Seventy percent of all IT projects fail—and scores of books
have attempted to help firms measure and manage IT systems and
processes better in order to turn this figure around In this book,
IT experts Peter D. Weill and Jeanne W. Ross argue that the real
reason IT fails to deliver value is that companies have no formal
system in place for guiding and monitoring IT decisions. Their
research shows that firms with explicit IT governance systems have
twice the profit of firms with poor governance, given the same
strategic objectives. Just as corporate governance systems aim to
ensure quality decisions about corporate assets, the authors show,
companies need IT governance systems to ensure that IT investments
are made wisely and effectively.
關於作者:
Peter Weill is the Director of the Center for Information
Systems Research CISR and a Senior Research Scientist at MIT’s
Sloan School of Management. Jeanne W. Ross is Principal Research
Scientist at CISR.
目錄:
Preface and Acknowledgments
1. IT Governance Simultaneously Empowers and Controls
2. Five Key IT Decisions: Making IT a Strategic Asset
3. IT Governance Archetypes for Allocating Decision Rights
4. Mechanisms for Implementing IT Governance
5. What IT Governance Works Best
6, Linking Strategy, IT Governance, and Performance
7. Government and Not-for-Profit Organizations
8. Leadership Principles for IT Governance
Appendix A: Research Sites
Appendix B: Measuring Governance Performance
Notes
Index
About the Authors