When selecting metrics and KPIs to share with the business, what are you more concerned with?
Building confidence in IT’s value43%
Influencing decision making of the business47%
Both equally9%
74 PARTICIPANTS
417 views1 Upvote1 Comment
Sort by:
Content you might like
I represent a business in the FMCG industry, and we are seeking support for end-to-end financial reporting to help with innovation planning. We are looking for a system or suite of solutions that can address the following requirements: SKU-level P&L entry for new product development (NPD) and cannibalization, Excel-based uploads aligned with market templates, or seamless integration with finance systems, Gate stage tracking for each project and market, Timely updates ahead of local PMRs, Automatic reflection of actual performance, and an intuitive interface to encourage user compliance. Could you please share examples of systems or solutions that have successfully met these requirements in the FMCG sector, especially those with a proven track record of delivering value? I welcome your input and any case studies or recommendations you can provide.
We are defining the key monitoring metrics for IT Observability (application / log/ infra/ network/real user/ synthetic monitoring). Any suggestions on best practice metrics we should implement for the above monitoring capabilities?
Agiloft7%
Conga23%
DocuSign CLM (SpringCM)38%
Apttus6%
Ironclad4%
Coupa (Exari)4%
Other (discuss below)16%
Is your business considering the purchase of accounts receivable automation software?
Yes66%
No25%
Unsure9%
The business should be familiar with the what IT does, why we do it, and how we deliver. In my experience metrics and KPIs leave our purpose open to interpertation or worse over looked and taken for granted. This creates instability in strategy and delivery, while reacting to the latest and greatest technology heightlighted in Forbes or the marketing email the board sent over requesting a whitepaper strategy for implementation. KPI should mean 'Keep People Informed'. In my experience IT leaders can be relunctant to communicate with the business about general IT topics; improved security, stability/performance, and process improvement through automation. If more IT leaders would promoted the why, what, and how, alue IT brings to the business the more likely IT purpose and strategy is understood; and when we are understood and seen as a partner, influencing decisions becomes the measureable output. Demonstrating what your team can do, not just through KPIs and metrics but through relationship and communication is in my opinion how we become influencial within the business.