific critical efforts or tasks but they should all have a turnover period where critical work is handled by your team, not the consultants. Figure out how to eliminate or dramatically reduce these third party expenses. The same goes for expensive contractors. It will be tough to keep up your team’s morale when you are reducing staff and yet you have lots of expensive contractors in your shop. Figure out how to transition the work to your team at much lower cost and improved control.

Track all of your cost reduction initiatives, vendor by vendor, task by task. Assign your finance lead and procurement lead to track these for you and ensure results. Have one of your most senior staff be responsible for the 3P reductions broadly — this also helps uncover areas where vendor relations may be too cosy. These actions will get you started on the 3P costs and should save you 10 to 20% of your 3P costs. I will cover other near term tactics in the next post that should yield a significant near term gain, typically 2% to 5% quick hit savings.

As I mentioned, it is a tough economic climate out there, make sure that you are holding the vendors to the same standards to which you are holding your shop. And make sure you listen when they come back with ways that if you change processes in your shop, can save them time and rework which they can pass back to you in the form of lower costs.

I would very much like to hear if you have implemented such an approach with 3Ps and how it went. And you will see the next post with more near term actions very soon.

Best, Jim