Smart Partnering
Keeping it simple isn’t always, well, simple.
By Paul Hyman
Winter 2007
CIOs, management consultants say, ought to persuade their service providers to agree on common solutions to reduce complexity. But invoking the KISS principle—“Keep it simple, stupid!”—isn’t so, well, simple. Service providers don’t always cooperate, the analysts say. Too often they create disparate solutions whose incompatibilities with other aspects of the business require CIOs to act as integrators. “Smart partnering is worth the effort and can certainly increase the chance of success,” says Jim Hayes, managing director of Accenture’s global Oracle practice. “When success does occur, the benefits include cost and time savings and reduced risk. Of course, any success makes a CIO look great.”
Keeping it simple is especially challenging in large, complex organizations, where
inevitably, many partners and suppliers are
part of the IT ecosystem. The more partners
are involved, the more important it is to reach
common solutions, suggests Dennis Walters,
who, as global alliance director at EDS, is
responsible for such key alliance partners as
Motorola and CA.
“Common solutions reduce complexity in
the environments, translating into lower
costs and a better user experience,” Walters
says. “In the long run, that means happier customers
and fewer calls to the CIO saying IT
services aren’t adequate.”
Hayes, Walters and John Romagnoli, a
senior analyst in Wholesale Communications
Strategies at the Yankee Group, offer the following
seven recommendations to CIOs
eager to pursue common solutions.
TIP 1 >
Choose your service providers wisely. Actually, you don’t really want service providers; you want providers with solutions to your problems.
“The number one frustration for CIOs is how difficult it is to find companies with thoughtful, intelligent solutions for their particular problems,” Romagnoli says. “Whenever I’m at a trade show, CIOs tell me that they are impatient with providers who just ‘throw products over the wall until, finally, one fits.’ ”
Romagnoli says that although some of the smaller carriers in the U.S. telecom industry are more nimble than the larger service providers, companies such as Verizon and AT&T “are starting to come to the table with real solutions rather than piece parts. That’s the sort of company you want on your side.”
He recommends that CIOs emulate government procurement officers. Contact one or two service providers, Romagnoli advises, and tell them upfront in the RFP that they will be expected to partner with other service providers to make solutions happen.
“The government wants to know more than that its service providers will use partners,” Romagnoli says. “It wants to know how they’ll use partners—and how they’ll integrate.”
The result, he concludes, “is a sort of internal certification process through which a CIO can identify a provider, understand its capabilities and expect a documented, repeatable model that, in effect, says that when the provider presents a solution, it will be a ubiquitous one that extends across the CIO’s entire sphere of operation.”
TIP 2 >
Seek out service providers that have already “prepartnered.” A real find for a CIOis a service provider that has gone through a prepartnering process with other service providers. The advantage is that such a provider may have addressed and developed solutions for some of the problems the CIO is experiencing.
“We’re talking about a service provider that, on its own, has gotten together with competitors and said, ‘Let’s come up with a common solution here,’ ” Romagnoli explains. For example, he says, AT&T has been layering services on top of its Ethernet service by certifying such partners as Verizon and Bell South.
“AT&T is certifying partners it can recommend up front,” Romagnoli says. For example, he says, when AT&T tells a CIO that the company needs to go into Verizon’s footprint before it can build a solution, AT&T can add that Verizon is already one of its certified partners. “That’s a flag for the CIO that AT&T has already done its homework,” Romagnoli says.
TIP 3 >
Set a clear governance structure. CIOs must make certain that service providers understand their specific roles and responsibilities.
“Once the roles are understood,” says Accenture’s Hayes, “service providers do their best thinking. They get together to consider and come up with hugely advantageous solutions for the client’s problems. It’s only when the client pits service providers against one another or creates an unhealthy competitive environment that the situation can become problematic.”
There may be a certain amount of debate at the beginning of the process, EDS’s Walters says, but after the CIO has made a decision about how to implement, the debate is over, and it’s time to execute.
“The CIO has to clarify the situation: ‘Provider #1, this is where you fit in, and this is your swim lane. Provider #2, this is what you’re bringing to the party,’ and so on,” Walters says. “Everything has to be spelled out up front, and everyone has to understand that there are common systems, a common reporting structure and a common governance structure.”
TIP 4 >
Put it in writing. Not only do the service providers need to know who is responsible for what, but they
also need to understand the common goal.
“If it’s not explicitly stated—if it’s not in writing — the odds that all the providers will understand the objective are reduced drastically,” Walters warns. “Each service provider may have the customer’s best interests in mind, but if the CIO doesn’t spell out what is expected from every party — as clearly as possible — different opinions on the best ways to meet the CIO’s needs may give rise to friction.”
TIP 5 >
Don’t forget incentives. Underscore the value of common solutions by including incentives that encourage service providers to work together.
“Adjust variable compensation on the basis of how smoothly the service providers function together,” Walters recommends.
TIP 6 >
But keep your hands off the differentiators. Hayes cautions CIOs to remember that all solutions can’t be common solutions. If a business has a competitive advantage that delivers real value, the CIO shouldn’t try to eliminate differences in order to simplify things. Differentiators, he says, should be accentuated, even if that means dealing with a little more complexity.
