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Improving IT Satisfaction Optimize Applications and IT Services to Drive End-User Productivity

Improving IT Satisfaction Optimize Applications and IT Services to Drive End-User Productivity. What’s Next is Up to You. Info-Tech recommends the following communication activities following your completion of the survey. All activities are optional and should be completed as you see fit.

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Improving IT Satisfaction Optimize Applications and IT Services to Drive End-User Productivity

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  1. Improving IT SatisfactionOptimize Applications and IT Services to Drive End-User Productivity

  2. What’s Next is Up to You • Info-Tech recommends the following communication activities following your completion of the survey. • All activities are optional and should be completed as you see fit.

  3. Using the Results • You get: • Overall IT Satisfaction Summary focusing on: business enablement, IT communications, IT services, and suite of applications • Overall IT Support Summary • Most/least satisfied departments by category • So you can: • Identify high-level problem and success areas • Benchmark overall improvements year over year • Identify most and least satisfied departments General Overview Scorecard • You get: • Business Enablement Scorecard capturing:company innovation, IT agility, and department technology enablement • IT Communications Scorecard capturing: end-user training, feedback receptivity, and IT staff professionalism • So you can: • Benchmark end-user perception of IT’s role in the business’ success, and IT’s ability to respond to changing business needs • Identify training opportunities and ensure professionalism of IT staff Bus. Enablement/ IT Communications Scorecard • You get: • Satisfaction with Core Services • Importance Ranking of Core Services • Results broken out by seniority, as well as highest and lowest-scoring departments • So you can: • Prioritize service optimization initiatives for the coming year • Ensure all user groups are satisfied IT Services Scorecard

  4. Using the Results • You get: • At-a-glance view of application portfolio health from the perspective of end users • Breakout of applications that are most critical, most underperforming, and most underused • So you can: • Identify opportunities to save on licensing costs, and simplify application management by retiring unwanted applications • Focus optimization efforts on applications that are most important to the business Application Portfolio Summary Scorecard • You get: • Breakout of satisfaction and importance by department and application • Detailed summary of features capability, usability, and data quality cross-referenced by users’ ratings of the application’s importance to their jobs • So you can: • Place targeted feedback in the hands of application administrators so they can address shortcomings and increase end-user productivity • Ensure each app is valuable and effective for every licensed user group Individual Application Scorecards Department Satisfaction Summary Scorecards • You get: • Summary of each department’s satisfaction ratings and comparison to company averages • End user comments and suggestions • So you can: • Set up feedback sessions with each department to communicate effectively with stakeholders and/or end users, get further feedback, and initiate actionable improvements • You get: • Summary of all major categories of data for each location • Detailed break out of the top ten most critical applications for each location • So you can: • Identify patterns of satisfaction resulting from cultural or infrastructure-based differences among locations Location-based Reports (Optional)

  5. Step 1. Become the Expert with Info-Tech • Dive into your results package! • Let Info-Tech Guide You. • Where possible, include key IT decision makers on your results call. Info-Tech will walk you through your results to: • Ensure you understand all facets of the data • Compare your results with those of other organizations • Give you the critical insights needed to enact change • Connect you with targeted research to ensure you see measurable results in next year’s program • Book your Team Review Meeting. • After your call with Info-Tech, schedule a meeting with your team. In your invite, communicate why you commissioned the reports. Set aside at least half a day (3-4 hours) to go through the results. Plan to go off-site and turn the meeting into an annual experience. • Before Your Review: • Which departments are most critical to the business? • Which departments are most and least satisfied? • In what mode does IT operate? Firefighter, housekeeper, or innovator? • What is IT’s prioritization of core services? • Does this align with the business’s overall prioritization of core services? • Does this align with the highest priority departments’ and stakeholders’ prioritization of core services? • What applications need to be addressed now? • What applications are due for re-evaluation or renewal? • In what ways do the reports identify with your expectations and differ from your expectations? • List Top Three Priorities: • … • … • … Engage Us! Get the most out of your data by answering the questions to the right before your results call, and identify three areas of high priority. Send this to us before your review call to get a tailored analysis.

  6. Step 2. Consume Data with Your Team • Structure the Team Review Meeting • Set the Tone • After your results call with Info-Tech, meet with your team. The objective is not just to share the results of the call with them, but to get them to care about the results. • Make it explicit that end users are IT’s customers, and customer satisfaction is critical to the success of the IT department and the organization as a whole. • Satisfying the business’ needs should be presented as a challenge to IT and can be used as a rallying point. • Review the Data • Summarize Overall End-User Sentiment. Print out the results (print in color on 11” X 17” for best results). Walk through the overview slides of the report, including location-based summary (don’t dive into Individual Application Scorecards or Department Satisfaction Summary Scorecards). Highlight any problem areas and celebrate any successes. • Divide and Conquer. Sort Individual Department Satisfaction Summary Scorecards into related piles (e.g. by satisfaction rating or importance). Split the team into groups and assign a group to each pile. Ask each group to read through open-ended feedback, summarize three strengths and three weaknesses (or more if desired) of each application. Direct groups not to explain comments, but only to summarize what was said. After 20 minutes of review time, have each group present the results of their review.Repeat this process for Department Satisfaction Summary Scorecards (optional). • Summarize and Prioritize • As a group, compile a comprehensive list of Next Steps to address any issues, and use cards or sticky notes to vote on the priority of each step. • Determine Accountabilities • For any high-priority Next Steps, decide what new responsibilities IT staff will have and how future results will impact them.

