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February 25, 2008

Gaining Momentum

I was pleased to see a recent post by Lighthouse that commented on Burton Group's strategy and philosophy. Here are a few key points:

"[Burton Group] is well-known for the cautious long-view that's needed when balancing architectural strategies with business drivers."

You see, product and market analysis are only part of a bigger picture. What's right in one environment may be wrong in another: it all depends on a given enterprise context, which includes business drivers. Assessing the long view enables a "steadier hand on the wheel", allowing decision makers to steer through near-term obstacles in pursuit of a long-term strategic goal. In the best case, architectural strategies are a manifestation of business goals. More often than not, however, they work in opposition to one another and on different timescales. Especially in this year of economic constriction, ensuring that architectural strategies are not tossed out in favor of immediate tactical "fixes" is one of the CIO's primary responsibilities. The combination of Burton Group advice, trend projection, and hands-on consulting is designed to enable the enterprise to move forward with tactical deliveries that align with architectural plans. It's just not enough to put a point on a graph and use it as a star chart for strategic choices.

"[Burton Group] needs to develop a less technology-driven, more business-based, approach towards IT infrastructure as part of the broad management of technology risks, costs, services and processes."

We couldn't agree more. All of us who come from industry backgrounds have lived this requirement. As an analyst firm, we do you a disservice if we omit the analysis of business context. Fortunately, Burton Group has always presented business context as part of its analysis. What's different now is that we have introduced new channels and content types that focus primarily on business drivers. Within the Executive Advisory Program, our modus operandi is to identify business implications that arise from our technical research and pull those out for closer inspection. In many cases, we roll up those implications to the CxO level where business decisions require concise explanations and infrastructure value discussions. Furthermore, infrastructure choices like Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), Software as a Service (SaaS), and Unified Communications (UC) must be assessed for their business impact and driven by actual need, lest they remain obscure technical discussions that never get off the ground. Or more ominously, they are chosen as solutions without careful analysis of future business and architectural risk.

"[Burton Group] has made some interesting moves forward over the last year. I'm especially interested in its Executive Advisory Program, which provides some free content to senior business managers outside Burton Group's geeky client-base. ... The early signs look good, especially since Burton Group is focusing on making its current insight easier rather than by developing totally new practices."

Thanks for noticing! (And, by the way, we still love our geeky client-base.) By creating the Executive Advisory Program (EAP), we were responding to a need expressed by our clients. This included a growing dissatisfaction with Gartner and others (as noted in the Lighthouse report). Rather than try to replicate what others were doing, we decided to build upon what we do best: well-reasoned, focused research that helps move our clients forward. With our executive audience, we honor their time constraints and recognize that a different "lens" is required on our content. At the same time, we acknowledge the executive as part of the enterprise ecosystem...connected with their staff in the pursuit of IT success in their organization. As a result, we make it easy to connect our executive research with underlying technical content and vice versa. The goal is to foster a productive exchange within that ecosystem.

Watch in the next several months as Burton Group continues to reinforce its capabilities and offer compelling value to both technologists and executives. This will include new business-focused sessions at our June Catalyst Conference that provide context for our continuing in-depth technical research.

-Chris

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Comments

Great post Chris. Good luck with the EAP... I've mentioned it on my site.

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