STRATEGIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS ALIGNMENT
A Decision Support Application for the Internet Era
David Lanc
Department of Computer Science, Heriot-Watt University, Riccarton Campus, Edinburgh EH14 4AS, UK
Lachlan MacKinnon
Department of Computer Science, Heriot-Watt University, Riccarton Campus, Edinburgh EH14 4AS, UK
Keywords HISSOM, SISP, SISA, IS Alignment, Holistic IS, Decision Support Applications, HDSA
Abstract Strategic information systems planning
, SISP, methods have proven organisationally complex to
utilise, despite 40 years of research and evolution of Information Systems, IS, in the organisational
context. The diverse nature of organisational strategy and environmental factors have been mooted as
primary causes. On one hand, confusion exists in the literature due to divergent, deficient definitions
of SISP. On the other, a lack of distinction exists between SISP as a planning process, and the broader
alignment of organisational direction with the IS capability that provides the context for sustainable IS
intellectual and cultural integration. Consequently, no methods or models for alignment of IS and
organisational activities exist that have both validity in the literature and sustainability in practice.
HISSOM (Holistic Information Systems Strategy for Organisational Management) is a practical,
holistic model that co-ordinates and facilitates cohesive alignment of organisational needs and the IS
capability required to meet those needs, at (1) stakeholder; (2) feedback metrics; (3) strategy and
change management; and (4) organisational culture and capability levels. HISSOM was initially
developed as a logical extension of the IS-alignment literature, and has been validated by action
research in several significant studies in different industries, markets and organisational settings. The
HISSOM model has been revised in the light of these studies, and a practical, Web-based decision
support application, the HISSOM Decision Support Advisor, HDSA, is now under development, to
promote wider use of the model and obtain evolutionary feedback from the user community. A
synthesis of the development of HISSOM and work on designing the HDSA architecture is described,
together with the impact of this research on extending the field of SISP and IS-alignment.
1 INTRODUCTION
Business-IS alignment seeks to align Information
Systems Strategy, ISS, and Information Systems, IS,
capabilities with organisational strategy and needs,
historically through strategic information systems
planning, SISP, approaches. Despite research
stretching back 40 years, and an unfounded but
widespread belief by researchers and practitioners
that this area has been comprehensively addressed,
no approach exists that successfully achieves this
alignment.
Recent research recognises the need to
reconside
r the field of SISP, and to respect the wider
aspects of IS-alignment, including social and
behavioural (McGrath et al, 1998)(Reich and
Benbasat, 1996, 2000), human relational (Pyburn,
1983), participatory (Hatten and Hatten, 1997),
cultural (Chan et al, 1997) and stakeholder (Lanc
and MacKinnon, 2001, 2003, 2004a) aspects that
influence organisational activity.
A dearth of significant empirical evidence into
IS-align
ment remains evident, questioning the
completeness of SISP as a driver of IS-alignment
(Sabherwal and King, 1995)(Teo and King,
1996)(Luftman, 2000). Conflict between those
supporting formal planning methodologies
(Bergeron et al, 1991), and those that do not
(McFarlan, 1971)(Runge, 1988)(King et al, 1989), is
evident in research (Earl, 1989, 1990, 1993)(Vitale
100
Lanc D. and MacKinnon L. (2005).
STRATEGIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS ALIGNMENT - A Decision Support Application for the Internet Era.
In Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems, pages 100-110
DOI: 10.5220/0002527701000110
Copyright
c
SciTePress
et al, 1986)(Sabherwal and King, 1995), supporting
the hypothesis that SISP is incomplete.
The central tenet of SISP as an IS-alignment
enabler has been directly challenged by researchers
(e.g. Lederer and Mendelow, 1989;Lederer and
Sethi, 1992;Mentzas, 1997), and commercial
surveys (e.g. Computer Technology Research
Corporation, 1994) supporting the existence of an
undefined phenomenon of IS-alignment that
transcends the confines of SISP, towards a more
holistic strategic IS-alignment, SISA, phenomenon,
comprising the structural, social, behavioural,
cultural and political aspects of organisational
endeavour (Lanc and MacKinnon, 2004c).
