![]() What have you done that is innovative? Senior IT leaders believe their teams are innovative but often, they are merely operating within the boundaries that already exist. Leaders may task their teams with finding innovative solutions but without a focused effort, it is difficult to accomplish. IT staff are generally focused on keeping the lights on by solving day to day issues or completing their tasks for the next project. Innovation requires a concerted effort with support from senior leaders to explore new ideas that may or may not deliver the intended result. If staff haven’t been working in this type of environment, this doesn’t come easy. It isn’t as simple as just giving the team a vision, telling them to explore possibilities, and then giving them a deadline. Unfortunately, this is how many IT organizations work. "Innovation is seeing beyond the status quo to create significant change to products and services, processes, or your business model." It can be difficult for leaders to fully internalize how their reactions can shape the attitudes and behaviors of their teams. IT staff need to think out of the box but in the past if they presented a solution that wasn’t within the existing norms of the organization, it was shot down. Perhaps it didn’t follow a technology standard or it required a high level conversation with another executive. To the staff, it seemed minor. Regardless of how the message was delivered, what they heard is that they need to follow the standard way of doing business. Three Key Actions for I.T. Leaders to Begin the Journey Toward True Innovation
Take steps to create true innovation within I.T. and for the broader organization. While there is an initial investment, the return will be well worth it. Don’t miss our upcoming blog article on innovation with IT service management. It is time to break away from the status quo when adopting best practices. Join our mailing list today! At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, innovation, process, and culture change to improve IT efficiency, increase effectiveness, and optimize costs. For more information, phone 520-591-2427 or email us at info@adoptitsm.com.
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![]() If you are involved in implementing DevOps practices or if you are researching DevOps, you know that culture change is critical to success. Developers and Operations must work together to create high quality deliverables on a frequent basis. For most organizations, bringing Developers and Operations closer together is a significant cultural shift. It is the most important aspect of transitioning to DevOps practices. Without fully addressing the people side of DevOps, you can only make so much progress. The various DevOps discussions and materials tend to focus on the behavior and subsequent culture change required within the IT organization but what about the business. If you are going change how IT works and delivers services to the business, there is a business impact. They are the customer. They need to be prepared to have discussions about the value of various requirements and deliverables. These discussions require someone at the table that can make decisions about functionality that delivers value, resources that may be required for user acceptance testing, the business impact of delivery schedules, etc. In the last fifteen years, IT leaders often talked about wanting a seat at the table with the business. They wanted to be involved in strategic decision making and offer advice and counsel on the various initiatives that the business was undertaking. Many IT leaders struggled with achieving this level of involvement. Now there is a new opportunity. In a sense, DevOps creates a brand new table and the business is definitely interested but they need to be involved in the planning as well as the execution so the entire organization can fully recognize the value of changing how the work is delivered. The culture change required for DevOps involves more than just IT. It needs to include the rest of the business. IT provides foundational technology for the entire company and it may create services that are sold to the community. It’s great the Development and Operations are recognizing the value of tearing down the silo between the organizations but to be truly successful, it is time to remove the silo that exists between IT and the business. Any organization adopting DevOps practices needs to focus on the behavior changes required across the entire organization. It’s a new day. DevOps practices involve more than just IT. The business needs to adopt a new mindset as well. Organizational change plans that address IT behavior need to consider the behavior of their business partners as well. The business needs to take the journey with IT to achieve the expected return. When adopting DevOps practices, engage the business in the early discussions prior to making changes. Even if you want some time to test and learn within the IT organization, take the first step in tearing down the wall that exists between IT and the business. Bring the business into the conversation. Talk with them about your objectives and ask them about the results they would like to see from this type of initiative. Partner with them on developing a strategy and path forward. Engaging the business in the early conversations relating to DevOps will help to gain their buy in. The behavior change from the business will evolve as DevOps practices evolve in the organization. They will have a voice in the adoption of the changes and while IT Development and Operations are adjusting to a new way of working, the business will be planning and adjusting as well. Inviting the business to the table along with Development and Operations will strengthen the end result and help to tear down the silo’s that have existed for far too long. To be successful, the adoption of DevOps practices requires a cultural shift from IT and the business. Take the journey together to achieve a much more valuable outcome. ![]() In Part 1 of “How can Business Relationship Managers Influence Organizational Change”, we looked at how Business Relationship Managers can serve as a translator for both IT and their business partners by bringing the benefits of IT work to life for both sides. They can help IT staff and business stakeholders understand the true impact of the work by relating the benefit in a manner that is meaningful. It is about more than saving money or upgrading a server. Business Relationship Managers can explain how the work directly impacts the customer or the employee. They understand the bigger picture but they can drill down to the day to day operational level and explain the benefit which allows all stakeholders to connect with this work at an emotional level and ultimately, improves the adoption of change. Another aspect of driving change adoption is understanding existing performance as well as progress toward improvement. Business Relationship Managers (BRM) are in a unique position to use metrics to help all of their stakeholders understand the value of the work being proposed or completed through the use of metrics. The metrics can drive action and improve the adoption of change. The business