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Canadians taking baby steps in bridging IT, business gap

Canadians taking baby steps in bridging IT, business gap

By:  Mari-Len De Guzman  On: 12 Apr 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

When it comes to IT maturity in the enterprise, Canada is generally in its infancy. This according to a recent study by IDC Canada Ltd. that measured the progress of IT in the business environment, where the extent to which corporate information systems serve business needs determine the level of IT maturity

In implementing a business intelligence application, for instance, oftentimes the challenge begins with where to find the data, how to find it, and how to build composite applications that will allow the business to pull information from various locations, said McJannet.

Achieving better integration between business and IT is also changing the way channel partners and consultants approach their business clients, said Kelly Lautt, business intelligence practice leader for Vancouver-based Habanero Consulting Group.

"It has been rare in this industry for partners to go [to a client] with a business attitude. In the traditional sense, IT solution providers usually go in and say, ‘we’re going to install this huge thing and that’s it.’ It’s traditionally been true also for internal IT departments and it’s not going to help," Lautt said.

To achieve that IT and business partnership, consultants offering their expertise to a particular company should try to approach a problem as a business need rather than a technology requirement.

"That is where planning the infrastructure really comes in," she said.

There are a number of mechanisms that can enable the upward progression of IT’s maturity level, according to IDC’s Senf. One of them is having effective service oriented architecture (SOA).

SOA enables organizations to create an IT infrastructure that allows users to have common access to data, services and resources across the network.

Despite the great hype around the benefits of SOA to the enterprise, the uptake in Canada has been relatively slow, said Senf. "Organizations see SOA as just another tool in the toolbox to get done what they needed to do from an IT standpoint. They are gradually understanding that this can help from a broader business perspective, as well."

Only about 25 per cent of Canadian organizations are either piloting or have broadly deployed SOA, while 11 per cent are planning on deploying this year, said the IDC analyst.

The good news is that Canadian executives are recognizing IT as having more of a strategic importance to the organization, said Senf. Better external relationships with customers, suppliers and partners are also moving up in the hierarchy of business priorities, he added.

"In order to facilitate reaching out to customers, partners or suppliers, certainly one of the underlying things that they can do from a software perspective is to look at SOA," said Senf. "To better understand what customers want and need (for instance), the ability to have access to better data makes a lot of difference."

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Mari-Len De Guzman Mari-Len De Guzman is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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