Spending
IT Budgets Wisely
IT budget growth
has slowed in Asia Pacific as businesses respond to current economic
challenges. In this article, Mr. Natasak Rodjanapiche, Managing
Director outlines the trends in current spending and the technology
options available to CIOs to maximise business benefits and return
on investment.
Spending money on technology has become a game of tactics, strategic
moves and potential risks for businesses throughout the world. Globally,
technology spending has slowed in response to the current global
economic downturn.
In Asia Pacific, companies are operating in a weak economic environment
- with the economy in the region projected to expand by 3% this
year and 4% in 2003. Throughout 2001 and 2002, achieving cost savings
was one of the main issues for Asia Pacific operations of multinational
and local organisations alike and remains a major objective through
into 2003.
Companies looking to achieve cost savings have reacted by cutting
IT budgets and overall, there appears to be constrained momentum
in Asia Pacific IT spending, with analyst predictions varying from
2.6% to 5.8% growth in 2002 and slightly more optimistic growth
outlook of over 9% in 2003.
‘Bare bones’ approach creates new buying patterns
Despite the optimistic outlook, for the moment, many IT executives
are not getting any more money, which means they have to make the
most of what they already have and be cautious about further spending.
Any request to the Board to sign off new projects will come under
close scrutiny for essential value to the business.
In the wake of the slowing economy, a “bare bones”
approach to technology spending has taken over and created new buying
patterns, with the focus on selecting the most affordable option
that can deliver the quickest return on investment. This is taking
the form of smaller, highly measurable projects and, increasingly,
an interest in outsourcing IT functions, to boost efficiency and
save money.
Technology that keeps a business up and running while also giving
it a competitive edge will be most sought after. In reviewing the
current business landscape, Oracle recommends a technology progression
path for those wanting to stay ahead of the curve yet save money.
Navigating Technology choices
The most crucial step in the process of assessing the value of an
IT infrastructure to the overall business is to understand the business
requirements and to map technology investment to them. Is a company
looking to expand into a new market? Or diversify into a new product
or industry sector? Does it need to streamline its manufacturing
capabilities? Whatever the requirements, the budget available will
have to suffice.
With a bewildering choice of technology on offer and several potential
expenditure options for an organisation’s limited IT budget,
this initial definition of requirements is the most important step
in ensuring future success in meeting short term return on investment
goals and long term business goals of competitive advantage, reduced
IT complexity, etc.
There are three key steps to get on the right path to success in
maximising IT spend and which make the most of the IT infrastructure
already in place:
Step 1 : Consolidate your information
Many businesses operate a disparate array of databases, file or
email systems, each needing management and administration. In this
scenario, most companies don’t actually know what information
they have, as their most valuable assets sit in isolated departmental
pools of data. Unstructured data is not productive and adds little
value to a company’s bottom line.
IT management teams should consider consolidating all of the company’s
data into one single database. Think about it. The name of a customer
only ever entered once, regardless of the application being used.
An employee’s details entered once for human resources, payroll
and project management purposes. By moving to a single database
model, information is centralised – which maximises availability
and performance, reduces administration and ultimately makes life
easier for customers and employees. Everyone in the company can
have selective and secure access to the same, accurate data. This
model offers visibility across the company to deliver an accurate
and real-time 360º view of key business areas including financial,
HR, customer and supplier information.
With today’s affordable database technology, this option
is entirely feasible for almost any size of business and can save
an impressive amount of IT budget that can then be used to grow
capabilities through the next steps on the technology growth path.
Step 2 : Exploit your existing hardware to the fullest
Hardware costs traditionally form a largest part of precious IT
budgets, and typically individual servers are poorly used. A recent
survey of large companies by Morgan Stanley found that 67% of servers
are utilised to less than 60% capacity – a shocking waste
of IT dollars. Clustering technologies available today obviate the
necessity for large expensive servers, and ensure hardware capacity
is used to the full.
Real Application Clusters (RAC) is basically a group of low cost
machines bound together to run large enterprise applications. This
solution to hardware waste has gained momentum as a fault-tolerant,
high-performance, scalable technology choice and is also proving
to be a viable low-cost alternative to mainframe infrastructures.
Hutchison-Priceline in Asia is an excellent example of a company
successfully using RAC technology. Hutchison-Priceline works with
one of the travel industry’s largest collections of travel
operators, including 25 airlines and 8,000 hotels worldwide, processing
high volumes of transactions on a 24/7 basis. It is using Oracle9i
RAC for all of its Asia travel service transactions, not only for
proven scalability, but also to help achieve substantial cost-savings.
With less money spent on hardware, IT managers can look to spend
their IT dollars on strategic projects for future needs.
Step 3 : Integrate your existing applications
Most companies struggle with a disconnected mix of mainframe, client/server
and web applications, and this complexity is further compounded
by any merger and acquisition activity. Web services promise a high
return on investment by integrating a company’s existing applications
and IT systems, and those of suppliers, partners and customers,
to enable rapid information sharing and transaction processing.
It’s cost-efficient, and uses what a company already has.
The birth of the application server began back with transaction
processing monitors and has evolved through web servers to Enterprise
Application Integration (EAI) and Web Services, which tie together
various parts of a company’s systems to provide more useful
access to information. Web Services and EAI can significantly streamline
and coordinate a company’s business processes and, according
to Meta Group, offer greater competitive differentiation and higher
return on investment in a down economy.
In the past, each application was its own central communication
station – this meant it needed to know how to link to many
other applications the business used as well as to the database.
The new breed of application server enables applications to communicate
via a central platform, and is an efficient way to centralise data
and link all of a business’ applications.
The market for this key software infrastructure product is heating
up. Analysts have reported that the Asia Pacific (excluding Japan)
market in 2001 grew at more than 39% and the pace of growth is set
to increase.
Software outsourcing – predictable costs, professionally
managed
One further key consideration to maximise IT budgets is the new
model of software outsourcing. A first-class software system is
critical in delivering strategic intelligence and indispensable
in managing the company’s greatest asset – information.
However, the actual management of the software systems can be a
distraction and a burden for a company whose core competence is
not related to IT.
Today, progressive organisations in both the private and public
sectors, are turning to software outsourcing, the so-called ‘utility
computing’ model, which allows a company to have its software
professionally managed either at their own offices, the IT vendors
premises, or at a third party’s premises - and to connect
to their data through a browser. Just as electricity is available
at the flick of a switch, their IT system is accessed at the click
of a mouse.
The benefits are enormous. Software outsourcing eliminates all
the headaches - the sheer administrative burden of maintaining essential
business software, the deployment of new IT projects, the ongoing
upgrades, the sourcing of scarce IT staff, and the employee or consultant
costs. And the uptake is increasing. With Oracle, companies can
select to have their software housed at their own premises, at Oracle’s
data centre, or at a third party’s data centre. In all these
models, Oracle professionals manage the software remotely –
all for a predictable monthly fee.
Outsourcing of the IT infrastructure is not new, but the traditional
model is changing. By accessing software applications like a utility,
via internet-enabled systems, companies can better manage the distribution
of their resources. Mobility of the workforce can be achieved easily
and transparently by providing access to the corporate systems any
place, any time via a spectrum of mobile devices.
Spending wisely
Today, businesses of all sizes should concentrate on investing their
IT budgets in technology that maximises their existing infrastructure,
and that allows them to focus on their core business, while taking
a longer-term view to ensure that they have the necessary technology
in place to emerge from the current economic downturn ahead of the
competition. Those who spend wisely today will be well placed to
be the winners tomorrow.
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