This wider alignment phenomenon is more
critical to the Internet era, which has introduced
direct, global organisational-consumer contact
through Web-based IS (Lanc and MacKinnon,
2003)(Porter, 2001)(Butler Group, 1997) hitherto
possible only through traditional EDI (Galliers,
1999)(Ward and Peppard, 2002). To facilitate
strategic alignment beyond the historic limitations of
SISP, SISA must address IS’s appropriate
organisational standing (Feld and Stoddard, 2004),
rectify the historic absence of top management
representation and poor credibility (Benjamin et al,
1984)(Earl and Feeny, 1994), IS-organisational
performance alignment, and improved education and
interaction of both business and IS management
(Teo and King, 1997).
HISSOM (Holistic Information Systems Strategy
for Organisational Management) was developed to
address the limitations of SISP, and to bring life to
the concept of SISA, adopting a holistic, multi-
dimensional view of IS-organisational alignment.
HISSOM is therefore a logical but important
extension of the literature.
This paper describes the development of HISSOM
from initial concept, validated through extensive
analysis of the literature and significant
ethnographic action research studies.
It defines the concept of SISA, and a new
definition of SISP, fit for the Internet era,
differentiating the two. Finally, the HISSOM
Decision Support Advisor, HDSA, catalysing SISA
and SISP into practical use, is described.
2 HISSOM BACKGROUND
2.1 The HISSOM model
HISSOM addresses the limitations of IS-
organisational alignment evidenced in the literature.
It facilitates practical alignment of the IS needs and
capabilities of an organisation, through combining
rational-analytical approaches of the past with
structural, cultural, social and behavioural aspects.
Importantly, HISSOM integrates insight, feedback
and control mechanisms, thereby aligning metrics
for targeting and monitoring delivery. It does this
from five key organisational perspectives, giving
unique insight into organisational activity systems:
The stakeholder perspective;
The organisational management perspective;
The business emphasis perspective;
The IS strategy perspective; and
The baseline capability perspective.
HISSOM also recognises (1) the organisation’s
external context, or Weltanschauung (Avison &
Fitzgerald, 1995); (2) the perspectives of external
stakeholders, recognised as often ignored (Ward and
Peppard, 2002), that influence organisational
behaviour; and (3) the importance of continuous
improvement methods again often ignored (Galliers,
1991,1999) (Porter, 1996, 2001).
2.2 Application of HISSOM
The initial HISSOM model was developed in 2000
(Lanc & MacKinnon, 2000, 2001). HISSOM was
then applied to four diverse real-world settings:
Europe’s largest bancassurance organisation
created by merger of two mature financial
services organisations (Lanc & MacKinnon,
2004a). One author was the director responsible
for the integration and new, IS-enabled strategy
of the business;
A US Internet start-up providing payment
processing services for Web-based merchants
(Lanc & MacKinnon, 2003). One author was the
Chief Operating Officer, responsible for the IS-
led strategy for the organisation;
The UK’s largest integrated Cards Business, and
its analytics-driven strategy. One author was the
strategy and development director of the
business; and
The UK Chip and PIN rollout, the largest
financial services change in the UK since
decimalisation. One author was a pivotal
member of the UK Steering Group for the
rollout, representing the largest infrastructure
payments participant.
The original HISSOM conceptual model was
enhanced in light of action research results, and the
concept of SISA developed, before being converted
into a requirements specification for the
development of the HDSA. It must be emphasised
that the action research performed was extremely
STRATEGIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS ALIGNMENT - A Decision Support Application for the Internet Era
101
substantive in nature, influencing both the
organisational and IS strategies for these settings,
with one of the authors occupying a senior role in
each of the organisations involved for the duration
of the process.
2.2 SISA and SISP: Essential
components of alignment
Strategic IS alignment (SISA) has been the subject
of much work over the last 5 years by the authors
(Lanc and MacKinnon, 2001, 2003, 2004a, 2004b).