areas are tracking various productivity and satisfaction metrics. The work completed relating to technology should enable stronger performance in these areas. The BRM should be reviewing these measures with their customer on a routine basis. Work completed by IT is often reflected in these measures. Using our example from part 1 of this blog series, the work to upgrade an ATM may be reflected in the volume of customers using specific ATM functionality, the volume and type of security issues relating to the ATM, or the number and type of support calls about a particular application used at the branch. Technology supports the business in doing their job effectively. Metrics that are monitored by business partners often show the impact of changes to the technology as well as changes to IT process and changes to the IT organizational structure. Business Relationship Managers are able to use these metrics to show the IT staff how the work they do has a very meaningful impact. The same metrics can be used to facilitate a conversation with the business about the value IT is bringing to the organization. While the business will also be making changes to strategies, processes, staffing, procedures, etc., and the BRM needs to understand the work that is underway, changes to the metrics also reflect changes taking place to the technology that is used every day by the business staff. With minimal effort, the BRM can help the business understand the value proposition for IT by using metrics to show how IT is supporting business outcomes. Using business metrics and correlating them to the work of the information technology team will have a considerable impact on change adoption by helping both IT and their business partners understand how the work being completed is affecting success. Additional training, communication, application or other technical enhancements, process and procedure changes, and even organizational changes may result from truly understanding the metrics and how the changes completed by the IT team influences the end result. Attend the Building Your Business Relationship Management Capabilities Workshop to grow in your role and strengthen your relationship with your business customers! Join our mailing list to ensure you don't miss another blog or important event! At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, innovation, process, and culture change to improve IT efficiency, increase effectiveness, and optimize costs. For more information, phone 520-591-2427 or email us at info@adoptitsm.com.
![]() When an organization adopts new technology or processes, there is a change to how people work. They need to modify their attitudes and behaviors to adopt the changes and this usually results in new procedures, updates to tools, and changing relationships between coworkers or departments. Business Relationship Managers (BRM) understand the needs of the business and they understand how the IT organization works. BRM’s work directly with business partners to ascertain their current and future needs and they help the IT team navigate meeting these needs. They have intimate knowledge of both organizations and they are pivotal to keeping these organizations in sync. While some would argue that the BRM should not be spending their time on organizational change management, it is actually a critical part of their role. IT staff often wonder about the value of the work they perform. They are asked to do tasks or take on projects but they aren’t provided with a lot of information. They may be given a copy of a business case but the overall handoff to the IT staff generally does not include the context relating to the true impact of the work they are doing. The BRM’s are in a perfect position to provide this context. They understand both the tangible and intangible benefits. Every communication to the IT staff should talk about the value of IT’s work to the business and relate this information at a level an IT staff member can understand and connect with at an emotional level. For example, the business case for completing an application upgrade at a bank may indicate that the branches will save millions of dollars and that customer satisfaction will be increased. Generally, this is what IT staff know about the work as it is in the business case. Why should they care? The upgrade could result in lots of additional hours of overtime. In this scenario, the programmer or engineer only sees the negative impact. They don’t connect to the meaning of the work and therefore, they aren’t incredibly motivated to do the work. The BRM has the opportunity to translate this upgrade into something meaningful for the IT staff. They know the impacts to the organization’s strategic plan as well as the individual employee at the branch. They can relate the impacts to a customer experience. If the programmer or engineer understands that a branch employee will no longer have to contact support about the application when a customer is sitting in front of them or that the upgrade will provide the ability for self service through an ATM rather than requiring a customer to visit a branch, it would make a difference. It would motivate the IT staff member to improve the experience for both their internal and external customers. The BRM is in a perfect position to help IT staff understand why the work is occurring and the true impact of their work. The BRM can tell the story. On the business side, the BRM understands the various departments, organizational structure, and politics of their assigned area. They are instrumental in setting and managing expectations. The BRM understands enough about the IT organization and workload that they can effectively translate something technical into something meaningful for their business partner. The BRM also knows their business partners well enough to understand their pain points and what motivates them. They can influence buy in for upgrades, downtime, process changes, IT restructures, and other changes by applying this information in a useful, meaningful way. For example, the server upgrade that will restrict application access for a half a day is required if you want the self-service functionality on the ATM. The ATM downtime this week will allow us to ensure the customer’s information is safe and secure. The BRM can tell the story to both IT and the business about how their work creates something meaningful for the staff and for the customer. They can link the impact of the work to tangible and intangible benefits that will appeal to leadership as well as the frontlines. They can have a huge impact on the success and adoption of change. Don’t miss part two of this blog where we’ll talk about how Business Relationship Managers can use metrics to influence change! Join our mailing list to ensure you don’t miss the next blog! At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, innovation, process, and culture to increase effectiveness, improve efficiency, and optimize costs. Discover how an cultural assessment can help you identify key steps to influence change adoption. Ask us to complete an assessment today and discover how to improve the return on your initiatives. Contact us at info@adoptitsm.com or by calling 520-591-2427.
