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This week: Funding of IT (ch 9 in Pearlson/Saunders). John Krogstie, IDI. INTRODUCTION. This chapter looks at the financial side of IT. First we explore ways of funding the IT department,
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This week:Funding of IT (ch 9 in Pearlson/Saunders) John Krogstie, IDI
INTRODUCTION • This chapter looks at the financial side of IT. • First we explore ways of funding the IT department, • Then, we look at ways to calculate the cost of IT investments, including total cost of ownership and activity based costing. • Finally, we consider ways of monitoring IT investments after they are made.
Funding the IT department • How are costs associated with designing, developing, delivering and maintaining IT systems recovered? • There are three main funding methods: • Chargeback • Allocation • Corporate budget
Chargeback • IT costs are recovered by charging individuals, departments, or business units • Rates for usage are calculated based on the actual cost to the IT group to run the system and billed out on a regular basis • They are popular because they are viewed as the most equitable way to recover IT costs • However, creating and managing a chargeback system is a costly endeavor • In Norway around 20 % use chargeback, more in large than in small organizations, more in USA
Allocation • Recovers costs based on something other than usage, such as revenues, log-in accounts, or number of employees • Its primary advantage is that it is simpler to implement and apply • There are two major problems: • The 'free rider' problem • Deciding the basis for charging out the costs
Corporate Budget • Here the costs fall to the corporate P&L, rather than levying charges on specific users or business units • In this case there is no requirement to calculate prices of the IT systems and hence no financial concern raised monthly by the business managers • However, there are drawbacks, as shown in the next slide
How much does IT cost? • The most basic method for calculating the cost of a system is to add up the costs of all the components including hardware, software, network, and the labor of the people involved • Many MIS organizations calculate the initial costs and ongoing maintenance costs in just this way
Activity Based Costing • Activity Based Costing (ABC)counts the actual activities that go into making a specific product or delivering a specific service. • Activities are processes, functions, or tasks that occur over time and have recognized results. They consume assigned resources to produce products and services. • Activities are useful in costing because they are thecommon denominator between business process improvement and information improvement across departments
Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) • TCO is fast becoming the industry standard • It looks beyond initial capital investments to include costs associated with technical support, administration, and training. • This technique estimates annual costs per user for each potential infrastructure choice; these costs are then totaled. • Careful estimates of TCO provide the best investment numbers to compare with financial return numbers when analyzing the net returns on various IT options
TCO Component Breakdown • For shared components like servers and printers, TCO estimates should be computed per component and then divided among all users who access them • For more complex situations, such as when only certain groups of users possess certain components, it is wise to segment the hardware analysis by platform • Soft costs, such as technical support, administration, and training are easier to estimate than they may first appear
TCO as a Management Tool • TCO also can help managers understand how infrastructure costs break down • It provides the fullest picture of where managers spend their money as TCO results can be evaluated over time against industry standards • Even without comparison data, the numbers that emerge from TCO studies assist in decisions about budgeting, resource allocation, and organizational structure
Valuing IT Investments • Soft benefits, such as the ability to make future decisions, make it difficult to measure the payback of IT investment • First, IT can be a significant part of the annual budget, thus under close scrutiny. • Second, the systems themselves are complex, and calculating the costs is an art, not a science. • Third, because many IT investments are for infrastructure, the payback period is much longer than other types of capital investments. • Fourth, many times the payback cannot be calculated because the investment is a necessity rather than a choice, and there is no tangible payback
Pitfalls in Analyzing IT Investments • Not every decision calls for in-depth analysis. Some are easy to make. • Not every evaluation method works in every case • Circumstances may alter the way a particular valuation method is best employed • Managers can fall into “analysis paralysis” • Even when the numbers say a project is not worthwhile, the investment may be necessary to remain competitive
Monitoring IT Investments • Management's role is to insure that the money spent on IT results in benefits for the organization. • That means an agreed-upon set of metrics must be created, and those metrics must be monitored and communicated to senior management and customers of the IT department
The Balanced Scorecard • Focuses attention on the organization’s value drivers (which include, but are not limited to, financial performance) • Companies use it to assess the full impact of their corporate strategies on their customers and workforce, as well as their financial performance • This methodology allows managers to look at their business from four perspectives: customer, internal business, innovation/learning, and financial
The Balanced Scorecard applied to IT • Applying the categories of the balanced scorecard to IT might mean interpreting them more broadly than originally conceived • For example, for the MIS scorecard, the customer is a user within the company, not an external customer • The questions asked when using this methodology within the IT department are summarized in the next slide
The IT Balanced Scorecard • A scorecard used within the IT department helps senior IS managers understand their organization’s performance, and measure it in a way that supports its business strategy • The IT scorecard is linked to the corporate scorecard, by insuring that the measures used by IT are those that support the corporate goals
IT Dashboards • IT dashboards summarize key metrics for senior managers in a manner that provides quick identification of the status of the organization • Dashboards provide frequently-updated information on areas of interest within the IT department. • The data tends to focus on project status or operational systems status • Problems can be identified and handled without waiting for the monthly CIO meeting