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Build an IT Strategy for Small and Midsize Canadian Federal Government Organizations

Success for federal departments, agencies, and Crown corporations depends on IT initiatives clearly aligned to organizational goals, enabling IT excellence and driving technology innovation.

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IT strategies are often nonexistent or ineffective:

  • According to our IT Management & Governance Diagnostic (MGD), 64.0% of governments have an IT strategy process they feel is ineffective.
  • IT does not do a good job of communicating their support for organization goals. As a result, 17.5% of government leaders still feel that their goals are unsupported by IT.
  • IT departments that have not developed IT strategies experience alignment, organization, and prioritization issues with the broader government organization.

Our Advice

Critical Insight

Most surveyed leaders value tech leaders with experience fostering operational stability and strategic alignment, however…

  • The CIO is seen as an order taker by organizational leaders. This usually results in the demands on IT far outstripping the IT budget.
  • Projects and initiatives are not prioritized around the organization’s objectives. Synergies and dependencies are recognized too late. Projects are often late or put on hold because of sudden changes to organizational requirements.

Impact and Result

Follow Info-Tech’s approach to developing a strong IT strategy for federal governments:

  • Use Info-Tech’s federal government–focused approach to discern the organizational context.
  • Clearly communicate to government executives how IT will support the government’s key objectives and initiatives using the Canadian Federal Government IT Strategy Presentation Template.
  • Use Info-Tech’s prioritization tool to help make project decisions in a holistic manner that allows for the selection of the most-valuable initiatives to become part of the IT strategic roadmap.

Build an IT Strategy for Small and Midsize Canadian Federal Government Organizations Research & Tools

1. Build an IT Strategy for Small and Midsize Canadian Federal Government Organizations Deck – Research to help you arrive at an IT strategy well aligned to organizational goals.

This step-by-step document walks you through how to properly develop an IT strategy for a small to medium-sized federal government department, agency, or Crown corporation and clearly align their IT initiatives to organization goals, IT excellence, and technology innovation.

2. Canadian Federal Government IT Strategy Presentation Template – A template to communicate your IT strategy to leadership and other stakeholders.

Use this best-of-breed template to build a clear, concise, and compelling strategy document for federal government stakeholders and senior government leadership.

3. IT Strategy Workbook – A structured tool to help you prioritize IT strategy activities and build a roadmap to ensure success.

Use this workbook to capture your organizational context, goals cascade, IT initiatives, and roadmap.

4. Canadian Federal Government Organizational Context Interview Guide – An interview guide to help elicit organizational context from your leadership/stakeholders.

To elicit the organizational context from your federal government stakeholders, consider the questions provided and uncover the right information to build your IT strategy.

5. Canadian Federal Government Strategy-on-a-Page-Template – A one-pager summary representing key aspects of your IT strategy.

Create a one-page summarization of the key aspects of your IT strategy for presentation to government leadership.

Unlock a Free Sample

Build an IT Strategy for Small and Midsize Canadian Federal Government Organizations

Success for federal departments, agencies, and Crown corporations depends on IT initiatives clearly aligned to organizational goals, enabling IT excellence and driving technology innovation.

Analyst Perspective

Align IT strategy with organizational goals to deliver your organization's mandate.

Canadian federal IT departments work in an environment wherein they need to factor central guidance into their work (e.g. federal guidance on cloud strategy, digital government strategy, cybersecurity), but they are also accountable to meet the technology needs of their department. Numerous external and internal factors affect their work, including budget constraints, compliance requirements, evolving technology trends, changing public expectations, and the need to collaborate and cater to different stakeholders including other federal departments/agencies. They are expected to execute modernization plans for aging technology applications, upgrade poor or sometimes nonexistent data infrastructure, manage security and privacy, and develop and retain increasingly hard-to-find technology talent.

In this environment, it is imperative that federal department IT leaders have a clear understanding of the organization's priorities, objectives, and resources and develop their IT strategy in alignment with organizational goals. This will help ensure that their technology investments maximize value creation through improved operational efficiency, better cost management, and enhanced quality of services to the public and other stakeholders.

This blueprint and associated tools will provide you with a step-by-step approach to achieve an IT strategy that is in sync with your organizational objectives and will help establish IT as a strategic partner to the broader department and government.

