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Portfolio Management Maturity Model at Chevron - Presentation & Discussion
November 13, 11:30 AM - 12:30 PM ET (GMT-4)
The fundamental goal of the model is to help IT become a business partner and earn a seat at the table. Core to the model is to establish a five year IT strategic road map that is owned by the business. Presenter Janinne Franke is manager of strategy, planning & optimization at Chevron's corporate department & services. She will share processes and lessons learned from developing and implementing the model.
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February 29, 2008 — CIO — The last time we sweated through an economy as harsh as today's environment—back around 2002—the technology market looked very different.
CIOs, fresh off a multiyear technology buying spree fueled by the dotcom boom, were trying to justify their spending in an uncertain post-9/11 economy. Vendors such as PeopleSoft and Business Objects were selling strong against Oracle, Microsoft, SAP and other big rivals. Influential financial companies, such as Merrill Lynch and E-Trade, had just begun committing to Linux. Sure, the economy stunk. But CIOs could negotiate better deals thanks to a competitive vendor landscape.
Today, CIOs have mostly mastered the case for ROI but are under new pressure to come up with ways IT can generate revenue for their companies. Open-source Linux is now an established standard; less-tried computing models such as virtualization are the current risky bets. Meanwhile, Microsoft, Oracle and SAP have snapped up dozens of other technology companies, shrinking CIO choice in the enterprise vendor market. And the economy stinks. Again.
But you're wrong if you think a potential recession, combined with big-time consolidation in the software market, has stripped CIOs of all bargaining power. Now is the right time to push technology vendors for a better deal than the one you have, even if you've recently signed contracts, say CIOs and their heavy-hitter negotiators.
But the way you go about it will make all the difference.
To get the inside track, we talked to top CIOs who take no guff as they command technology budgets in the hundreds of millions. We also interviewed veteran negotiators who specialize in crafting IT contracts. With advice ranging from how to make industry consolidation work for you, to how and why to hang back from forming a so-called partnership with a tech supplier, these diplomats relish doing deals in adverse circumstances.
You can, too. If you manage vendor relationships with strength and subtlety. (Read about the challenges small companies face with big vendors in "What if Yoda Ran IBM?.)
"Everyone understands we're facing recession. The vendor doesn't want to lose you," says Jeff Muscarella, managing partner at NPI Financial, a spend management consulting firm in Atlanta. Know that, he advises, and use it.
Just the basics, please. Sometimes we all need a refresher or we need to make sure our team and our colleagues are all on the same page.
Over 25 tutorials on everything from business intelligence to virtualization.