Technology, data and cybersecurity teams have long struggled to showcase their value within their parent organizations. The complexity of technology coupled with hard-to-define and easy-to-manage metrics leaves technology teams struggling to showcase their value and execute within a timeframe in which the business can accept the investment and risks associated with the potential return. As the speed of technology-driven change has accelerated, this problem has amplified with technology, data and cybersecurity teams continually working to manage tech debt while being asked to deliver new capabilities in ever-more compressed timelines.
While technology, data and cybersecurity teams can struggle with their value proposition, other key business functions have managed to build tools and shared language to measure and communicate their success. Sales, finance and corporate development have a strong toolbox, including sales budgets, value creation plans, profit & loss statements, GAAP-accounting standards and the rule of 40 that are generally accepted and widely understood. When these tools are employed, these organizations start from the advantage of a shared understanding of their inputs, information formatting, timelines and the standards used to produce them.
The challenge for many technology, data and cybersecurity teams is using abstract cost savings, cost avoidance or return on investment. While the formula itself is not abstract, the elements that come into consideration for the accuracy of the forecast can be used by many non-technology stakeholders to evaluate a plan to determine if it is worthy of their budget investment. When unlocking additional technology investment, the most successful teams will focus on aligning their tasks and timelines to corporate imperatives. This provides visibility across executive leadership and the assignment of investment dollars already allocated for corporate initiatives.
To do this technology, data and cybersecurity teams must leverage tools that can be easily parsed and understood across the organization. I believe the more technology, data, and cybersecurity teams can leverage common business measurement tools, the more effective they will be at showcasing the value they bring to an organization. Some common tools I see being adopted by teams to showcase their investments and align across an organization include:
Once we align on our tool and communication of value method, we need to adjust the language we use and structure to showcase the value we provide across common technology, data and cybersecurity projects. Showcasing all technology, data and cybersecurity projects through the lens of corporate and business metrics leads to better understanding and acceptance across the business. Some common IT metrics and their business counterparts can include:
Technology, data, and cybersecurity teams often feel doom and gloom when working to gain support and investment. But all is not lost. Organizations see the value data and AI bring to product launches, customer adoption and revenue. It falls to the technology, data and cybersecurity teams to bring their initiatives and investments forward so that other business leaders understand the full scope of impact while balancing endless tradeoffs between limited budget, risk, market forces and organizational change.