Less complexity to lower cost of ownership is, Hayes says, “an admirable goal. But the trick is for the CIO to recognize the business drivers in his company, as well as the differentiating technologies those drivers deliver in support of the business. Then, I think, it’s OKto be not so common. One mistake a CIO can make is to take a differentiating facet of the business and try to change it merely for purposes of simplification.”
TIP 7 >
Keep your eye on the ball. It’s not enough to select service providers and give them their marching orders. The process must be reviewed regularly, assessing the effectiveness of the providers — individually and collectively.
“In some cases, reviewing once every quarter is enough,” Walters says. “In other cases, once a month or more [often] may be appropriate. For sure, once a year isn’t going to work.”
CIOs should never be wed to the original plan and, depending on the outcome of the regular reviews, they should be ready to make adjustments. The best solution providers continuously learn about the CIO’s business and its operations, and as part of that process, they can offer new ideas on ways to make improvements. That, as they say, is a good thing.
Paul Hyman is a freelance writer who reports on the technology sector. He was formerly editor in chief of Electronic Buyers’ News and GamePower.
How Deloitte & Touche Builds Client Success
Nothing breeds success
like success. That's
why Deloitte & Touche
LLP security consultants
consider setting short-term
goals a leading practice when developing
strategic customer-specific
solutions. "I like to showcase incremental
successes every four to six
months," says Deborah Golden, a
principal in Deloitte & Touche's
Security & Privacy Services practice.
"We like to show value as soon as
possible and build toward the long term vision
demonstrating value
along the way."
Deloitte & Touche consultants
utilize short-term goals to keep
clients engaged and focused on the
strategic value of the solution,
Golden explains. These short-term
wins keep stakeholders involved in
the process. "That way, when you
move to the next step, you don't
have to pull the stakeholders along,"
she adds. "They've seen what they're
achieving, and they want to continue
building on prior accomplishments."
Another Deloitte & Touche leading
practice for developing customer specific
solutions: secure buy-in from
all stakeholders in the project. That's
especially important when a solution
involves not only the CIO and several
suppliers, but also multiple business
units across the CIO's organization,
Golden says. By finding common
solutions, multiple business units in
the same organization can utilize a
single approach and underlying technology
solution to develop comprehensive
results that may ultimately
lead to a higher degree of economies
of scale. "So many of today's solutions
integrate common technologies
across various applications, infrastructure
and business units," Golden
explains. "The true value of an
identity management solution
encompasses many aspects of an
organization and not just one silo
component and business unit."
Get Hip to HIPAA
Putting these principles into action,
Deloitte & Touche's Security &
Privacy Services group recently
advised a health-care client that
sought recommendations on
processes that involve Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA)
requirements.
To do so, the Deloitte & Touche
security consulting team reviewed the
complexityof the client's environment.
This environment supported not only
the client's own employees, but also an
entire community of physicians, nurses,
students and multiple campuses.
Next, the Deloitte & Touche team drew
up a priorities road map for the client.
"We aligned those proposed priorities
into areas that could be delivered in
incremental and successful components,"
Golden recounts, "not only to
one particular organization, but also to
the greater community that our client
has to support."
Golden and her team have
another advantage, namely the
breadth of the practice at Deloitte &
Touche. The firm brings together
many years of global industry experience
with a complete array of
security and privacy services across
all industries. By virtue of this global
organization, Deloitte & Touche's
clients have access to experienced
professionals and specialists who
can address specific, complex issues
from multiple angles.
This multi-disciplinary business
model allows industry-experienced
specialists to support the engagement
by applying specialized
knowledge, skills, resources and
tools. "Because of what we call a
multidisciplinary approach with
audit and control capabilities, industry
practices and more, we team
together to solve our clients'
problems," Golden says.
"We can easily reach out to other
member firms that specialize in a
certain area, whether an application,
technology or industry."
To create powerful, unified
solutions, the Security & Privacy
Services group at Deloitte &
Touche often turns to vendors with
which it has relationships. Deloitte
& Touche connects these vendors
with its Identity and Access
Management specialists to create
solutions that meet client requirements,
Golden says. For example,
the aforementioned health-care
provider performed an analysis of
proposed technology solutions
from CA and three other software
vendors. After a careful review,
the client selected the CA solution.
"Our client believed CA was the
company that most holistically
met their needs," Golden explains.
"The alliance relationship between
CA and Deloitte & Touche permitted
our two organizations to work
together effectively to deliver the
solution to our client."
"The alliance relationship between
CA and Deloitte & Touche permitted
our two organizations to work
together effectively to deliver the
solution to our client."
Leveraging Deloitte & Touche's
approach of maintaining a steady
stream of short-term goals, the
CA and Deloitte & Touche team
integrated the first phase of the
healthcare engagement — which
included people, process and
technology components — in just
four months. Next, the team will
incorporate additional solutions in
phases two, three and beyond.
"The alliance has produced a solution
for the client that might not
have occurred without both of our
involvements," Golden says.
"That's the true value of not only
an alliance, but also the value we
provide to our clients."
— P.H.
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