Photo of Anubhav Sharma, Research Director, CIO Strategy, Info-Tech Research Group. Anubhav Sharma
Research Director, CIO Strategy
Info-Tech Research Group

Expert Opinion

Think organizational value, not just technology, to create an effective IT strategy.

Being a CIO for a small or midsize Canadian federal government organization is different than being a CIO in the private sector. While all CIOs are concerned with aligning IT objectives with the firm's objectives, it all boils down to revenue growth in the private sector. Accordingly, those CIOs focus on technology initiatives that drive business growth and help the overall bottom line at the end of the fiscal year. After all, the entire point of being in business is to generate a profit and push to gain more market share in their segment.

Being a CIO in the Canadian federal public sector is a different story. Federal governments don't strive for revenue growth so much as efficiency and good governance. CIOs for Canadian small-to-midsize government departments contend with a smaller pool of available IT resources and work daily to balance competing priorities whilst advancing the digital ambitions of government departments and Crown corporations. Canadian federal government departments and Crown corporations focus on delivering services that provide meaningful impact for residents that contribute to the national economy as well as overall prosperity and well-being.

There is no rule for defining a small-to-midsize Canadian federal government department or Crown corporation. ITRG has partnered with GC agencies, departments, and Crown corporations ranging from four to four thousand IT employees. For the purposes of this research blueprint, small-to-midsize organizations shall be defined as up to five hundred IT employees.

This blueprint and associated tools will guide you through the appropriate methodologies and processes to help you, the small-to-midsize federal public sector CIO, create a solid IT strategy that aligns with your government leadership's goals to help drive value for your organization.

Photo of Matt Bourne, Managing Partner, Info-Tech Research Group. Matt Bourne
Managing Partner,
Info-Tech Research Group

What is an IT strategy?

An information technology (IT) strategy provides a holistic view of the current IT environment, the future direction, and the initiatives required to achieve the desired future state.

An IT strategy is defined based on the organizational imperatives it enables, not the technology used to accomplish this.

It should support nimble, reliable, and efficient responses to strategic objectives.

It guides the prioritization of initiatives and investments, focused on driving organization value, while ensuring alignment between IT and the broader organization.

An IT strategy is NOT a list of IT initiatives developed in isolation without alignment with organizational needs.

IT

  • Defining an IT strategy means organizing IT's financial, technical, and human resources around the organization's goals, and providing oversight to manage risks.
  • IT decisions are made with a focus on long-term investments.
  • Initiatives are prioritized based on an enterprise-first approach.

Department/Agency/Crown Corporation

  • An IT strategy ensures the wise investment of dollars on IT initiatives that help achieve organization goals and objectives while driving future growth.
  • An IT strategy enables the alignment of IT activities with organizational objectives and sets expectations about what can be achieved.

Source: Info-Tech IT Strategy Workshop Facilitation Deck

Introduction to the federal government

Organizational Structure

  • The Canadian federal government comprises three distinct branches – legislative, executive, and judicial – with powers vested by the Constitution of Canada in the House of Commons, the prime minister, and the federal courts, respectively.
  • Unlike the US system, there is no separation of powers between the legislative and executive branches, as the prime minister and their cabinet are drawn from elected members of Parliament.

Federal Spending

  • The budget for federal government spending in Canada is presented by the government and approved by Parliament.
  • The Treasury Board governs the use of budgetary funds and the assets purchased with said funds. A set of guidelines from the Treasury Board is offered to the various federal departments and agencies.
  • Once the funds have been provided, the departments/agencies have significant discretion in deciding how to spend them based on their organizational needs. The federal government generally also takes a "hands off" position on how IT departments in Crown corporations are managed as quasi-private sector structures.

Shared Services Canada as a Partner

  • The Canadian federal government consolidated select IT service capabilities beginning in 2011 with the creation of Shared Services Canada (SSC). The agency provides centralized email, data center, and network services to federal government departments and agencies.

Staffing Model

  • Centralized Staffing: Staffing in the federal government is overseen by the Public Service Commission. Note that many GC IT infrastructure resources were transferred to SSC upon its creation.

Info-Tech Insight

Understand organizational context not only for your department/agency/Crown corporation but also for the broader government while developing your IT strategy.