![]() Advanced Organizational Performance Techniques (AdOPT) is Now an Authorized Partner of GamingWorks for the Delivery of The Phoenix Project Interactive DevOps Learning Experience -- The Phoenix Project simulation is an experiential learning opportunity that fosters an understanding of DevOps principles and how those principles can be applied in the real world. -- TUCSON, AZ, October 13, 2016/ -- DevOps is becoming more important as businesses look for ways to achieve a competitive advantage. While best practices relating to DevOps are emerging, it is clear that every organization is unique, every implementation will be different, and that the culture of an organization can make or break the success of DevOps. Advanced Organizational Performance Techniques (AdOPT) focuses on helping Information Technology and business teams to harness the power of change. By fostering an environment which adapts to change quickly, organizations can achieve a higher level of performance. Over the years, AdOPT has focused on helping organizations adopt and excel in achieving their objectives by customizing various best practices, tools, and techniques and providing advisory services and training relating to the acceptance of change as well as identifying targeted actions to influence organizational culture. The Phoenix Project simulation is a natural addition to AdOPT's portfolio of service offerings. During this interactive, one day simulation, participants experience situations that mirror the real business world. Projects in trouble, system issues, financial pressures, and new priorities plague the team as they race to provide the technology services required to turn the company around. The simulation helps to break down the barriers and change resistance that often exists when a new way of working is discussed or initiated. It provides participants with a DevOps experience that becomes a foundational building block for achieving concrete change when they return to the office. At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, innovation, process, and culture to increase effectiveness, improve efficiency, and optimize costs. ![]() We’ve all heard the research. Roughly 70% of project fail to achieve the intended return. Approximately 50% of the time this is due to leadership protecting the status quo. Change is hard. Even for leaders, it is difficult. As leaders, we don’t set out to protect “the way we’ve always done it” but we have habits too. We are used to making decisions using similar criteria or in a certain way. We also have very busy schedules which sometimes affect our decision making as it relates to change. We make choices every day and sometimes we have to weigh the time it may take to deal with an issue one way vs another. We may choose the easier option as we don’t have the time to dedicate to the more difficult path and the results will be similar anyway. The challenge for leaders is that our staff is looking at our actions. They are evaluating what they are hearing and they are looking to see if actions are aligning with what is being said. They are taking their ques from what is being done versus what is being said. Leaders go through the same change cycle as everybody else. It can take time to fully comprehend the changes taking place and how you should react. While you are going through the change cycle, you are sending signals to our staff about the importance of adopting the changes taking place. Invest in Four Key Areas to Maximize the Opportunity for Success
Yes. It is extra work. The coalition can help and you can grow the coalition over time. It won’t replace you being present but it can lessen the load. Also, consider the organizational consequences of delayed or partial change adoption. Investing time and energy into being visible and fostering a conversation will pay dividends and you may even achieve a greater return from the change than you expected. Research over the last 15+ years has repeatedly shown that effective leadership is pivotal to the adoption and success of change. Leaders at every level need to effectively engage and take action. It is an investment of time and energy but the returns are well worth it. At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, innovation, process, and culture to increase effectiveness, improve efficiency, and optimize costs. Discover how an cultural assessment can help you identify key steps to influence change adoption. Ask us to complete an assessment today and discover how to improve the return on your initiatives. Contact us at info@adoptitsm.com or by calling 520-591-2427.
