Source / Reference:
1) “Strategic Alignment: Analysis of Perspectives” by P. Coleman and R. Papp 2006
1) “Strategic Alignment: Analysis of Perspectives” by P. Coleman and R. Papp 2006
http://sais.aisnet.org/2006/Coleman-SAIS2006-paper.pdf
Subject:
In Lecture 4 - Which alignment strategy in SAM model is the best? And why?
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Subject:
In Lecture 4 - Which alignment strategy in SAM model is the best? And why?
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Response:
Figure 1: Strategic Alignment Model
I think there is no best alignment strategy. More than
one approach may be required to comprehensively align the information technology (IT) with business. As
they all involve only 3 out 4 of the components in the model, there is/are
limitation(s) for each of them. One firm may adopt it/them in different time,
different business environment and different countries. Otherwise, working on
only one perspective may not efficiently solve the problems.
Besides, the firms should choose the strategy that is suitable and
feasible for them. It is because many factors including the corporate culture,
nature of the firm and IT experts available will
affect the effectiveness of alignment between business and IT. In my opinion,
the 4 perspectives have different driver and different weakest component that
they have different influence to the firms. Their effectiveness
is different for different firms, even though the firms apply the same perspective. Here is some analysis of characteristics for the
4 perspectives according to my understanding about the SAM model.
Figure 2: The 4 perspectives of SAM
For strategy execution, IT tools are designed, employed
or adjusted according to the business processes. With the business strategy acting
as the driver and well-defined application area in the business process, it
will be easier to decide what IT to employ. There is/are objective(s) of
adoption of IT, which then confine the resources to be used by planning. As
there is only slight change (or re-design) in business process and the business
strategies the company applied, it will be less time-consuming for alignment of
business process and IT. IT strategy does not have to be changed cross-functionally
to align with the business strategy. In other words, it does not necessary
refer to alignment in large scope of the business. It is a much faster and
easier way to business re-engineering. This may explains why it is popular that
there were 20% of the companies used this approach to do business process
management [1]. However, if the company wants to employ the IT infrastructure
by changing its position in the IT market or if the company wants a radical
change, this perspective may not be a prominent choice. It may not be applicable for firms which want to follow the market and employ the new IT tools.
For technology transformation, IT competencies are
identified. There will be no significant change in business process. IT
strategies are adjusted according to the change in business strategies. IT
infrastructure is employed and redesigned to align with the business. As the
performance is measured in terms of IT market position(e.g. the leadership, purchasing, bargaining power in employing IT), more criteria(e.g. the comparative advantages and effectiveness brought by use of IT) other
than financial aspect need to be assessed. However, the problems of business
processes may be less concerned. There may be some processes not necessary but
they may have wasted resources. Improvement in IT strategy may not be effective
enough for redundant processes.
For competitive potential, business infrastructure is altered
to align with the business strategy, which is functionally fitting the IT
strategy. By finding and making use of the new IT competencies, new business
opportunities can be identified. New business strategies are developed and thus brings corresponding new business infrastructure required. The organization
infrastructure designed to strategically fit the business strategies are
usually new products, work flow, and new market. So, market share, growth of the
firm, and new product introduction are the performance criteria. However, it may be irrelevant and not useful enough for those which are have little applicable emerging IT competencies available (e.g. traditional food stores). It may not be suitable for the businesses having high risk in changing the business strategy too.
For service level, it ensures the effective use of IT
that it concerns how IT improves the delivery of products and services.
Business processes, organizational structure, human resources are re-structured
due to the new IT applications and systems. Business processes are streamlined
or simplified to improve supply chain and customers’ satisfaction. This
perspective is especially useful for service companies. Compared to the products provided, the price offered or the materials used, the front-line staffs are important to boost sales revenue and improve goodwill.
The enhanced processes can increase delivery and front-line support. However, companies
selling tangible products may require unified business strategies to cooperate
and achieve better resources allocation. It may be incompatible for these
companies to change ‘organizational infrastructure’ without strategic alignment with
'business strategy'. IT strategies
and organizational infrastructure are improved in this perspective. It may require large scale of business
process engineering to fulfill the expectation. It means it is costly and involve high risk (e.g. staffs are not familiar with the new business operation, unpredictable changes in external environment that no routine solution prepared).
Though strategy execution is the most popular approach, popularity does not mean the best. It is just because of the ease of
alignment.The domains and perspectives of SAM have inferior parts
that some of them may not be always applicable to the companies. It may result in loopholes and thus adverse effect may occur in the business. Managers
should consider whether they have enough resources, IT management skills, IT
knowledge, etc. in order to apply the right perspective(s).
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Comment on Eleanor’s week 4 blog:
She gives a clear introduction to SAM and the 4 perspectives. She shares the same view with me that there are limitations and merits for the 4 perspectives. None of them is comparatively better. The best alignment strategy is the one best fit with the situation of the firm. However, it would be better if she can share more of her understanding about the SAM.
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Comment on Eleanor’s week 4 blog:
She gives a clear introduction to SAM and the 4 perspectives. She shares the same view with me that there are limitations and merits for the 4 perspectives. None of them is comparatively better. The best alignment strategy is the one best fit with the situation of the firm. However, it would be better if she can share more of her understanding about the SAM.

- Shown some unclear on the application of diff. align. model to diff. Co. . See the course blog for the details
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