Challenges and opportunities in federal government IT

Challenges

  • Heightened resident expectations on delivery of government services due to shifts in attitudes since the pandemic and generational changes.
  • Finite budget, requiring prioritization and hard decisions on where to spend.
  • Adherence to stringent compliance requirements including security standards, accessibility requirements, and privacy laws.
  • Modernizing legacy systems while continuing to ensure critical department/agency support.
  • Attracting, retaining, and upskilling top IT talent facing competition with private sector.
  • Rise in cyberthreats and data breaches, enhancing need to implement robust security measures to protect sensitive government data.

Opportunities

  • Lead digital transformation by leveraging new innovative technologies such as AI.
  • Incorporate user-centered design thinking while developing services/products.
  • Leverage data analytics to identify trends, gain insights into department operations, and make better data-driven decisions.
  • Defend against cyberthreats by implementing zero-trust security, shifting from securing network boundaries to a focus on verifying users, assets, and resources.
  • Migrate to cloud computing to reduce costs, increase flexibility. and improve service delivery.
  • Develop cross-department collaboration to focus on similar use cases for service modernization and thus multiply resource effectiveness.

Info-Tech Insight

Looking at challenges and opportunities will give you unique insights on key focus areas for your IT strategy.

Executive Summary

IT strategies are often nonexistent or ineffective.

  • According to our IT Management & Governance Diagnostic (MGD), 64.0% of governments have an IT strategy process they feel is ineffective (N=89 since January 1, 2021).
  • IT does not do a good job of communicating their support for organization goals. As a result, 17.5% of government leaders still feel that their goals are unsupported by IT (Info-Tech, CEO-CIO Alignment Diagnostic; N=57 since January 1, 2021).
  • IT departments that have not developed IT strategies experience alignment, organization, and prioritization issues with the broader organization.

Three-quarters of surveyed executives value technology leaders with experience in fostering operational stability and strategic alignment (CIO Journal, 2020). However …

  • The CIO is often seen as an order taker by the broader organization's leaders. This usually results in the demands on IT far outstripping their budget.
  • Projects and initiatives are not prioritized around organization's objectives. Synergies and dependencies are recognized too late. Projects are often late or put on hold because of sudden changes to organizational requirements.

Follow Info-Tech's approach to developing a strong IT strategy for federal government.

  • Use Info-Tech's federal government focused approach to discern the organizational context and develop your strategy.
  • Clearly communicate to government executives how IT will support the government's key objectives and initiatives using the Canadian Federal Government IT Strategy Presentation Template.
  • Use Info-Tech's prioritization tool to help make project decisions in a holistic manner that allows for the selection of the most valuable initiatives to become part of the IT strategic roadmap.

Info-Tech Insight

A government CIO has three roles: enable organizational productivity, run an effective IT shop, and drive technology innovation. Your IT strategy must reflect these three mandates and how IT strives to fulfill them.

Info-Tech's approach

  1. Establish the Scope of Your IT Strategy
    Establish the scope of your IT strategy by defining IT's mission and vision statements and guiding principles.
  2. Review IT Performance From Last Fiscal Year
    A retrospective of IT's performance helps you recognize the current state while highlighting important strategic elements to address going forward.
  3. Build Your Key Initiative Plan
    Elicit the organizational context and identify strategic initiatives that are most important to the organization and build a plan to execute them.
  4. Define IT's Operational Strategy
    Evaluate the foundational elements of IT's operational strategy that will be required to execute the key initiatives successfully.

Numbered icons associated with the relative steps.

Info-Tech's methodology for IT strategy

01
Organizational Context

02
Key Initiative Plan

03
Operational Strategy

04
Executive Presentation

Inputs

  • Organizational (Org.) Strategy
  • Capability Map
  • Org. Context Information
  • Diagnostic Reports to Assess Current State
  • Last Fiscal Strategy
  • Key Initiatives List
  • Last Fiscal Operational Strategy
  • Initiatives & Roadmap
  • Operational Strategy

