MIT Sloan Website




STORE
Search   
 
Home View Cart Check Out Contact Us Help/FAQs

Business Ethics and Public Policy
Corporate Strategy
Financial Management
Human Resources
Global Business
Leadership
Information Systems
Technology and Innovation
Managerial Economics
Marketing
Operations
Service and Quality
Miscellaneous
Back Issues
Sustainability
Collections
Generating Premium Returns on Your IT Investments
By Peter Weill and Sinan Aral
Winter 2006
Reprint 47211
Volume 47, Number 2, pages 39-48, 10 pages
Primary Topic: Information Systems
Secondary Topic: Corporate Strategy

Related Articles

Summary

Although IT portfolio management has been a best practice for some time, many companies still generate substandard returns from their IT investments. The authors note that investing the right amounts in the right IT asset classes is only the first step -- IT portfolio management techniques must be complemented by a suite of interlocking business practices and processes collectively labeled "IT savvy." The benefits of establishing such practices add up to a tangible IT savvy premium: The authors point to higher net profits and other performance gains for IT-savvy companies in the year following their investments in key IT asset categories. The article cites a range of organizations -- from 7-Eleven Japan and Amazon.com to Raytheon and Carlson Companies -- in which IT savvy is ingrained, informing many of the companies' business decisions and sharply focusing their IT investments. Starting with a refresher on the IT portfolio approach -- and noting best-practices portfolio players such as UPS, Eli Lilly and Mohegan Sun -- the authors draw on the findings of a multiyear survey to review the different IT assets in which companies invest before discussing the gap in IT investment returns that separates those with IT savvy from those without. They present five hallmarks of IT savvy and offer a series of practical suggestions for how managers can start to match IT savvy with the IT asset mix.

OR

Includes one pdf to copy from.
Pricing is based on # of
copies made.

Info on pricing and academic discounts.


Related Articles

Avoiding the Alignment Trap in IT

By David Shpilberg, Steve Berez, Rudy Puryear and Sachin Shah
Fall 2007
Reprint 49102



Beyond the Business Case: New Approaches to IT Investment

By Jeanne W. Ross and Cynthia M. Beath
Winter 2002
Reprint 4325



Building IT Infrastructure for Strategic Agility

By Peter Weill, Mani Subramani and Marianne Broadbent
Fall 2002
Reprint 4416



 
 
Copyright © Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1977-2009. All rights reserved.
877-727-7170, mitsmr@pubservice.com