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When I talk to clients about their IT organization, I use the terms “IT” and “The Business” to distinguish between the groups that support and the groups that consume the technology.  Too often I see that distinction continue within the organization itself, rather than considering the organization as a whole.  For example:

  • Many organizations have an IT Strategy that is separate from the overall business strategy
  • Enterprise Risk Assessments consider “Technology” as a separate and distinct risk that must be evaluated
  • Audits are often separated between IT and process efforts

This mindset is often indicative of a disconnect between the two groups.  But why do we see this disconnect?  CIO.com recently tried to answer this question based on their regular #CIOChat and I think that the 8 reasons they outline are pretty spot on.  You should read the full article on CIO.com, but here are the 8 reasons in summary:

  1. IT’s relative newness
  2. Poor historical focus on alignment
  3. Lack of transparency and common language
  4. IT says “No” too quickly
  5. The willingness to be strategi
  6. How IT operates
  7. Lack of business technical backgroud
  8. How the business is organized

[dvbox title=”My favorite quote from the article:” style=”light”]

“Why is it always IT versus the business? It’s not finance versus the business. Why, she asked, is there an other-worldness to IT?

[/dvbox]

What do you think?  Can you share any other reasons why the IT-business disconnect might exist?  Share your thoughts in the comments below.