  7. Step 3. Build a Communication Plan for the Organization • Communicate to the Business • Brief Stakeholders • Determine appropriate stakeholders to brief on the results. Depending on your role and relationship to senior management, this may be the CEO, steering committee, CFO, COO, CIO, or IT Manager. • No matter how good or bad the results, they should be used to create commitment to action and improvement. Come prepared with an agenda; initial action plans should benefit as a result of this meeting. • Get Stakeholder Direction on Goals and Objectives • In most cases, results will support a case to be made for additional resources or significant upgrades in specific services or applications. Use data to discuss potential improvement initiatives and availability of budget. Be prepared to state why you believe a problem exists, how it can be remedied, and the benefits to the business in rectifying this issue. • Ask stakeholders what they want to see from your initiatives. This input should develop and improve the initial action plans. • Determine Other Departments and/or Stakeholders to Engage • Determine which business leaders or user groups should be further engaged to share results and solicit additional feedback. • Agree on Corporate Messaging • Before formulating any company-wide communications, ensure stakeholders are bought into your plans for sharing the results with the organization, as well as any key user groups. • Ideally, results should be communicated to all end users who were invited to participate in the survey. • Prepare an Agenda: • Topic: … • Topic Owners: … • Discussion Time: [#] min. • Decision or Required Result: … • Review Date: -- / -- / -- • Bring Your Tools: • Info-Tech IT Satisfaction Survey General Overview • Info-Tech Business & IT Communications Overview • Info-Tech Services Overview • Info-Tech Applications Overview • Action Plans (completed) • … • … • Develop Outputs: • Example: CEO Mandate for Improvement Program • Example: Commitment to Increased Budget Flexibility • Example: Communication Plan • … • …

  8. Step 4. Engage Key User Groups • Initiate and Maintain Engagement • How you tackle meeting with individual departments will depend on how many there are and which are important to stakeholders. • However, soliciting feedback and not acting on it is as bad as not soliciting it at all, if not worse. Schedule regular updates with the business to communicate progress. • Process: • Build the End-User Communication Plan • Identify and prioritize departments. • Use the discussion with stakeholders as a starting point. • Decide who will be accountable for each department. • The CIO shouldn’t be responsible for managing more than ten individual business stakeholders, so decide who will. • For organizations with an unwieldy number of stakeholders, consider using a tier system to group them. • Create a plan and regular meeting process. • To keep end users engaged, the first meeting must be conducted within six months of completing the survey. • When explaining each department’s results, use the Department Satisfaction Scorecard to highlight areas with very low scores, very high scores, or significant deviation from the score of the organization average. • Address neutral or negative feedback with a positive, client-facing attitude. • Use the Action Plan templates to develop solutions. • Start with a Plan: • Reiterate the objective of the program: Improving end-user satisfaction and enabling the organization • Highlight success stories • Be transparent about challenges • Explain individual department results • Identify departmental priorities & pain points • Solicit additional department feedback • Share next steps • Bring Your Tools: • Info-Tech Individual Department Scorecard • Summary of Top Three Successes and Pain Paints for this department (from IT Team Review Meeting) • Develop a Timeline for Follow-up Meetings: • 1st Quarter: • 2nd Quarter: • 3rd Quarter: • 4th Quarter:

  9. Step 5. Initiate a Service Optimization Initiative • Implement Consistent and Effective IT Service Capabilities • Identify Service Gaps • When reviewing end-user service satisfaction, the goal should be to have average satisfaction scores above 80% in all areas. With this in mind, review satisfaction results one service at a time, starting with the highest priority service area. • Prioritize Service Improvement Plans • Select one to three service areas to focus on in the coming year. Services that are ranked high in importance but low in satisfaction should be addressed first. For example, in the example on the right the network should be a priority, followed by devices. • Identify and Address Unique User Groups • In most cases, addressing an underperforming service that affects everyone is the best option. However, when satisfaction is generally high, look to satisfaction ratings broken out by seniority levels, and by department as, sometimes, specific user groups have needs that differ from the norm. • Some examples of where this might apply include: • Executives with stringent needs for reporting and analytics • Designers wanting faster devices or larger monitors • Researchers asking for relaxed website or video access rights • Developers relying on faster network capabilities Need Some Help? Info-Tech can help you move from ad hoc help to managed services with our five-day workshop!

