Ivanti
today announced survey findings that show that IT leaders in companies
across the U.S., Europe and Middle East are caught up in a balancing act where
everyday tasks, such as maintaining strong operations, are outweighing more
creative projects, such as leading innovation and supporting new digital
business initiatives. This is according to a new survey carried out by IDG
Connect, and commissioned by Ivanti.
The survey, "The
CIO's Conundrum: Can IT Move from ‘Keep the Lights On' to Creative Thinking?"
which was based on the responses of over 300 IT decision makers, discovered a
tension whereby tasks such as supporting business processes, lowering IT spend
and taking responsibility for corporate governance and regulatory compliance
are taking precedence over creativity.
"It's not over-dramatizing matters to argue that enterprises today face an
existential crisis: innovate or die," said Matthew Smith, President, Demand
Generation at IDG Communications. "As globalization and digital-native
start-ups threaten incumbents, smart companies need to liberate their CIOs to
think ahead of the curve rather than obsess over day-to-day operations. But
today IT is all too often still regarded as a support function or information
leaders are too stretched to drive competitive differentiation."
The IDG survey found that maintaining critical infrastructure and IT systems
was the most cited expectation for more than half (56%) of respondents. After
that, the most cited expectations were lowering IT spend (50%) and supporting
more agile business processes (41%). The least cited expectations were enabling
executive leadership's strategic innovation (28%) and training staff on IT
security (23%).
When asked how their IT teams spent most of their time, respondents most cited
security initiatives (52%), implementing new technologies/processes (52%),
maintaining and updating applications/systems (42%) and acquiring the right
talent (38%). Asked about investment plans over the next two years, 53% said
there would be more money allocated for new cloud and infrastructure while 46%
expect increased budget for data analytics and 39% expect to invest in
maintaining/modernizing existing infrastructure and services.
"Progressive CIOs want to innovate! Currently, the day to day
operations or 'keeping the lights on' demands the lion's share of the IT
budget, while only a fraction is currently dedicated to driving
innovation," said Duane Newman, Vice President, Product Management and
Marketing at Ivanti. "IT can't let the operations ball drop.
When companies provide 5% or 10% more time on innovation and
creativity, they quickly reap benefits and deliver true digital
competitive advantages for their business."
To view the full report, The
CIO's Conundrum: Can IT Move from ‘Keep the Lights On' to Creative Thinking? visit: https://go.ivanti.com/Web-White-Paper-The-CIOs-Conundrum.html.