Technology is becoming increasingly embedded in every aspect of life and
industry. We rely on IT to run our cars, communicate via phone or mail, access
news and information, manage our health and education, run our businesses,
design new products and services, and so much else.
Yet there remains a strong perception that the industry employs geeks
operating as enthusiastic amateurs, and that the UK lags behind other countries
in its IT capability.
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The truth is far from that perception, however. The UK IT industry leads the
world in successful delivery and operation of IT that provides real benefit.
This successful delivery is performed by professional IT suppliers employing
well-qualified staff who operate as professionally as any accountant, lawyer,
medical practitioner or engineer.
To reinforce this point, Intellect’s Professionalism Working Group has
published a scoping paper outlining initial thoughts on the characteristics of
professional IT supply organisations. The emphasis must be on establishing an
open and effective relationship as a platform for success; this paper is just
the latest in Intellect’s series of initiatives, which also include the IT
Supplier Code of Best Practice and our Concept Viability service.
The working group plans to produce guidelines to help suppliers demonstrate
that they operate to professional standards and help customers assess and assure
themselves of the quality of their suppliers. We aim to take this programme
forward in collaboration with professional institutions, including the BCS, IEE
and major customer groups, including the National Computing Centre and the
eGovernment Unit, ensuring that activities are complementary and win the backing
of the whole IT industry.
Ensuring that projects deliver the required business benefit and are
completed on time and to budget is an essential part of guaranteeing that the
industry remains professional and well respected. Professional organisations
create customer confidence and trust, which results in improved sales figures,
increasing profits and an enhanced reputation. Properly focused professionalism
will keep UK IT globally competitive and profitable, and ensure that it commands
respect from professionals in other industries.
Professionalism is essential throughout the supply chain. The objective of
delivering key outcomes to time and budget requires all participants in the
supply chain – users, customer-facing staff, buyers, suppliers and
subcontractors – to work professionally. The supply chain is only as strong as
its weakest link. That requires each organisation in the chain and all staff to
be knowledgeable and to operate professionally. And as customers recognise the
advantages that professional behaviour offers, and encourage this by buying
intelligently, a mutually supportive environment and dynamic relationship that
bolsters the UK’s commercial opportunities will be created.
Professionalism is a key asset that shareholders and customers expect to see
in a viable organisation. Many IT companies have already developed elements of a
workable self-regulatory policy. Customers need to participate in this move
towards stronger professionalism by ensuring that suppliers adhere to the
professional standards set by the IT industry.
Not enough consideration is given to the impact of new technology on
employees, users and members of the public. Any IT-enabled business change
project requires, where applicable, consultation with citizens, preparation for
staff, analysis of the impact on service deployment and pre-emptive action to
deal with any expected increases in demand.
Overcoming cultural barriers and silo mentalities across the public sector
will be critical. IT has often worked in isolation from the business and other
back-office functions. If the nature of change is to be better understood, both
as a profession and as a solution, IT needs to work collaboratively within and
across organisations to support better-integrated systems that will address the
increasingly joined-up nature of government.
Professionalism may be summarised as ‘doing things right and doing the right
things’. Surely this is a laudable objective for all involved in IT.
John Higgins is director general of UK IT industry trade association
Intellect.www.intellectuk.org
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