Based upon practitioner experience and IS strategy
literature from the academic, practitioner,
organisational capability, business management, and
commercial developer/consultant communities,
HISSOM was developed and applied, initially based
upon extending the concept of SISP, in several
ethnographic studies in the UK and US markets.
The evolution of HISSOM from a limited SISP
to a more holistic SISA approach entailed
consideration of 7 drivers (Appendix A) that impact
the decisions and actions of each of the 5 HISSOM
perspectives. Each driver represents an
organisational “layer” that requires vertical co-
ordination to facilitate dynamic equilibrium between
organisational needs, capabilities and the insight,
feedback and control mechanisms required to direct
and monitor action.
Additionally, HISSOM facilitates horizontal
alignment of each driver/layer, facilitating a “cross-
perspective” evaluation of the degree of alignment
of that layer (e.g. assessing the degree of strategy
alignment, or performance metrics, across all
stakeholders). The vertical and horizontal alignment
evaluations enable a holistic approach to be
evaluated, across perspective groups and
organisational layers, bringing conceptual and
practical rigour to the concept of SISA, whilst
highlighting its distinction from SISP as follows:
SISP is concerned with analysis, planning and
implementation activities associated with
meeting organisational needs and achieving
competitive differentiation; and
SISA is concerned, in addition, with ongoing
cultural and behavioural alignment of the IS
capability with the wider organisational context.
The organisational context (e.g. structure,
decision-making style, formality) dictates
whether any IS endeavour is ultimately strategic
(Sabherwal and King, 1995), a factor supporting
the encapsulation of SISP within SISA.
HISSOM’s 7 layers are consolidated within
“insight, control and feedback,” “need” and
“capability” classifications, as follows:
“Insight, control and feedback” layers: external
benchmarks, market position and balanced
scorecard metrics;
“Need” layers: organisational objectives, strategy
planning, change management and continuous
improvement, organisational culture (as an
undeveloped need), resource management,
training and support; and
“Organisational capability” layers: culture (as an
in situ capability), governance, people, process,
data, technology and capital components.
The drivers and limitations/assumptions
underpinning SISA and SISP were validated against
a broad synthesis of the literature (Lanc and
MacKinnon, 2004c), resulting in definitions of SISP
and SISA as follows:
SISP is a continuous, organisational analysis and
planning activity, involving participation and
commitment from all relevant organisational
constituents, concerning:
Identification, assessment, introduction and
reorganisation, within organisational limitations,
of all IS capabilities required to drive and pursue
organisational goals;
Assessment of internally and externally derived
IS innovations, including those from continuous
improvement and operational transformation
activities, exploited by the organisation for
competitive advantage or sustainable benefit; and
Identification, implementation, management
control and feedback of the planned change
activities derived from the assessment of IS
capabilities and innovations, including non-IS
organisational activities and resources.
SISA is a dynamic organisational behaviour,
involving participation, knowledge sharing,
commitment and cultural alignment of
organisational management and staff with the IS
function, concerning:
Acceptance of the importance, participation and
representation at the appropriate level, of IS as a
key, integrated organisational capability;
Recognition of the need for SISP (as defined) to
align dynamically the IS capability with
organisational needs and goals;
Development, management and organisation of
the IS capability, including outsourcing and other
external relationships, to maintain realistic (that
is, affordable), dynamic equilibrium with
foreseeable organisational needs; and
Development and management of appropriate
organisational governance and relationships, in
pursuit of cohesive, integrated organisational
interactions, communication, policies and
knowledge development.
Appendix A illustrates in tabular form the latest
version of the HISSOM model, incorporating the
concepts of SISA and SISP. The remainder of this
ICEIS 2005 - ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEMS
102
paper describes the current state of development of
the HISSOM DSA, in terms of workflow design,
logical architecture and components.
