Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Planning for Application Modernization

posted by Peter Mollins at
eWeek just published a strong piece on how to plan Application Modernization initiatives. In the first paragraph industry expert Tim Pacileo identifies the key for any modernization activity: justify it. CIOs face a multitude of competing interests when determining where to allocate resources. The pressures are more intense now that IT has become so tightly interwoven with very visible business processes. As a result, it is critical that the CIO has the right information available to determine which priorities should be selected and why.

This is the role of Application Portfolio Management. It provides a framework to collect measurements and place them into business context. This allows CIOs to quickly determine which projects make sense to act on based on the strategy of overall organization and not just on the narrower needs of IT. Justifying projects is vastly simplified when the interests of IT are tied to the business.

Interestingly, Pacileo suggests using a chargeback model to ensure that costs are properly associated with the correct IT activity. The best approach for this method is via business-centric portfolio management. By placing application portfolios into business context (by operational unit, geography, etc) CIOs can match costs to the exact software (and IT infrastructure) that is incurring the costs.

Pacielo also points out that in the rush to solve problems, IT often will product multiple overlapping applications that drain resources. A business-centric Application Portfolio Management solution is again the ideal approach. When IT compels itself to match business-value, cost, and risk to IT assets these kinds of glaring issues become readily apparent. He cites the example of one company having three overlapping systems. We've seen cases with more than 2 dozen duplicate systems being maintained separately.

Application Portfolio Management is an increasingly rigorous discipline. Executives should turn to this framework when determining where priorities lie and how to justify them.

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