Outputs

Org. Context Information for Step 2:
  • Org. Goals
  • Org. Objectives & Initiatives
  • Government-Customized Capability Map
IT Strategy Information for Approval:
  • Strategy Scope
  • Year in Review
  • Key initiative Plan & Profiles
  • Goals Cascade
  • Roadmap
Operational Strategy Information for Step 4:
  • Stakeholder Management
  • Metrics & Targets
  • Risk Management
  • Org. Changes
  • Budget
  • Functional Roadmap & Next Steps
Executive Presentations for:
  • Government Leadership
  • IT Team
  • Board
  • Org-Wide Key Highlights

Service

Pre-Workshop Industry-Specific Guided Implementation IT Strategy Workshop IT Strategy Workshop IT Strategy Workshop

Info-Tech's methodology for IT strategy

01
Organizational Context

02
Key Initiative Plan

03
Operational Strategy

04
Executive Presentation

Org. Strategy InformationFederal Government Capability MapCurrent-State AssessmentLast Fiscal StrategyKey Initiatives ListLast Fiscal Operational StrategyInitiatives & RoadmapOperational Strategy
Lightweight AssessmentConduct Org. Goals ExerciseUse Capability Map TemplateInterview Department Head/Govt. Leaders, Peers, & IT ManagersBrainstorm Success StoriesBrainstorm List of Projects Approved by BusinessCollect Minimal Operational Strategy DataCollect Minimal Initiatives and Roadmap DataCollect Minimal Operational Strategy Data
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Thorough AnalysisFollow Org. Context MethodologyConduct Half-Day Industry Guided ImplementationLaunch Business Vision, CEO-CIO Alignment, and MGD DiagnosticsGather & Organize Past Fiscal Strategy DocumentsConduct Strategy WorkshopConduct Strategy WorkshopConduct Strategy WorkshopConduct Strategy Workshop

Blueprint deliverables

Key deliverable

Canadian Federal Government IT Strategy Presentation Template

A highly visual and compelling presentation template that enables easy customization and executive-facing content developed based on ITRG's experiences working with key federal government members.

Sample of the Canadian Federal Government IT Strategy Presentation Template.

The IT Strategy Workbook supports each step of this blueprint to help you accomplish your goals:


Goals Cascade Visual

Elicit organization context and use the workbook to build your custom goals cascade.

Sample of the Goals Cascade Visual from the workbook.

Initiative Prioritization

Use the weighted scorecard approach to evaluate and prioritize your strategic initiatives.

Sample of the Initiative Prioritization from the workbook.

Roadmap/ Gantt Chart

Populate your Gantt chart to visually represent your key initiative plan over the next 12 months.

Sample of the Roadmap/ Gantt Chart from the workbook.

Info-Tech offers varying levels of support for your needs

Build your membership based on the right combination of Info-Tech's comprehensive and connected research frameworks, diagnostics, and advisory services

DIY Toolkit

Guided Implementation

Workshop

Counsellor Services (Executive or IT Domain)

Consulting

"Our team has already made this initiative a priority, and we have the time and capability, but some research along the way would be helpful." "Our team knows that we need improve, but we need assistance to determine where to focus. Some check-ins with an expert along the way would help keep us on track." "We need to hit the ground running and get this project kicked off immediately. Our team has the ability to take this over once we get a framework and strategy in place." "We need a dedicated relationship with a technical expert or IT executive coach to support ongoing delivery and career development" "Our team does not have the time or the knowledge to take this initiative on. We need assistance through the entirety of this project."

Unlimited access to Info-Tech's library of best practices research.

Get support from Info-Tech's team of subject matter experts.

Have analysts facilitate your team as they define a key initiative or solve a problem.

Build a dedicated relationship with a senior analyst to advise on key initiatives or your career.

Leverage our benchmarking services team for hands-on support.

Guided Implementation

A Guided Implementation (GI) is a series of calls with an Info-Tech analyst to help implement our best practices in your organization.

A typical GI is between 8 to 12 calls over the course of 2 to 4 months.

What does a typical GI on this topic look like?

Phase 0

Phase 1

Phase 2

Phase 3

Phase 4

Call #1: Discuss org. context and customize your org. capability map. Call #2: Identify mission and vision statements and guiding principles to discuss strategy scope. Call #3: Assess year-in-review data and evaluate performance.

Call #4: Discuss diagnostic data results and success stories.