3 THE HISSOM DSA
3.1 Current stage of development
The HISSOM Decision Support Advisor, HDSA, is
under development to provide a support facility for
organisational executives and managers involved in
the development of IS strategy. Currently, the model
is dependent on experience-based evaluation by the
authors, or the user having extensive relevant
experience in the same area. To improve the model’s
availability and applicability, the HDSA will be
enhanced to provide a step-by-step evaluative model
with contextual filtering of output advice on the
development of IS strategy for specific
organisational situations. Additionally, we intend to
evolve the HDSA by capturing empirical
information from HISSOM applications within the
user community, using this information to enhance
and expand the underpinning database and
contextual rules engine.
The architecture of the HDSA is based on a
classic AI decision support model, utilising a
deterministic form-based questionnaire model to
capture organisational information and determine
advice strategies, combined with a rules-based
filtering engine to tailor advice to the particular
situation. An underpinning database provides the
question and answer elements for the forms, and the
individual elements used to compose the output
advice stream. To date, a fully configurable forms-
based interface has been developed in C# for .NET,
with the underpinning database currently an SQL-
based relational DBMS. We are in the process of
developing the rules engine as a logic-predicate
model, realising the features identified from the
HISSOM development necessary for the HDSA.
HDSA features arising from our extensive action
research, comprise:
An evaluation of organisational maturity in co-
ordinating and managing IS alignment;
An assessment of the experience, expertise and
seniority of IS professionals;
Identification of the cultural, social and
behavioural contexts within which organisational
activity and interactions occur;
An assessment of the organisational governance
regime; and
An evaluation of the influence of the five
HISSOM perspective groups, in order to
establish the perspective weighting inherent in
influencing organisational activity.
The above evaluations facilitate generation of an
early hypothesis with regard to expected
organisational behaviour. This evaluation helps
recognise the organisation’s environmental context
recognised as largely absent in IS-alignment models
(e.g. Avison & Fitzgerald, 1995, Galliers, 1999).
Table 1 illustrates, from action research results,
rankings used as proxies for the relative influence of
each HISSOM perspective group in each study. The
results regarding the influence of these groups upon
organisational direction comprised:
A direct correlation between management tenure
and the relative influences of the organisational
management and business emphasis
perspectives, resulting in greater coherence of
direction setting. Conversely, the less established
an organisation’s management (in structured
interaction and operating culture), the more
directive its influence in decision-making;
Strictly controlled organisational contexts drive
top-down, hierarchical influences. The Cards
Business study typified this relationship by the
relative ranking of the external, organisational
management, business emphasis and IS strategy
perspectives. The immature management
environment of the Internet study, displayed a
more fragmented relationship;
The baseline IS capability, representing the
influence of the IS function specialists, is
generally regarded as a “gatekeeper” in mature
or relatively mature settings, regardless of its
ability to innovate. This was typified in the Cards
Business study, in which its IS capabilities were
unsupported by Corporate IS resources. The
influence exerted by the Cards IS function was a
facet of its specialisation, non-compliant
architecture and integration with external
solution providers’ systems, an anomaly within
the larger Group;
An organisation’s proximity to an external event
such as a merger, industry initiative or new start-
up, positively correlates the relationship between
the external stakeholder and organisational
management groups;
The existence of integrated IS Strategy resources
positively correlates with a greater level of IS-
organisational alignment. The outsourced IS
capability of the Internet start-up was not
integrated into organisational planning activities.
This resulted in poor communication and
interaction highlighted historically (Hatten &
Hatten, 1997;McGrath et al, 1998), and a lack of
cohesion between organisational management, IS
executives (IS strategy perspective) and IS
function (Baseline IS Capability perspective).
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103
Table 1: Perspective Influence Rankings (1=high)
Perspective Group
UK Bancassurer
(Mature)
US Start-up
(Immature)
Cards Business
(Relatively mature)
Chip & PIN
Industry Group
(Relatively mature)
External Stakeholder 2 2 1 2
Organisational Management 2 1 2 1
Business Emphasis 1 4 3 1
IS Strategy 2 5 4 2
Baseline IS Capability 2 5 3 2
The relative ranking between the Business
Emphasis, IS Strategy and Baseline IS Capability
perspectives remained constant in all studies.
