Technology estates are becoming increasingly complex and inflexible for many organizations. Between mergers and acquisitions, the need to prioritize core versus emerging operations, business cycle-driven investments, and a history of getting by with aging technology—the IT function has often tolerated these challenges. Rather than modernizing their technology, they’ve held onto the status quo, continuing to maintain their systems—or worse, having to continuously triage legacy systems to keep up with changing conditions.
But rapid market shifts are making the previously tolerable, intolerable. Customer and business user experience expectations are rising. Regulations are mounting. Sustainable technology and security are increasing priorities. And emerging technologies like cloud, data, AI, and more recently Gen AI have spawned a new era of modernized IT.
Put simply: modernizing today’s IT function can be more than just updating technology. It’s about shifting the orientation of the function from a business service provider to a business value driver. In this article, we explore barriers to making that crucial shift and highlight tips for helping successfully drive modernization programs.
An effective method for changing the way we approach IT modernization is to reconsider the incentives that drive day-to-day operations and deep-seated perspectives of what success looks like. Historically, there have been three ways the IT function has been inadvertently incentivized into being inflexible and unable to keep up with the pace of change:
Although it may sound obvious to some, the key is to think beyond the walls of your IT function and to measure and deliver what is most important to your business.
Like legacy IT, conventional outsourcing and managed service providers (MSPs) have traditionally delivered reactive, short-term wins. Through next-generation managed services—or what Deloitte calls Operate Services—we are seeing organizations repositioning IT as a reliable business value driver. This is materializing in a variety of ways for Deloitte clients, but here are three big wins we see repeatedly:
In the face of new regulatory challenges and market complications due to commodity price fluctuation, a large process manufacturing organization was looking for innovative ways to improve its financial and logistics processes. Its legacy SAP enterprise resource planning application MSP offered basic support capabilities but was unable to generate the insights required to truly modernize its business-critical IT operation.
Through Deloitte Operate Application Management Services, the manufacturer has introduced advanced automations across its entire SAP estate, resulting in more efficient finance and supply chain processes while also delivering analytics that allowed enterprise leaders to adapt to new challenges and improve business outcomes. The solution ranges from the incremental deployment of robotic process automation to reduce manual steps in finance processes and the cleansing of the organization’s material master (central master record for logistics) to help optimize inventory.
In today's fast-paced business environment, modernizing the IT function is no longer just about upgrading technology, but shifting the orientation of the function from a business enabler to a value creator. Providers of next-generation managed services, or Operate services, are emerging as important players in helping organizations achieve this shift. These third parties can help businesses unlock more value from emerging applications and technology by helping eliminate low-value tasks and processes, reducing technical debt, reorienting operational focus towards strategic business outcomes, and rethinking outdated approaches to incentivization and success measurement.