  10. Step 6. Rationalize the Application Portfolio • Eliminate Underused Applications • Today is the right time to consolidate; in the average application portfolio, the number of unneeded applications is on the rise (see below). • Once the larger IT department has been briefed, assemble the applications team to evaluate the overall health of the application portfolio. • Print all Specific Application Scorecards and sort according to the quadrant in which each application appears on the Applications Overview Scorecard (see right). • Source: • Capgemini • Application • Landscape • Report • 2014

  11. Step 6. Rationalize the Application Portfolio • Eliminate Underused Applications • Applications typically account for approximately 40% of the IT budget, on average. Identify potential savings in ongoing maintenance costs for non-core applications using data from the end users themselves. • Start with Nonessential Applications. Labeled Unwanted and Questionable, and viewable on the Applications Overview page, these applications were rated by end users to be: • Low in importance (i.e. unused or nice to have) • Ineffective (low Usability and Features scores) Feeling Overwhelmed? Let us guide you through your Application Rationalization project with our five-day workshop!

  12. Step 6. Rationalize the Application Portfolio • Eliminate Underused Applications • Scale Back Licensing. Review each application’s Scorecard to identify any departments with importance ratings below 50% (“Imp.” on bottom left). In review sessions with these departments, feedback should be solicited around how these applications are utilized to identify opportunities for cutting back licenses. • Retire Non-Critical Applications. In situations where all departments rate the app as less than 50% in importance, consider retiring the application. However, review responses grouped by seniority and importance rating (right half of the page) to establish exactly how many users view the app as important or critical, and whether those users are satisfied. It may be sufficient to purchase a small set of licenses for the few users that continue to get value from the application. • Carefully Review Open-Ended Feedback on Each App. • For any departments with low importance ratings for the app, review that department’s comments on the Individual Application Comments page. • Confer with internal experts to create an action plan for retirement or de-provisioning of each application that includes input from business owners and IT administrators of each affected application.

  13. Step 7. Enact an Application Modernization Roadmap • Mitigate At Risk Applications • Develop a strategy for improving overall portfolio satisfaction on an app-by-app basis. • High risk applications are those that are core to the business, but are underperforming in terms of their effectiveness in enabling the business. • For each of these applications it is essential to establish a mitigation strategy that targets high-impact problem areas and maximizes IT resources. • With high risk applications, the focus should not be on importance ratings and cutting back licenses, but instead on satisfaction ratings and improving performance. • Source: • Capgemini • Application • Landscape • Report • 2014

  14. Step 7. Enact an Application Modernization Roadmap • Mitigate At Risk Applications • Dive Deeper with Individual Application Scorecards • The beauty of surveying end users on specific applications is that you get an organization-wide view of each app, including which departments are most or least problematic. For each high risk application look at individual scorecards to determine next steps. • Identify Problem Departments • In many cases, the application may be performing adequately for the core user group for which it was intended (e.g. Sales Department for CRM). However, users with peripheral use cases may view the application as critical to their role. • Focus first on departments found in the Reassess quadrant; these users are dissatisfied with both Features AND Usability, whereas those in the Upgrade or Retrain quadrants are at least happy with Features or Usability respectively. • Address first any dissatisfied departments that rate this application as important (i.e. Imp. >50%). The goal should be to have all of these departments in the Maintain quadrant. • Summarize the comments listed for dissatisfied departments and, if necessary, schedule focus groups with users to assess functional gaps in the application.

  15. Step 7. Enact an Application Modernization Plan • Mitigate High Risk Applications • With high risk applications, the Application Manager has three options: Improve user expertise, improve the application itself, or change the app entirely. • The path one takes should depend on answers to this question: • “Does anybody like this app?” • Retrain Users if Super-Users are Happy • Look at satisfaction ratings of end users that indicate the application is Important or Mission Critical to them doing their job. If they are relatively happy with Features and Usability, these super-users may be leveraged to create a training program for the application to get everyone else up to speed. • Improve Data Input Workflow or Reporting • Data quality scores below 70% indicate that either the workflow of the app is too complex, there are too many fields to enter, the responsiveness of the app is lacking, or the reporting coming out of the app is poor. Upgrading the server or network may help, but poor integration of the application into business process is often the real problem. • Upgrade or Switch Vendors • If all users are dissatisfied, and performance cannot be linked to business process, performance (i.e. infrastructure), or training, the application is in need of an upgrade, or switching vendors is the best alternative. • Tailor Next Steps Using Open-Ended Feedback • Averages lie; carefully evaluate open-ended feedback to color the context around the numbers. Users are typically very forthcoming with invaluable feedback when unhappy.

  16. Timeline Month 1 Survey End Users Results Call with Info-Tech Consume Data with Your Team Meet with Critical Stakeholders Create a Communication Plan Meet with Individual Departments Initiate a Service Optimization Initiative Rationalize the Apps Portfolio Enact an Application Modernization Plan Month 3 Quarterly Update to the Business Six-Month Update to the Business Month 6 Month 9 Quarterly Update to the Business Survey End Users To Measure Improvements Year 2

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