Significant IS capability and competence existed, in
terms of skills, experience and operating processes in
each study. However, wider alignment was only visible
in the more “mature” organisational contexts, where
interaction of organisational management and Business
Emphasis perspectives catalysed improved
organisational coherence.
The absence of a holistic management interaction
culture within the start-up study rendered the best
attempts of IS and business management to be more
involved of little impact. This mirrored findings that
executives should recognise the importance of IS
alignment with organisational goals (e.g. Pyburn,
1983;Earl, 1993), and the level of understanding that
IS management has of organisational needs (Luftman,
2000;Luftman et al, 1999).
Table 1 summarises the interaction of each
perspective based on more detailed underlying
analyses from action research (page count restricts
publication). For example, the external stakeholder
perspective was evaluated using a “Cause & Effect”
grid, analysing the interaction and influence of various
external stakeholder groups upon the organisation. This
directly impacted each external stakeholder perspective
layer, in turn driving specific HDSA workflow steps:
Identifying specific external groups that could
realistically influence the organisation;
Identifying the impact of each external group
through the seven HISSOM driver layers;
Identifying and weighting the relative influence of
each group upon the seven layers; and
Identifying specific activities that an external
group, or one of its constituents, can influence or
restrict the organisation pursuing.
Decision support analyses based upon the HDSA
grid are then generated, based on user judgment of the
likelihood of events (using Likert scale forms) and
their likely impact over time (i.e. immediate or longer
term). The output of this analysis is designed to
provide management with an indication of the key
external influence groups, the immediacy of their
influence, and the organisational aspects of interest to
those groups. An outcome is generated by the HDSA
that was previously only possible in HISSOM
evaluations through experience-based evaluations of
the authors. Importantly, the HDSA will ultimately
gain feedback from a wider population of users,
enriching the range of outcomes currently limited by
the authors’ experience (and biased by that
experience).
The concept of “organisational maturity” of IS-
alignment required careful consideration in the HDSA
design. Table 2 identifies the organisational maturity
matrix, comprising four maturity evaluation
classifications derived from experience and practice of
the authors, supported by the literature.
Table 2: Organisational Maturity Matrix
Organisational
Background
Organisational
Culture
Skills
/Experience
Policies
/Governance
Strategy Focus Tenure of management Management experience Organisational Governance
Dependency on IS Internal innovation dependency Non-executive/adviser
status
Responsibility for IS
Historic IS investment Existing IS-organisational alignment External IS dependencies Responsibility for Strategy Planning
IS outsource status Barriers to IS innovation IS Management
Experience
Strategy planning governance
Other capability outsource
status
Acquisition v Organic Growth IS technical competency Resource planning,
training & prioritisation
External influences IS function size/structure Functional management IS
awareness
IS strategy responsibility
Regulatory influences Strategy Planning approach Continuous Improvement approach
Communications/Education/Interaction IS Governance
Integration v devolution/silo regime IS resource prioritisation
Risk profile
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Organisational culture and specifically the
behavioural interaction of organisational executives
impacted all studies. Although experiential learning
facilitates adaptation to cultural environments during
action research, a complication for the HDSA is
consideration of how to help future users evaluate
the “organisational psyche” that sets the theme for
any organisational change activity. Hence,
management tenure, evidence of innovation
programmes and IS positioning within the
organisation are key maturity attributes. Evaluating
IS-organisational alignment history provides insight
into organisational behaviour regarding strategy and
investment in IS, and whether the IS capability is
deemed ancillary or core. The presence of IS skills
and competence, and of formal/informal governance
over strategic direction and IS management, also
support an overall assessment of organisational
maturity.
Each HDSA element drives detailed questions
sets which ultimately drive a “maturity” metric,
categorised as follows:
(a) Mature;
(b) Relatively mature;
(c) Relatively immature; and
(d) Immature.
A “level of assurance,” related to the integrity of
results based on the profile of individuals
completing the HDSA questionnaire is calculated,
recognising some users will be less familiar with the
organisational context than others. The question of
objectivity in determining HDSA results remains a
further complexity, given the small number of
studies providing insight to the initial HDSA
construct. An evaluation matrix was therefore
developed (Appendix B) to assess the level of
subjectivity associated with each output, based on
user profiles of those completing the evaluation.