Call #5: Identify strategic initiatives and required information.

Call #6: Discuss how to build your roadmap.

Call #7: Discuss and identify appropriate operational strategy components.

Call #8: Summarize results and plan next steps.

Workshop Agenda

Contact your account representative for more information.
workshops@infotech.com 1-888-670-8889

Session 0
(Pre-Workshop)

Session 1

Session 2

Session 3

Session 4

Session 5
(Post-Workshop)

Elicit Org. Context Establish the Scope of Your IT Strategy Build Your Key Initiative Plan Build Your Key Initiative Plan (cont.) Define Your Operational Strategy Document Strategy

Activities

  • 0.1 Complete recommended diagnostic programs.
  • 0.2 Interview key department stakeholders, as needed, to identify org. context: org. goals, initiatives, and the org. mission and vision.
  • 0.3 (Optional) CIO to compile and prioritize IT success stories.
  • 1.1 Review/validate the org. context.
  • 1.2 Construct your mission and vision statements.
  • 1.3 Elicit your guiding principles and finalize IT strategy scope.
  • 2.1 Identify key IT initiatives that support the organization.
  • 2.2 Identify key IT initiatives that enable operational excellence.
  • 2.3 Identify key IT initiatives that drive technology innovation.
  • 2.4 Consolidate and prioritize (where needed) your IT initiatives.
  • 3.1 Determine IT goals.
  • 3.2 Complete org.-IT goals cascade.
  • 3.3 Build your IT strategy roadmap.
  • 4.1 Identify metrics and targets per IT goal.
  • 4.2 (Optional) Identify required skills and resource capacity.
  • 4.3 Discuss next steps and wrap-up.
  • 5.1 Complete in-progress deliverables.
  • 5.2 (Optional) Set up review time for workshop deliverable.

Outcomes

  1. Diagnostics reports (CIO business vision, management and governance diagnostic, government leadership-CIO alignment)
  2. IT Strategy Workbook – Org. context and goals
  1. IT strategy scope (IT mission, vision, and guiding principles)
  1. List of key IT initiatives
  1. Goals cascade
  2. Roadmap (Gantt chart)
  1. IT metrics and targets
  2. IT resourcing changes
  3. Next steps and strategy refresh schedule
  1. IT strategy presentation

Workshop Requirements

Launch Diagnostics

Launch the CIO business vision diagnostic.

Launch the government leadership-CIO alignment diagnostic.

Launch the management and governance diagnostic.

Gather all historical diagnostic reports (if they exist).

Contact your Account Manager to get started.

Organizational Inputs

Gather organizational strategy documents and find information on:

  • Organization goals
  • Organization initiatives
  • Organizational capabilities to create or enhance

(If this doesn't exist for your organization, contact your Info-Tech Account Manager to get started.)

Interview the following stakeholders to uncover business context information:

  • Government leadership (including ADMs)/department head
  • CFO

Download the Business Context Discovery Tool.

IT Inputs

Gather information on last fiscal year's strategy, particularly information on:

  • IT goals
  • Specific IT initiatives/projects completed
  • Project start and end dates
  • Metrics and targets and progress made toward them
  • Last fiscal year's budget information
  • Organizational structure

Build an IT Strategy for Small and Midsize Canadian Federal Government Organizations

Phase 1

Establish Scope of Your IT Strategy

Phase 1

1.1 Mission & Vision Statement

1.2 Guiding Principles

1.3 Finalize Scope

Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4

This phase will walk you through the following activities:

  • How to build IT mission and vision statements
  • How to elicit IT guiding principles
  • How to finalize and communicate your IT strategy scope

This phase involves the following participants:

  • CIO and ADM
  • Senior IT Team

To complete this phase, you will need:

Canadian Federal Government IT Strategy Presentation Template

Title page for 'FY23 IT Strategy'.

Use the Canadian Federal Government IT Strategy Presentation Template to document the results from the following activities:

  • Mission and Vision Statements
  • IT Guiding Principles
1.1 Mission & Vision Statement

IT must aim to support the organization's mission and vision

A mission statement:

  • Focuses on today and what an organization does to achieve its goals.
  • Drives the organization.
  • Answers: What do we do? Whom do we serve? How do we service them?

