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Home Newsroom Latest News June 2002 Building Better IT Partnerships

Building Better IT Partnerships

Building Better IT Partnerships

Lou D'Ambrosio
(Lou D'Ambrosio is a 1986 Smeal College graduate, and is Vice President of Worldwide Sales and Marketing for the IBM Software Group. Mr. D'Ambrosio leads a team of more than 12,000 professionals for IBM's $13B software business. He is responsible for worldwide sales, global brand management, channels, and international operations.)

If, as you've no doubt discovered in your studies, information technology (IT) is the future of business, why is it such a pain to manage productively? Since my days at Penn State, I've come to see that the reasons lie in the way IT has evolved. And I've found that the solution - one that you will soon help provide - lies in a move toward partner relationships among technology suppliers.

Imagine a world where you could fill your gas tank with only one brand of gasoline, because your car was incompatible with all the others. Or think about owning a phone that could only communicate with other phones of the same type.

These ideas sound absurd to us. A world organized this way would range from intolerably inconvenient to completely unworkable. And yet, we created such a world in the early days of the IT revolution. Clearly, there's much work for you to do as you enter this daunting arena.

Nobody planned it this way. However, as computers found their way into the business world, we were faced with a seemingly limitless universe of possibilities - and like kids in a candy store - we wanted some of everything.

However, getting a computer system to serve the needs of business without creating more problems than it solved turned out to be a formidable challenge. It was a challenge best left to the experts; that is, the suppliers of the technology. Business people had their own operations to run. And the technology experts, understandably, built and sold integrated systems to their customers, telling them that a single vendor meant a single solution to all of a customer's IT needs.

It sounded great on paper. But in fact, vendor-driven solutions work only when all the vendors are reading off the same page. To use the automobile analogy, we buy cars as a single-solution package from a vendor. This works because all cars run on the same types of gasoline and drive, turn, park, and stop in the same ways. Thus, we can all operate on the same streets and highways, with a single set of rules governing our actions.

Historically, this has not been the case with IT systems. Those single-vendor "solutions" have created massive headaches for business organizations because there has been so little common ground and so little compatibility across systems from different vendors. As a result, businesses whose "legacy" systems (the technology that is already in place) need to grow and interact with IT operations in other parts of the company, or with suppliers or customers, find that upgrading is a monstrous undertaking that cannibalizes precious resources, human and otherwise.

These organizations are often faced with a Hobson's choice: continue to remain dependent upon the original vendor, or take a deep breath and start the whole IT-building process over from scratch. The drawbacks of the latter choice are obvious; making the former choice runs the risk of subordinating business objectives and strategies to IT needs, rather than vice versa.

Mounting problems with systems compatibility and flexibility, coupled with the economic belt-tightening that has become the new organizational mantra, has forced business to take a more critical look at how to fill its IT needs. That in turn has forced suppliers to listen more to their customers. And what we have heard is that most companies, using an average of eight operating platforms to support their IT operations, want to be able to navigate across those systems easily and expand them compatibly. They don't want to tear the house down in order to retrofit it, and they want to communicate with all the other houses in their universe.

The result is a move to partnerships: a sea change in how the IT industry does business. Partnerships among technology companies that produce applications and those that produce "middleware" (software that allows applications to run on multiple platforms, or operating systems) enable customers to get what they need. Being more flexible and being able to integrate across supplier and vendor networks can help a company speed time-to-market, adapt to new business models, and improve service at lower cost.

For example, Volvo is using a middleware- and application-provider partnership to standardize all product development for its Renault, Mack, and Volvo trucks and buses. The solution will link more than 50 engineering and manufacturing sites worldwide, allowing collaboration and real-time 3D product-data sharing. And Colgate-Palmolive is using a partnership solution to improve its global supply chain, order entry, accounts receivable, human resources, and warehouse operations, hoping to improve upon a system that increased gross margins from 48 percent in 1994 to 55 percent in 2001.

Technology business partnerships are an elegant answer to a messy problem, a win-win solution that's good for supplier and customer alike. It's an approach that the technology companies are beginning to comprehend as they listen to their customers' needs. As you begin your careers armed with this knowledge and continuing to focus on your customers, you will play a critical role in moving the industry to the next stage in its evolution.

REPORTERS & EDITORS: For more information, please contact Wyatt DuBois in the Smeal College of Business Media Relations Office at 814-863-3798 or wed112@psu.edu.

Penn State's Smeal College of Business offers highly ranked undergraduate, MBA, executive MBA, Ph.D., and executive education opportunities to more than 5,500 students at all levels. Featuring academic departments of accounting, finance, marketing, insurance and real estate, management, and supply chain and information systems, the college is also home to major research centers such as the Center for Supply Chain Research, the Institute for the Study of Business Markets, the Center for Digital Transformation, the Farrell Center for Corporate Innovation and Entrepreneurship, the Center for Global Business Studies, and the Center for the Management of Technological and Organizational Change.

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