Advanced Organizational Performance Techniques (AdOPT) Schedules a COBIT Boot Camp which Allows Students to Obtain Two COBIT Certifications in One Week
COBIT Foundation and COBIT Assessor certification courses have been scheduled back to back creating the unique opportunity to understand the basics of COBIT as well as the more advanced COBIT Process Assessment Model. TUCSON, AZ, August 22, 2016 /PressRelease/ -- AdOPT is offering the first US based COBIT boot camp that includes both COBIT Foundation and COBIT Assessor certification in a one week format. This course has been added to the schedule the week of December 5th in New York City, NY. "The COBIT 5 framework has evolved over the years into an incredibly valuable tool for the governance and management of IT. The Assessor component of COBIT 5 provides a structured, repeatable process that can be used to understand the performance and capability of critical processes. The Assessor course is rarely offered in the US which makes it difficult for IT professionals to attend and grow their knowledge in this area. We hope by providing the courses in a boot camp format, we make it easier for IT leaders and auditors to understand the framework and how it can be leveraged to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the enterprise." - Pam Erskine In one week, students can obtain two incredibly valuable COBIT certifications. Both certification exams are included in the course. Additional information about the courses is available at http://www.adoptandinnovate.com/workshops--simulations.html. Private courses are also available. At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, process, innovation, and culture change to improve IT efficiency, increase effectiveness, and optimize costs. For more information, phone 520-591-2427, visit our website at http://www.adoptandinnovate.com or email us at info@adoptitsm.com. ![]() Organizational agility is the ability for your IT organization to adapt quickly in response to changes in technology or changes in the business. It requires the IT organization to have a foundation in place that includes the processes and controls that equate to stability but allow for flexibility so that the IT organization can be dynamic, taking advantage of change and potentially, actually thriving on change. When the IT organization has high agility, it not only supports the business in achieving its’ goals and objectives, IT offers a competitive advantage providing its’ customers with the opportunity to improve the speed to market for new products and services, facilitate a new customer experience, or optimize costs by taking advantage of changes in the technology landscape. To build agility, IT organizations must take actions to harness the power of change in the organization. It must help people not only adapt but feel that they can prosper in times of change. This often requires culture change with the organization. IT leaders can define a path which embeds agility into the culture. This requires targeted actions that tie to the very foundation of the organization. Redefining the vision and strategy process and plan, identifying and changing management behaviors, modifying job descriptions, changing the reward and incentive plan, and redesigning employee development are some basic actions that tie to embedding agility into the culture. It is an effort that requires focused planning and leadership. What if you aren’t ready to undertake this type of initiative but you want to improve the agility within your team or division? What steps can you can take to see some improvement? 5 Tips to Improve Organizational Agility
Embedding organizational agility into the IT culture takes time and focused effort but given the critical nature of technology and the pace of change in your industry, how can you afford to postpone taking steps to improve the effectiveness and adaptability of the organization? At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, innovation, process, and culture to increase effectiveness, improve efficiency, and optimize costs. Discover how an cultural assessment can help you identify key steps to influence change adoption. Ask us to complete an assessment today and discover how to improve the return on your initiatives. Contact us at info@adoptitsm.com or by calling 520-591-2427.
![]() Innovation is defined as introducing something new for the first time. If you subscribe to this definition, almost everyone is innovative on a daily basis. This definition is way too broad and it implies that merely doing something new is creative or above and beyond the status quo. Most people believe they are innovative yet they are really working within the boundaries of the existing organizational norms or processes. Innovation should be tied to value. What can be done to create a new product or way of working that creates value for a stakeholder in the organization? Usually, this involves some creativity. The stakeholder could be a customer or the department that employs you. It may or may not be an extension of something that is done today and sometimes, you will have to go way outside of the operational norms to make it happen. This new solution is a game changer for the organization. When considering innovation, take a moment to watch this video by Rafa Galeano. In the video Rafa describes innovation in a simple, easy to understand manner. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYJ81JJ1-oQ Now that we’ve defined innovation, consider this question - When was the last time you or your team did something really innovative at work? At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, innovation, process, and culture to increase effectiveness, improve efficiency, and optimize costs. Discover how facilitated problem solving can help you find innovative solutions. Ask us to facilitate a design thinking exercise to spark some innovative thinking and solve your tough IT challenges. Email us at info@adoptitsm.com or by calling 520-591-2427.
![]() The business case for IT divisions to adopt best practices should be based on the potential to achieve a greater efficiency, a higher level of effectiveness, or to optimize costs for the organization. If any one of these three goals are met, the businesses supported by IT will benefit as their ability to achieve their objectives is heightened. Before you send the next IT staff member to the latest certification training or devote time and energy to creating a project or adoption plan for a best practice, ask the following questions:
Answering the four sets of questions above will provide the IT organization with a better view of the value of a best practice adoption effort. The answers provide a foundation that can be used as a springboard for determining the next steps. Join our mailing list to ensure you don't miss another blog or important event! At AdOPT, we are transformation consultants focused on strategy, innovation, process, and culture to increase effectiveness, improve efficiency, and optimize costs. Discover how a facilitated session on defining value can help you to understand your stakeholders perspective of the value IT is providing. Ask us to facilitate a value definition exercise with your team by emailing info@adoptitsm.com or by calling 520-591-2427.
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