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 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 government departments:
- Use Info-Tech’s 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 Provincial Government 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.
Member Testimonials
After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve. See our top member experiences for this blueprint and what our clients have to say.
10.0/10
Overall Impact
$25,000
Average $ Saved
20
Average Days Saved
Client
Experience
Impact
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Ontario Treasury Board Secretariat - Central Agencies I&IT Cluster
Guided Implementation
10/10
$25,000
20
The best parts were the timely engaging and helpful conversations with the Analyst, Anubhav Sharma as well as the tools and templates used to captu... Read More
Build an IT Strategy for Canadian Provincial Government Organizations
Success for a provincial government 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
Anubhav Sharma |
Canadian provincial government organizations operate in a challenging environment characterized by siloed structures of ministries, departments, and agencies. They utilize a combination of dedicated IT groups and shared services, resulting in a complex governance and stakeholder relationship ecosystem. Numerous external and internal factors affect their work. These include budget constraints, compliance requirements, evolving technology trends, changing public expectations, and the need to collaborate with, and cater to, different stakeholders such as other ministries, departments, and agencies. At the same time, they are expected to execute modernization plans for aging technology applications, upgrade poor or sometimes non-existent data infrastructure, and manage security and privacy, as well as develop and retain increasingly hard-to-find technology talent. In this environment, it is imperative that provincial government IT leaders have a clear understanding of the organization’s priorities, objectives, and resources so they can develop an IT strategy aligned with organizational goals. A clear understanding will also help them ensure that their technology investments maximize value creation through improved operational efficiency, better cost management, and an enhanced quality of services to the public and other stakeholders. This blueprint and the 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 you establish IT as a strategic partner in the broader organization. |
Expert Opinion
Think organizational value, not just technology, to create an effective IT strategy.
David Wallace |
Being a CIO in a provincial government is very different from being a CIO in the private sector. The scope of the mandate for provincial government CIOs is very large, spanning programs that provide critical services to citizens, ranging from health care to transportation infrastructure and safety, to support for the justice system. Similar to private industry CIOs, provincial government CIOs are focused on business-driven IT goals. However, they also need to align strongly with their provincial government’s goals, objectives, and measures of success – all of which are available online for the public to see. Their focus needs to be on value and the efficient use of public funds to meet service needs and longer-term change to program mandates, rather than revenue and the bottom Iine, which is the measure of success for private industry CIOs. Given this focus, it is essential for provincial government CIOs to fully understand the priorities of their government, as stated in public and ministerial measurements of success, and to develop data, application, and technology initiatives that meet or exceed the goals of their provincial government. After all, there is one fundamental goal for provincial governments – to meet their published legislative budget and program targets and to do this in collaboration with the appropriate ministries to deliver results. This blueprint and the associated tools will guide you through the appropriate methodologies and processes to help you, as a provincial government CIO, create a business-driven and tangible IT strategy that aligns with your government commitments to the public and provide strategic IT leadership to the organization and ever-improving services to the public. |
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. It has the following characteristics:
- It is defined based on the organizational imperatives it enables, not the technology used to accomplish these initiatives.
- It should support nimble, reliable, and efficient responses to strategic objectives.
- It guides the prioritization of initiatives, focused on organization value, while ensuring alignment between IT and the organization.
- It is not a list of IT initiatives that has been developed in isolation. It must be aligned with organizational needs.
IT |
Ministry/Department/Agency |
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Defining an IT strategy means organizing IT’s financial, technical, and human resources around organizational goals and providing oversight to manage risks. IT decisions are made with a focus on long-term investments. Initiatives are prioritized based on an organization-first approach. |
An IT strategy ensures the wise investment of dollars on IT initiatives that help achieve organizational 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's IT Strategy Workshop Facilitation Deck
Introduction to Canadian provincial governments
Federal/Provincial Structure
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Provincial Funding
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IT Governance
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Staffing Model
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Info-Tech Insight
Understanding organizational context for your ministry/agency, as well as the broader provincial government, is important for creating an effective IT strategy.
1 Wikipedia, 2023
Challenges and opportunities in government IT
Challenges |
Opportunities |
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Info-Tech Insight
Understanding these 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. |
Three-quarters of surveyed executives value technology leaders with experience fostering operational stability and strategic alignment.3 |
Follow Info-Tech’s approach to developing a strong IT strategy for provincial government |
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Info-Tech Insight
A government CIO has three mandates: enable organizational productivity, run an effective IT shop, and drive technology innovation. Your IT strategy must reflect these three mandates and how IT will strive to fulfill them.
1 Info-Tech, IT Management & Governance Diagnostic; n=89 since January 1, 2021
2 Info-Tech, CEO-CIO Alignment Diagnostic; n=57 since January 1, 2021
3 CIO Journal, 2020
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. |
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2 |
Review IT’s Performance From Last Fiscal Year A retrospective of IT’s performance helps 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 on them. |
4 |
Define IT’s Operational Strategy Evaluate the foundational elements of IT’s operational strategy that will be required to successfully execute on key initiatives. |
Info-Tech's methodology for IT strategy
01 |
02
Key Initiative Plan |
03
Operational Strategy |
04
Executive Presentation |
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Inputs |
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Outputs |
Org. Context Information for Step 2:
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IT Strategy Information for Approval:
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Operational Strategy Information for Step 4:
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Executive Presentations for:
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Service |
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Info-Tech's methodology for IT strategy
01 Organizational Context | 02 | 03 Operational Strategy | 04 Executive Presentation | |||||
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Org. Strategy Information | Government Capability Map | Current-State Assessment | Last Fiscal’s Strategy | Key Initiatives List | Last Fiscal’s Operational Strategy | Initiatives and Roadmap | Operational Strategy | |
Lightweight | Conduct Org. Goals Exercise | Use Capability Map Template | Interview Department Head/ Govt. Leaders, Peers, and IT Managers | Brainstorm Success Stories | Brainstorm List of Projects Approved by Business | Collect Minimal Operational Strategy Data | Collect Minimal Initiatives and Roadmap Data | Collect Minimal Operational Strategy Data |
↕ | ↕ | ↕ | ↕ | ↕ | ↕ | ↕ | ↕ | |
Thorough | Follow Org. Context Methodology | Conduct Half-Day Industry-Guided Implementation | Launch Business Vision, CEO-CIO Alignment, and MGD Diagnostics | Gather and Organize Past Fiscal Strategy Documents | Conduct Strategy Workshop | Conduct Strategy Workshop | Conduct Strategy Workshop | Conduct Strategy Workshop |
Blueprint deliverables
The IT Strategy Workbook supports each step of this blueprint to help you accomplish your goals.
