The traditional transaction-oriented systems view of IT is dead long back. Gone are the days of CIOs, who could do with a few metrics, analytics and spreadsheets. Over the last half of a decade, the CIOs role has undergone a dramatic change.
The Web 2.0 has made the role of a CIO far more measurable and accountable than it was ever before. With digital disrupting the enterprise world, a CIO is now responsible for delivering it all – Speed, Security, and Innovation. A CIO is at the sharp end of business change, isn’t it?
Measuring, showcasing and improving the right metrics can help the CIO deliver expected business value. Right metrics help CIOs gain credibility with the CEO and CFO, and also flaunt his function’s real contribution to the bottom line in 2018.
Finding and collating data into a dashboard is easy. However, it becomes tricky to figure out the right set of metrics to show on the dashboard. Many CIOs battle with getting the value of IT to the stakeholders and business leadership. The age-old operational level metrics such as cost measures and availability metrics or call centre metrics hold little to no significance for business leaders today. Large numbers of CIOs miss the bus on financials, innovation, and customer satisfaction.
A good CIO dashboard links business functions to IT capabilities and communicates health, delivery, outcome, and agility in the IT function. It’s constituted by reliable, repeatable and actionable metrics that help a CIO in:
Here are the top 5 metrics that build a great CIO dashboard. These metrics are likely to matter a lot this year, and in the years to come.
Operational metrics drive organizations to focus on their operational excellence and urge the management to take corrective measures in case the business objectives are not attained. A typical operational dashboard that measures and monitors IT operations would include:
A CIO plays the role of a steward driving innovation within the organization by powering daily operations and also customer engagement initiatives. Hence, they need to prudently communicate the IT value to business leadership. The jumping pad of this communication would be to articulate the impact of applications’ performance via dashboards to business peers. High-performing applications are the need of the hour since any deflection in the app speed can have an adverse impact on employee productivity, customers’ transactions, product delivery time and other business outcomes.
IT infrastructure is business-critical today. The need of the hour is to rightly link the IT activities and their outcome to the optimum utilization of business resources. All the activities within the IT portfolio mirror the efficiency and effectiveness that in turn help CIOs prioritize investments and proactive decision making, better IT strategic planning and a work environment facilitating the timely delivery of desired and tangible results.
The utilization dashboard allows for a high-level visualization of the current consumption of resources and also the available remaining capacity. Such a dashboard will help CIOs in indentifying any current risks related to resource constraints or overallocation (resources allocated over 100%).
Such metrics assist in drawing inferences and taking a decision on future investments. Not only can CIOs optimize the resource utilization with the utilization dashboards, but they can improve the customer satisfaction by optimizing the service quality of the organization. Using utilization dashboards, CIOs can also monitor their team’s productivity through billable and non-billable time.
It’s important for modern CIOs to establish some benchmarking metrics for end user satisfaction. A modern CIO can make a smart pick from surveys, focus groups, etc., and find out what works best for the organization. It’s to be clearly understood that no feedback from the users does not mean 100% user satisfaction. Tracking these metrics regularly and making the same available to business leadership will help CIOs consistently improve the IT environment within the organization.
CIOs can use metrics listed below to provide a consistently rewarding experience to users:
Tools for the New Age CIO
CIOs today have got a full plate of responsibilities – from building relationships with internal and external stakeholders and introducing new systems/technologies or processes to building their teams and much more.
Adding more and more and more to the plate can stretch CIOs thin. And with only limited time in the day, CIOs need to figure out some new tools that can help them get smarter results.
This dashboard offers a unifying mechanism track, assess and predict the management and financials of large systems and processes. It also helps in:
CIOs can leverage predictive analytics in apt scenarios to attain quickest return on investment (ROI). They need to devise methodologies for their predictive modeling techniques outlining big data, infrastructure and applications to steer their organizations forward. To accomplish this feat, CIOs need to execute a reliable architecture for building and managing predictive analytics models (employing automation) to assess the quality of resources, allocation/requirement of present and future resources, failure of IT servers, etc.