The result is a metric with 12 possible outcomes
for the organisational maturity evaluation and 90
possible outcomes, classified into a “capability-
maturity” grading, for the perspective weighting
evaluation, on a scale from “There is a high level of
assurance of a dominant perspective” (stating which
one) to “There is a low level of assurance that the
perspectives are in balance.”
Evaluation results are utilised at relevant points
in the HDSA workflow, to ensure departures from
expectation (based on user inputs) can be
highlighted and potential conflicts alerted to users.
Analysis performed in defining the HDSA
reveals a number of design implications that directly
impact the HDSA logical architecture (Figure 1).
Early HDSA results will necessarily depend upon
results from HISSOM case studies, given lack of
wider results. To develop the HDSA into a more
robust decision support tool, an Artificial
Intelligence, AI, database engine is required, both
locally at each user site and centrally, to facilitate
mapping and collation of results from the universe
of HDSA installations, providing increased levels of
assurance to the HDSA community.
Figure 1: HDSA High Level Logical Architecture
INPUT PHASE
PROCESS PHASE
External Stakeholder Perspective Evaluation Or
g
anisational Mana
g
ement Pers
p
ective Evaluat
i
Business Emphasis Perspective Evaluation
IS Strategy Perspective Evaluation Baseline IS Capability Perspective Evaluation
OUTPUT PHASE
HDSA FINAL OUTCOME
IP U
p
dates
HDSA Hi
g
h Level Lo
g
ical Architecture
Central HDSA Applicatio
n
Iteratio
n
Perspective Weightin
g
Evaluatio
n
INTERACTIVE PROCESS REQUIRING ALIGNMENT WITH THE "INPUT" OUTCOMES AND WITH EACH PERSPECTIVE EVALU
OUTCOME
OUTCOME 1 OUTCOME 2
Maturity Evaluation
INTERACTIVE PROCESS REQUIRING ALIGNMENT WITH THE "INPUT" AND PERSPECTIVE OUTCOMES
OUTCOME 3 OUTCOME 4 OUTCOME 5 OUTCOME 6 OUTCOME 7
Organisational HDSA Application
Evaluator
Questionnaire Led
Evaluation
Evaluator
Questionnaire Led
Evaluation
HDSA Local
Database
HDSA Local
A.I. Engine
HDSA Central
A.I. Engine
HDSA Central
Database
Figure 1: HDSA High Level Logical Architecture.
STRATEGIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS ALIGNMENT - A Decision Support Application for the Internet Era
105
The HDSA’s AI engine will take time to
develop fully. Therefore, the HDSA will comprise a
parking lot table of issues and anomalies that users
identify in practice, and store for further
consideration, to ensure anomalous results cannot
transcend the HDSA workflow unchecked.
The HDSA architecture will accordingly
facilitate the collation, interpretation and output of
improved results based on increased volumes of data
over time, which will increase objectivity based on
experiential results from a growing community of
users.
Once the perspective weighting and maturity
evaluations are complete, the HDSA workflow
mirrors HISSOM’s five perspective approach,
evaluating each perspective against the others, using
cross-referenced question sets to assess consistency
across layers within each perspective (Appendix A).
Over time, and with use of the distributed HDSA
architecture, initial question sets will be modified to
ensure a balance of user time commitment and
qualitative output is maintained.
Alignment of each perspective questionnaire
results with all other HISSOM perspectives and the
maturity and perspective weighting evaluations takes
place within the “process” phase of the HDSA
architecture (figure 1). Action research results and
outputs will be used as an initial output set. Over
time, the HDSA’s AI engine will help build a more
cohesive universe of possible outcomes into a more
holistic output set, facilitating extension of the
HDSA into wider user communities.