Goals Cascade Visual Elicit org. context and use the workbook to build your custom goals cascade. |
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Initiative Prioritization Use the weighted scorecard approach to evaluate and prioritize your strategic initiatives. |
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Roadmap/ Gantt Chart Populate your Gantt chart to represent your key initiative plan visually over the next 12 months. |
Key deliverable
Canadian Provincial 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 government members
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 |
Workshop |
Counsellor |
Consulting |
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“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 to 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 on this initiative. We need assistance through the entirety of this project.” |
Gain unlimited access to Info-Tech’s library of research on best practices. |
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 you on key initiatives or your career. |
Leverage our benchmarking services team for hands-on support. |
Guided Implementation
What does a typical GI on this topic look like?
Phase 0 | Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | Phase 4 |
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Call #1: Discuss organization context and customize your organization’s 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. |
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 8 to 12 calls over the course of 2 to 4 months.
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) |
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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 |
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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 compiles and prioritizes 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 & Governance diagnostic, Government Leadership-CIO alignment) 2. Canadian Provincial Government 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 |
Organizational Inputs |
IT Inputs |
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Launch the CIO Business Vision diagnostic. Launch the Government Leadership-CIO Alignment diagnostic. Launch the Management & Governance diagnostic. Gather all historical diagnostic reports (if they exist). Contact your Account Manager to get started. |
Gather organizational strategy documents and find information on:
(If your organization does not have this information, contact your Info-Tech account manager to get started.) Interview the following stakeholders to uncover business context information:
Download the Business Context Discovery Tool. |
Gather information on last fiscal year’s strategy, particularly information on:
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Phase 1
Establish the Scope of Your IT Strategy
Phase 1
1.1 Mission & Vision Statement
1.2 Guiding Principles
1.3 Finalize Scope
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 Department Head
- Senior IT Team
To complete this phase, you will need:
Canadian Provincial Government IT Strategy Presentation Template
Use the Canadian Provincial 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.
For further guidance, please refer to the appendix.
A mission statement: |
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"A mission statement focuses on the purpose; the vision statement looks to the fulfillment of that purpose." |
A vision statement: |
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"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
1.1 Mission & Vision Statement
1.1 Construct mission and vision statements
Objective: Help teams define their purpose (why they exist) to build a mission statement (if one doesn't already exist).
60 minutes
Step 1:
- Gather the IT strategy creation team and revisit your organizational context inputs, specifically the org. mission statement.
- Begin by asking the participants:
- What is our job as a team?
- What’s our goal? How do we align IT to our organization mission?
- What benefit are we bringing to our residents?
- Ask them to share general thoughts in a check-in.
Step 2:
- Share some examples of IT mission statements.
- Example: To provide leadership for the use of innovative information technology in a secure and efficient manner to enable and empower the department.
- Provide each participant with some time to write their own version of an IT mission statement.
Step 3:
- This step involves reviewing individual mission statements, combining them, and building one collective mission statement for the team.
- Consider the following approach to build a unified mission statement:
- Use the 20 x 20 rule for group decision making. Give the group no more than 20 minutes to craft a collective team purpose with no more than 20 words.
- As a facilitator, provide guidelines on how to write for the intended audience.
- Refer back to the org. mission statement periodically and ensure there is alignment.
- Document your final mission statement in your Canadian Provincial Government IT Strategy Presentation
Source: Hyper Island, 2021
1.1 Mission & Vision Statement
1.1 Construct mission and vision statements (cont.)
Objective: Help teams define their ideal culture (how they work together to achieve their purpose) in a vision statement.
60 minutes
Step 4:
- Gather the IT strategy creation team and revisit your org. context inputs, specifically the org. vision statement.
- Share one or more examples of vision statements.
- Provide participants with sticky notes and writing materials and ask them to work individually for this step.
- Ask participants to brainstorm using the following questions:
- What is the desired future state of the IT organization?
- How should we work to attain the desired state?
- How do we want IT to be perceived in the desired state?
- Provide participants with guidelines to build descriptive, compelling, and achievable statements regarding their desired future state.
- Regroup as a team and review participants’ answers.
Step 5:
- Ask the team to post their notes on the wall.
- Have the team group the words that have a similar meaning or feeling behind them. These will create themes.
- When the group is done categorizing the statements into themes, ask if there is anything missing. Did they ensure alignment to the org. vision statement? Are there any elements missing when considering alignment back to the org. vision statement?
Step 6:
- Consider each category as a component of your vision statement.
- Review each category with participants; define what the behavior looks like when it is being met and what it looks like when it isn’t.
- As a facilitator, provide guidelines on wordsmithing and finessing the language.
- Refer back to the org. vision statement periodically and ensure there is alignment.
- Document your final mission statement in your Canadian Provincial Government IT Strategy Presentation Template.
Source: Hyper Island, 2021