LLMs and Generative AI in the enterprise.
Inspire, develop, and guide a winning organization.
Understand the unique values and behaviors of a successful organization.
Create visible workflows to achieve well-architected software.
Understand and use meaningful data to measure success.
Integrate and automate quality, security, and compliance into daily work.
An on-demand learning experience from the people who brought you The Phoenix Project, Team Topologies, Accelerate, and more.
Learn how to enhance collaboration and performance in large-scale organizations through Flow Engineering
Learn how making work visible, value stream management, and flow metrics can affect change in your organization.
Clarify team interactions for fast flow using simple sense-making approaches and tools.
Multiple award-winning CTO, researcher, and bestselling author Gene Kim hosts enterprise technology and business leaders.
In the first part of this two-part episode of The Idealcast, Gene Kim speaks with Dr. Ron Westrum, Emeritus Professor of Sociology at Eastern Michigan University.
In the first episode of Season 2 of The Idealcast, Gene Kim speaks with Admiral John Richardson, who served as Chief of Naval Operations for four years.
Exploring the impact of GenAI in our organizations & creating business impact through technology leadership.
DevOps best practices, case studies, organizational change, ways of working, and the latest thinking affecting business and technology leadership.
The debate over in-office versus remote work misses a fundamental truth: high-performing teams succeed based on how they’re organized, not where they sit.
Leaders can help their organizations move from the danger zone to the winning zone by changing how they wire their organization’s social circuitry.
The values and philosophies that frame the processes, procedures, and practices of DevOps.
This post presents the four key metrics to measure software delivery performance.
May 19, 2025
Moving beyond mutual understanding, true business-IT partnership requires shared ownership of outcomes. This means shifting from a transactional “order-taker” relationship to one where both groups are jointly accountable for business results. This installment of our series on bridging the business-IT gap provides specific approaches for creating this shared ownership.
“Winning Together” demonstrates how shared OKRs can align business and technology teams around common goals. Here’s how to implement this approach effectively:
Focus on Customer and Business Outcomes: Rather than separate business and technology objectives, define objectives at the value stream level that focus on customer and business outcomes.
Connect Technical Capabilities to Business Value: For each objective, explicitly map how technical capabilities enable business outcomes. As the authors of Flow Engineering state: “If you can’t explain how a technical initiative drives business value, it shouldn’t be a priority.”
Create Nested Objectives: Establish a clear line of sight from enterprise objectives down to team-level objectives. This creates coherence while still allowing autonomy at the team level.
Balance Outcome and Capability Metrics: Include both outcome metrics (customer adoption, revenue) and capability metrics (delivery speed, reliability) in your OKRs. This helps both groups understand the connection between technical excellence and business results.
Practical Example: An insurance company described in “Winning Together” established the OKR “Customers love our mobile experience” with key results including “20% mobile customer NPS improvement” (business metric) and “30% Flow Time reduction for features” (technology metric). By connecting these metrics, they showed how technical improvements directly contributed to customer satisfaction.
Research shows that product-oriented organizations significantly outperform project-oriented ones. Here’s how to make this shift:
Establish Persistent Cross-Functional Teams: Replace temporary project teams with stable, cross-functional product teams that include business and technology roles. Flow Engineering provides a structured approach:
Implement Product-Based Funding Models: Move away from project-based funding to product-based funding. “Winning Together” suggests starting with:
Create Product Ownership Partnerships: Establish clear roles where business and technology leaders share product ownership. “Measuring Leadership” suggests defining specific accountabilities for:
Practical Action: Select one value stream to pilot a product-oriented approach. Establish a dedicated, cross-functional team with stable funding and joint business-technology leadership. Run the pilot for at least 90 days, measuring both business and technical outcomes.
“How to Thrive in Building a Learning Culture” emphasizes the importance of structured forums for joint decision-making between business and technology.
Product Portfolio Reviews: Quarterly sessions where business and technology leaders jointly review the product portfolio, assess performance, and make investment decisions.
Technology Investment Councils: Forums where business and technology leaders collaboratively decide on strategic technology investments, balancing short-term feature needs with long-term architectural sustainability.
Joint Prioritization Methods: Structured approaches like Weighted Shortest Job First (WSJF) that incorporate both business value and technical considerations into prioritization decisions.
Regular Operating Reviews: Weekly or bi-weekly sessions where business and technology leaders review progress, address impediments, and make adjustments together.
Practical Action: Implement monthly Joint Operating Reviews that examine both business and technical metrics, with equal time allocated to both perspectives. Ensure that adjustments to plans incorporate both business and technical considerations.
“Measuring Leadership” shows that joint accountability drives better outcomes than separate business and technology accountability:
Shared Success Metrics: Define shared success metrics on which both business and technology leaders are evaluated. These should include both business outcomes (revenue, customer satisfaction) and technical outcomes (reliability, security).
Joint Retrospectives: Regular sessions where business and technology leaders reflect on what’s working, what’s not, and how to improve together:
Transparent Performance Reporting: Create dashboards that show both business and technical performance side by side, making the connections between them visible to all stakeholders.
Joint Recognition and Rewards: Celebrate successes together with recognition that acknowledges both business and technical contributions to outcomes.
Practical Action: Implement quarterly joint retrospectives that include both business and technology leaders, focusing on learning and improvement rather than blame. Ensure that findings and action items are widely shared.
“Winning Together” describes how Nordstrom transformed their digital capabilities through joint business-technology ownership:
The results were dramatic: deployment frequency increased from monthly to daily, mean time to recovery decreased from days to hours, and most importantly, digital sales grew significantly faster than the industry average.
Joint ownership is more than just a structural change—it’s a fundamental shift in how business and technology leaders think about their roles and responsibilities. By implementing the practices outlined above, you create the foundation for a true strategic partnership that drives superior business outcomes.
In Part 4, we’ll explore how to sustain this partnership over time, ensuring that it becomes embedded in the organization’s DNA rather than being dependent on specific individuals or initiatives.
Managing Editor at IT Revolution working on publishing books and guidance papers for the modern business leader. I also oversee the production of the IT Revolution blog, combining the best of responsible, human-centered content with the assistance of AI tools.
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