
What It Is: Understanding the current state of IT within an organization requires a thoughtful process for evaluating how it is structured, aligned, and operating in concert with business needs and expectations. That process is typically referred to as an “IT Assessment”, where an outside reviewer or firm provides perspective on how an IT organization is performing and recommended actions to drive improvement.
Why It Matters: One of the benefits and challenges of working within technology has always been the continuous change and complexity that comes with trying to deliver advanced capabilities to meet business needs and drive competitive advantage, while doing so at speed, securely and reliably, and with quality. Even the most performant organization has opportunities to improve, and the value in IT Assessment is to provide a line of sight to where the organization is and opportunities to improve in the interest of continuing to drive excellence in the value and quality of service delivered.
Key Concepts
There are three fundamental pillars around which IT excellence should be evaluated, they are:
- Business Enablement – how well IT capabilities align and support business needs
- Delivery Excellence – how well the IT organization delivers and manages the technology footprint in place to support and enable the business
- Operational Excellence – how healthy and well-managed the IT organization is from an operating perspective, irrespective of delivery execution and the technology footprint itself
The remainder of this article will be focused on nineteen dimensions across these three pillars, in the interest of both defining “What Good Looks Like” in each dimension (in a perfect world) and some key “Questions to Consider” in each case, as a means to explore the current situation.
It is worth noting that there are and will be industry-specific considerations that come into play beyond what is identified below, but “IT is IT” to a degree, regardless of industry, and I would argue that most or all of what is listed below should apply to the vast majority of technology organizations. The model can and should be extended where appropriate to address an such considerations where it is important to do so.
The considerations themselves are also top-of-mind items, but not meant to be exhaustive, as secondary areas of exploration would tend to surface through the process of understanding and discussing the dimensions below. Hopefully this is a good start… feedback is certainly welcome where something significant may have been missed.
Business Enablement
Partnership and Accountability

Innovation / Capability Enablement / Competitive Advantage

Speed-to-Value

Value / Cost Ratio

Reliability, Security, and Performance

Agility, Capability, and Continuity

Delivery Excellence
Business-Aligned Technology Strategy

Technology Footprint

Applications

Data and Analytics

AI, Agentic, and Orchestration

Cloud, Infrastructure, and Monitoring

Security, Audit, and Compliance

Delivery Management

Operational Excellence
Portfolio Management

Financial Management

IT Operations

Workforce and Sourcing Strategy

Continuous Improvement

Wrapping Up
There are many elements that influence achieving excellence with IT and it is a given that no environment would match up to the “perfect world” that is described across the dimensions above and that’s completely fine. The point is to aspire to achieve excellence, then have a strategy and plan to continuously head in the right direction. Where we don’t have a plan or aren’t focused on improving what we do on a day-to-day basis, the odds are that we won’t do it or won’t achieve sustainable improvements over time. I hope the information was helpful and thought-provoking.
For Additional Information: InBrief: IT Excellence, Culture and Sustaining Success, InBrief: Developing IT Strategy, InBrief: Transformation, InBrief: IT Value/Cost Optimization, InBrief: The Intelligent Enterprise 2.0, InBrief: The Role of Architecture, InBrief: IT Portfolio Management, InBrief: IT Operations, InPractice: PMOs and Governance, InBrief: Workforce and Sourcing Strategy, InBrief: Intelligent Monitoring
Excellence doesn’t happen by accident. Courageous leadership is essential.
Put value creation first, be disciplined, but nimble.
Want to discuss more? Please send me a message. I’m happy to explore with you.
-CJG 05/31/2026














