Out Now in Your Online Bookstore

CPA Australia has just released for purchase the IT & Management CoE’s publication, IT Governance: A Practical Guide for Company Directors and Corporate Executives. The co-authors were Chris Gillies and Marianne Broadbent of Gartner. I was a member of the steering committee for this publication, and it is in the end a document that we are all proud of.

In particular, Jan Barned – an unheralded contributor but the policy advisor for the IT & M Centre of Excellence – did a good job of keeping us all on track and making sure that it hit the deadlines on time. A mammoth effort to get it there and some very good lessons learned by Jan and for CPA Australia.

The publication is an excellent result, and of course you can buy it here for $A55 (and I know how much effort and time went into it, and it’s cheap at twice the price).

Chief Information Officers – The Glue That Binds

ZDNet have an article by Steve Ranger called ‘CIOs must bridge gap between business and tech’. The essential point of the article is that the role of CIO is not technical, it is about business strategy and implementing that in the technical sphere.

The CIO is responsible for the stewardship of technological resources within a defined architectural framework – and then implementing strategic direction (not technical implementation!) to achieve technological goals.

This echoes the discussion CPA Australia was having recently regarding information technology governance. Keep it simple for the board, and break up the tasks in terms a layman can understand: Keeping It Running, Plan It, Manage It, and Build it. At the end of the day, that’s all that’s involved in IT (it’s a lot more complex than that, technically, but business-wise – that’s all that matters.

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Disparity between corporate and IT governance implementation: survey

CPA Australia has a story on its website of a survey by HP Australia of IT Governance being out of alignment for businesses. The research wasn’t carried out by CPA Australia (or even the ITM COE) – it was carried out by HP – but it is an indicator of the ITM COE’s effectiveness in bringing this to the business agenda (where CPA Australia is firmly ensconced).This story was also picked up by CEO Online.

Special Edition of the Australian Accounting Review: Information Systems Research

One of the exciting things on the Information Technology & Management Centre of Excellence’s work plans for this year is a special edition of the Australian Accounting Review. If you don’t know of the AAR (and if you studied an Honours degree in business over the past twenty-five years, you probably should know about it), it is the pre-eminent Australian research journal for accounting and business.

Speaking for myself, I do occasionally get a little twitch in my eye when I think back to all those research papers I had to critique out of the AAR, but I’m getting over that. Honest.

At any rate, a call for papers has been issued, and the response has been very enthusiastic – much better perhaps than we had anticipated, and the editorial committee (Dr John Campbell, Shauna Kelly, and myself) are now finalising the papers that will be included in the special edition.

I will probably will document (OK, definitely will) the launch of the special edition. This is a project I am particularly proud that the COE has been able to bring to fruition, and the quality of the papers that have been submitted – from some of Australia’s foremost researchers – indicates a future need for such a journal. However, at this time, it is a one-off and the COE will review the project to see whether we do this more often – at the moment, I am thinking biannually, but perhaps it’s an annual thing (or if it’s a complete bomb, we’ll call it a success and not repeat the experience).

I suspect the whole “complete bomb” thing is not an option, just on the basis of my reading of the papers I have seen so far. Australian research is a strong thing, and information systems is no less strong than any other area of Australian inventiveness, so I suppose I shouldn’t have been surprised. I am looking forward to the final fruition of something we first talked about at least three years ago (when Tony Hayes was the Chair), and if this was the only thing we could achieve, I would have been a happy man. The fact that we’re almost done with our current work program is testament to the dedication and assistance of the people on the COE, on our policy and research advisor Jan Barned, and more particularly on the ability of CPA Australia to attract and foster the abilities of very talented people.

Who do I mean? Well, perhaps you’ll have to beg, borrow or steal a copy of the Special Edition of the Australian Accounting Review: Information Systems Research. I’m sure it’ll be a best-seller.

Commercial Considerations with Open Source Software

Tonight was the night of my presentation to the IT Discussion Group for CPA Australia. It was a packed house – well, it would have been if it had actually been a house. And if there had been a few more people there.

Nonetheless, I’ll claim it was delivered to great acclaim. I promised that I would upload the slides from the presentation, so here they are in PDF form – “Pits, Traps, and Windfalls of Open Source Software“. I am happy to email the powerpoint (or OOo version) upon request.

As always, happy to have any feedback on the issues raised here.