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Retail IT: Alignment Woes, Legacy Costs Mean Trouble

Retail IT: Alignment Woes, Legacy Costs Mean Trouble

An exclusive look at a new RSR Research survey of retailers shows serious problems mounting inside today's retail IT shops -- including a vicious cycle with legacy apps that's hurting businesses at a particularly bad time.

The majority of retailers are struggling to survive due to deep cuts in consumer spending that are unlikely to reverse course any time soon. March's disappointing retail results evinced more of the same: Most consumers are terrified to spend any money.

But the recession and the subsequent sea of red ink on retailers' bottom lines are also shining a harsh light on retail IT departments-in turmoil because they are out of alignment with business peers on core strategy and governance issues and beset with legacy application maintenance costs and snowballing tech-project backlogs.

That's according to a soon-to-be released survey report, "IT and Business Alignment in Retail Benchmark Study 2009," authored by RSR Research managing partners Brian Kilcourse and Paula Rosenblum. (RSR conducted the online survey in February 2009 and received answers from 85 respondents representing a mix of business and IT executives and managers.)

The seriousness of the RSR data as well as the insight and analysis from Kilcourse and Rosenblum (two former retail CIOs) paint a nightmarish, paradoxical scenario: While retail executives are seemingly disinterested in technology, they know they are increasingly dependent on IT. For instance, retailers are keenly aware of the need to delight today's customer with "wow factor" service options; but they also need to cut and manage their own operational expenses, Kilcourse and Rosenblum point out.

Which is where IT usually comes to the rescue. Right? Not so fast, according to the survey.

Kilcourse and Rosenblum argue in the report that the IT department, traditionally known as the "ugly stepchild of many retail operations," should be in the prime position to help retailers achieve corporate objectives.

However, the business side's perceptions of IT leaders and the department are hurting IT's potential impact. Those perceptions: IT is a huge, uncontrolled cost centre and the business side has concerns about how to accurately measure the performance and impact of IT, note Kilcourse and Rosenblum. (One piece of evidence in line with that attitude: Retailers spent just 2.9 percent of revenues on IT, according to CIO's 2009 "State of the CIO" survey data. Compare that with financial services, for instance, which spends 7.7 percent of revenues on IT.)

In addition, and perhaps most damning, is this detail about the business-IT relationship in the retail industry, say Kilcourse and Rosenblum: "The language of IT is foreign to the [retail] business. Businesspeople don't understand IT, and they don't want to."

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