HISSOM in practice is not restricted by strict
workflow rules, allowing each perspective phase to
be completed in any order. Designing this “real-
world” iterative workflow approach to IS-alignment
into an unsupervised, computerised application,
introduces complexity. For example, changing
strategic decisions in practice will require iteration
with the existing state of alignment that the
underlying HDSA database holds.
To aid user understanding of this iterative
process, an “evaluation status” will be visible on all
key HDSA pages, comprising “compulsory”,
“optional” and “dependent” classifications. Where a
compulsory task changes (such as organisational
sign-off of a particular change activity), its
dependent tasks will require re-evaluation (such as
the IS resource effort required for the change
activity) to ensure they remain valid. Optional tasks,
such as planning project management resources, will
not halt workflow progress to the extent an
incomplete, dependent task would. This aspect of the
HDSA is critical to providing valid outcomes and
will be a key success factor in practice. To facilitate
flexibility in practice, the HDSA task grid will be
partially user definable, with specific tasks key to
the underlying HISSOM model structured in such a
way as to ensure a valid outcome can be generated
for valid inputs.
3.2 Future HDSA development
Current HDSA development is focused on
functional design and logical architecture. The next
phase of development comprises:
Workflow completion (web-based);
Development of local/central AI engines;
User profile questionnaire development/analysis;
HDSA perspective alignment process;
Supplementary support and maintenance; and
IP-based process workflow for continuous
update of central and local AI engines.
Once the above are complete, user testing and
Web-based distribution will follow, before an initial
HDSA application is released for practical use.
4 SUMMARY
The HDSA is the result of five years of work
involving ethnographic case studies in large, mature
organisations, entrepreneurial start-ups and large-
scale industry rollouts of new technologies. It
incorporates over twenty years of practical
experience from the authors. Fundamentally, its
foundation is supported by, and extends the
literature pertaining to IS- alignment.
The HDSA incorporates unique aspects that
target weaknesses in historic IS-alignment methods
by incorporating:
Initial maturity and perspective weighting
evaluations;
Iterative decision support capabilities aligned to
each perspective;
Identification of potential conflicts/anomalies
based upon user inputs and intelligent answer
sets; and
Assessment of user profiles incorporating skills,
experience and organisational status elements to
aid decision support.
No IS- alignment model can guarantee market
success. However, the HDSA will provide
organisations for the first time with a practical, self-
evolving, decision support framework based upon
both sound concepts and rigorous practice.
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106
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APPENDIX A – HISSOM MODEL TABULAR REPRESENTATION
HISSOM 3.3 Matrix with transferable & integrated layers
Capability/
Need Classifications
Perspective
Layer
Rationale
Stakeholder
Organisational
Management
Business
Emphasis
IS Strategy
Baseline IS
Capability
Insight, Control &
Feedback
Determination (Metric)
Layer
Metrics visible and used to
understand and evaluate
organisational
drivers/direction
External
Benchmarks
Market Position
(Existing & Future)
& Organisational
Balanced Scorecard
Organisational &
Functional Balanced
Scorecards,
Financial
IS/IS/EIS/DSS
Organisational & IS
Balanced Scorecards,
Financial
IS/MIS/EIS/DSS
Organisational & IS
Balanced Scorecards,
Financial
IS/MIS/EIS/DSS
Direction (Driver) Layer
Drivers of organisational
strategy supported by
Definition Layer
Organisational
Objectives
Competitive
Advantage, Market
Differentiation &
Organisational
Objectives
Organisational
Applications &
Knowledge
Management
Architecture
1
Organisational
Applications &
Knowledge
Management
Architecture
1
Organisational
Applications &
Knowledge
Management
Architecture
1
Definition (Decision) Layer
Strategy and direction setting
activity supporting Driver
Layer, interacts with Change,