“A mission statement focuses on the purpose; the vision statement looks to the fulfillment of that purpose.”

A vision statement:

  • Focuses on tomorrow and what an organization ultimately wants to become.
  • Gives the organization direction.
  • Answers: What problems are we solving? Who and what are we changing?

“A vision statement provides a concrete way for stakeholders, especially employees, to understand the meaning and purpose of your organization. However, unlike a mission statement – which describes the who, what, and why of your organization – a vision statement describes the desired long-term results of your organization's efforts.”

Source: Business News Daily, 2020

IT mission statements demonstrate the IT function's purpose

The IT mission statement specifies the function's purpose or reason for being. The mission should guide each day's activities and decisions. It will be influenced by government policy statements and directives such as the Government of Canada's Digital Ambitions and The Policy on Service and Digital. The mission statements use simple and concise terminology and speak loudly and clearly, generating enthusiasm for the organization.

Strong IT mission statements have the following characteristics:

  • Articulates the IT function's purpose and reason for existence
  • Describes what the IT function does to achieve its vision
  • Defines the end users of the IT function
  • Is:
    • Compelling
    • Easy to grasp
    • Sharply focused
    • Inspirational
    • Memorable
    • Concise

Sample IT Mission Statements:

  • To provide leadership for the use of innovative information technology in a secure and efficient manner to enable and empower the department or Crown corporation.
  • To lead innovative change by providing digital and data-driven services to stakeholders (internal and external)
  • To help fulfil organizational goals, the IT department is committed to empowering department stakeholders with technology and services that facilitate effective processes, collaboration, and communication.

IT vision statements demonstrate what the IT organization aspires to be

The IT vision statement communicates a desired future state of the IT organization. Like the IT mission statement previously reviewed, it will also be influenced by government policy statements and directives such as the Government of Canada's Digital Ambitions and The Policy on Service and Digital. The statement is expressed in the present tense. It seeks to articulate the desired role of IT and how IT will be perceived.

Strong IT vision statements have the following characteristics:

  • Describes a desired future
  • Focuses on ends, not means
  • Communicates promise
  • Is:
    • Concise (no unnecessary words)
    • Compelling
    • Achievable
    • Inspirational
    • Memorable

Sample IT Vision Statements:

  • To be a trusted advisor and partner in enabling innovation and growth through an engaged IT workforce.
  • IT is a cohesive, proactive, and disciplined team that delivers innovative technology solutions while demonstrating a strong stakeholder experience mindset.
  • World-class provider and trusted partner enabling department's transformation into a leading prudential regulator.
Build an IT Strategy for Small and Midsize Canadian Federal Government Organizations preview picture

About Info-Tech

Info-Tech Research Group is the world’s fastest-growing information technology research and advisory company, proudly serving over 30,000 IT professionals.

We produce unbiased and highly relevant research to help CIOs and IT leaders make strategic, timely, and well-informed decisions. We partner closely with IT teams to provide everything they need, from actionable tools to analyst guidance, ensuring they deliver measurable results for their organizations.

What Is a Blueprint?

A blueprint is designed to be a roadmap, containing a methodology and the tools and templates you need to solve your IT problems.

Each blueprint can be accompanied by a Guided Implementation that provides you access to our world-class analysts to help you get through the project.

Need Extra Help?
Speak With An Analyst

Get the help you need in this 5-phase advisory process. You'll receive 8 touchpoints with our researchers, all included in your membership.

Guided Implementation 1: Pre-project call
  • Call 1: Discuss org. context and customize your org. capability map.

Guided Implementation 2: Establish the scope of your IT strategy
  • Call 1: Identify mission and vision statements and guiding principles to discuss strategy scope.

Guided Implementation 3: Review performance from the last fiscal year
  • Call 1: Assess year-in-review data and evaluate performance.
  • Call 2: Discuss diagnostic data results and success stories.

Guided Implementation 4: Build your key initiative plan
  • Call 1: Identify strategic initiatives and required information.
  • Call 2: Discuss how to build your roadmap.

Guided Implementation 5: Define your operational strategy
  • Call 1: Discuss and identify appropriate operational strategy components.
  • Call 2: Summarize results and plan next steps.

Author

Anubhav Sharma

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