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Five ways to bolster your IT budget in 2016

Enterprise IT budgets could take a hit in 2016, if IDC’s latest predictions are anything to go by. With less cash to go around, how can CIOs persuade those holding the purse strings to invest in new technology?

Canada’s ICT sector certainly isn’t in recession. It’s just not likely to grow as quickly as people had hoped. In December, IDC announced a new estimate for ICT growth in 2016, predicting 2.4 per cent growth next year. That was down from the 3.4 per cent it predicted for 2016 at the start of this year. The oil slump isn’t helping.

CIOs may have to work extra hard to extract money from the CFO, CEO, or whichever line of business director holds the purse strings. Michael Murphy, vice-president and country manager for Citrix Canada, has a few pointers to help CIOs maintain or increase their budgets.

Show me the money

As much is possible, the conversation should focus on the financial benefits of the solution, be that operational savings or productivity gains, he argued.

“They want to know that what they’re spending on IT makes them money in a legitimate return such as driving revenue or growth, or saves them money because it can stop me doing something of a capital nature or lower costs of an operational nature,” he said.

That’s all very well, but when it comes to IT projects, the financial benefits aren’t always clear. It may be difficult to demonstrate a return on investment for IT projects in black and white; it can be tricky when it comes to monitoring employee productivity, for example.

“Sometimes the benefits are intangible, meaning that the fruits of their labours aren’t shown to be valid until a cost is offset, or the project is really up and running and showing economies of scale,” admits Murphy.

This is even more true for foundational IT projects that may not even make sense to business users. How do you explain the move to a micro services architecture or the deployment of software-defined storage in a way that business users understand? It’s not impossible, but it takes some thinking.

Several approaches

This year more than ever, CIOs must lead with the business problem that the technology solves, he warns, ditching the technical jargon and speaking to business managers in a language that they understand.

There are several broad approaches that CIOs can take in 2016 to help justify their budgets and create a positive financial environment.

Even though IT investments are growing as quickly, they are still growing. Some business decisions are simply outside the CIOs control, but positioning yourself to take part in the conversations would be a positive step for the coming year.

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