Driver & Metric Layers
Organisational
Strategy
Organisational
Strategy Planning
Business Function
Strategy Planning
Information Systems
Strategy Planning
Information Systems
Strategy Planning
Change Layer
Organisational change
activity supporting and
gaining insight from Decision
Layer, interacting with
capability layers (WHAT WE
DO)
Change
Management
2
Change
Management
2
Change Management,
Continuous
Improvement &
Project Portfolio
2
Change Management,
Continuous
Improvement &
Project Portfolio
2
Change Management,
Continuous
Improvement &
Project Portfolio
2
Organisational
Need Layers
Collaborative
V
Combative
Equilibrium
Culture Layer
Behavioural context in which
organisation develops, Organisational Organisational
Resource Management
& Liaison, Support,
Resource Management
& Liaison, Support,
Resource Management
& Liaison, Support,
operates and interacts;
supports & limits all layers
(THE WAY WE DO)
Culture
3
Culture
3
Recruitment &
Training
3
Recruitment &
Training
3
Recruitment &
Training
3
Integrity Layer
Activities maintaining
organisational integrity from
all key dimensions; supports
and limits all layers
Risk & Financial
Management,
Org Governance
(inc. reputation
risk)
Risk & Financial
Management,
Org Governance
Contingency &
Capacity Planning,
Functional
Governance, Security
& Control
Contingency &
Capacity Planning, IS
Governance, Security
& Control
Contingency &
Capacity Planning, IS
Governance, Security
& Control
Organisational
Capability
Layers
Infrastructure Layer
Core capability necessary for
basic organisational operation;
supports and limits all layers
People, Process,
Org Structure,
Data, Technology,
Capital
People, Process, Org
Structure, Data,
Technology, Capital
Functional
infrastructure,
Processes, Data,
Functional structure &
HR, Capital
Information Systems
infrastructure,
Processes, Data, IS
structure
& IS HR, Capital
Information Systems
infrastructure,
Processes, Data, IS
structure & IS HR,
Capital
Notes: (1) Includes Data Sources & External Communications (e.g. EDI, E-commerce, M-commerce); (2) Includes performance
measurement for change activities; (3) Includes general and specific policy and procedure issues.
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Appendix B
HDSA Maturity & Perspective Weighting Evaluation Matrix Extracts
Evaluation Metric
HDSA
Process
Process Steps
Basis of
Evaluation
Basis of Judgement
Judgement
Type
Potential
Influences on
Evaluation
Consequential or
Mitigating Action
Relative/
Absolute
Scenario
Universe Valid Outcomes
1
Maturity
Evaluation
1.1 Survey data Objective
Evaluator
See 1.2 Relative 4 scenarios (a) Mature
Survey
evaluation
Survey data
input
Logical relationships
between input data elements
Objective Completeness
Over time, HDSA AI
engine will identify
anomalies (b)
Relatively
Mature
Over time, based on HDSA
AI engine Objective (c)
Relatively
Immature
Organisation-specific data
element relationships Subjective
Over time, based on HDSA
AI engine (d) Immature
1.2Evaluator User profile
Position relative to
organisational setting Objective
N/a Iteration within HDSA Relative 3 scenarios (a) High
Over time, based on HDSA
AI engine
(b) Medium
(c) Low
Position relative to
organisational setting
Subjective
Over time, based on HDSA
AI engine
2
2.1
Survey
evaluation
Survey data
input Survey data Objective Evaluators See 2.3 5 scenarios (a)
One dominant
perspective
Perspective
Weighting
Evaluation
(Individual
perspectives)
Logical relationships of
input data elements
Objective Completeness
Over time, HDSA AI eng.
will identify anomalies
Relative (b)
Two dominant
perspectives
Linkage with Maturity
evaluation Objective (c)
One weak
perspective
Organisation-specific data
element relationships Subjective
Over time, based on HDSA
AI engine (d)
Two weak
perspectives
Linkage with Maturity
evaluation
Subjective (e)
Balanced
perspectives
2.2
Survey
evaluation 2.1 output As above As above As above As above As above 6 scenarios - Level 0-5
(All
perspectives)
2.3Evaluators User profile
Position relative to
organisational setting Objective
N/a Iteration within HDSA Relative 3 scenarios - High, Medium,
Over time, based on HDSA
AI engine
Low
Position relative to
organisational setting Subjective
Over time, based on HDSA
AI engine
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