Use the right mix of funding options for your IT organization.
Many years ago, I inherited an IT organization with a funding problem: they were coming to the end of a multi-year, but temporary, allocation of funding. Unfortunately, this temporary funding had been used to enter into ongoing liabilities, such as enterprise software licensing and hiring indeterminate staff. (Hint: don’t do this.) We had to figure out how to continue to pay for the full-time staff who were hired with the temporary funding. This prompted us to consider the various ways that mandatory and optional services could be funded in an organization, and how to allocate available funding in the most effective and justifiable way.
It is worth thinking about how your IT organization is funded. There are probably options you haven’t considered, and a mix of funding models can improve your financial stability, your client satisfaction, and the quality of your portfolio management.
Internal Taxation
Most IT groups have a dedicated budget — a fixed portion of their organization’s overall permanent budget. This is a form of internal taxation: allocating a department’s budget is a zero-sum game, so the “tax” is funding that the organization allocated to the IT group instead of to other branches. It would be the same as if the IT group had no budget of its own, but then all the other branches in the department had a mandatory tax clawed out of their budgets and given to the IT group.
Thinking about a dedicated branch budget as a tax is useful, as it prompts us to ask how the tax is allocated (i.e., who didn’t get the funding that went to IT). Was it allocated according to the number of staff in the other branches, their budget size, or some measure of their IT consumption? Chances are that no such analysis took place — the department simply allocated “the funding IT needs” (or, more likely, “the funding we’re willing to give them”) then allocated the rest to the other branches.
Taxation is a suitable way to fund certain things. First among these is what economics calls “public goods” — services that benefit everyone in a community, not just certain individuals. The classic example is street lighting, which benefits everyone, not just drivers. Many IT services are public goods — email, the telephone system, and cross-enterprise applications such as finance and payroll. All the hidden infrastructure that makes these things possible (e.g., the data centre) is also in this class.
Taxation is a good way to pay for mandatory programs, especially those that are unpopular or invisible, and is an appropriate way to pass on costs that you are receiving from suppliers — for example, enterprise-wide software licensing.
However, there are disadvantages to a taxation model.
- The most obvious is that tax is unfair to people not using the service the tax is paying for. If an IT system is built and operated for the exclusive benefit of one branch in a department, making all the branches share in the cost will seem unfair.
- Tax also discourages resource conservation, promoting waste. We have all known (or been), an apartment dweller who said, “Why turn the lights off? Power is included in the rent.” If IT clients pay a fixed amount for a service, whether they use it or not, there is no incentive to be thoughtful about what resources they consume. Frivolous and wasteful network usage is a common symptom of this problem. “If I pay a fixed amount for the network, whether I use it or not, why not stream ‘Dancing with the Stars’?”
- Tax is also not very agile. Because it is hard to quickly add funding and the staff to spend it if additional services are urgently needed, and hard to quickly release funding if there is surplus, taxation promotes large, long-term enterprise projects. Not that that is a bad thing — but it doesn’t encourage or facilitate short-term quick wins.
- Finally, a tax-funded organization should be prepared for intense scrutiny from their taxed base. Clients will want to know where their money is going and that they are getting good value. A tax-funded organization needs good bookkeeping, reporting, and transparency.
Cost Recovery
Cost recovery is the other extreme on the scale. For example, look at the IT Consulting industry: you pay a well-defined rate for consultants, who will do exactly what you pay for and nothing more. You don’t get work you didn’t pay for, and you don’t pay for work you didn’t get.
This model can be applied to an internal IT organization. In its pure form, the IT organization would have no base budget, and would bill client branches for the total cost of all the work they do. Clients would pay the total cost of new projects done for their benefit and would pay a share of the cost of consumable services (e.g., network) based on usage.
While we don't normally see a strict, "libertarian" implementation of cost recovery, there are theoretical advantages worth discussing.
- The most important is that cost recovery promotes better-informed business decisions. Client branches get
what they are willing to pay for, and they are fully aware of the price of their decisions.
I heard an IT group say, “if we charge the client the full cost of the service, including the ongoing operating cost, they might decide it’s too expensive and not go ahead”.
To which I would respond, “Good! If they can’t afford it, they shouldn’t go ahead. If you can’t afford the fuel, maintenance, and insurance, you can’t afford the car.”
- Cost recovery also encourages conservation, since clients will use only what they are willing to pay for, which usually translates into using only what brings positive value.
There are also disadvantages to a pure cost recovery model.
- Cost recovery might discourage experimentation and automation, since the innovator knows they’ll have to pay for the new service. Such concerns are often misinformed, as automation is often cheaper than the manual process it replaces, but the bill for automation is overt, while the cost of manual processes is distributed and hidden, and thus often overlooked and mis-labeled as “free”.
- In a cost recovery environment, we must prorate shared infrastructure and services. It wouldn’t be fair to bill the cost of a new multipurpose data centre to the next client whose application request happened to cause us to build one. We need to calculate the cost of the shared foundation and determine a fair way to add a share of that cost to each client’s bill.
- This billing for “total cost” tends to make clients think that our costs are too high. They compare our proposed price for a new application to the number they saw on a software box at Best Buy, or how long their co-op student says it would take to build. They aren’t taking into account the data centre, network, foundation software, help line, power systems, operations staff overtime, etc.
- Cost recovery also implies that the services in question are optional. If there is a bill for the service
then, surely, I can say “no thanks” and choose not to purchase it.
So, cost recovery is a poor way to fund mandatory services. “Thanks, but I’ll just take the web application, not the IT Security option.”
- Staffing a cost-recovered IT organization is challenging. Clients expect to be able to have anything they are willing to pay for, but this requires that there be staff available to do the work. Does the IT group staff for the demand peaks or the demand lows? If the former, how does it pay staff during periods of low demand? If the latter, how does it have enough workers available during peaks?
- Cost recovery also implies that the IT organization is just a competitive supplier — that the client can “price shop” and go elsewhere for their services. In many organizations, this is not actually allowed — IT is, in fact, a cost-recovering monopoly. Those are usually unpopular.
- Finally, there is a cost for cost recovery. We need a billing system, cost transfer transactions, debt collectors, and additional budget planning and complexity. We need to include the cost of cost recovery in the cost we recover, and we need to be careful that we don’t simply transfer the burden of cost recovery to our internal finance group. We must set the system in place in partnership with them, and making sure that the budgeting transaction size and period are set appropriately.
Hybrids
As you might expect, we can get some of the advantages and avoid some of the disadvantages of both models by combining them: pay for foundation and enterprise-wide services with tax, and cost-recover services provided to specific clients.
For example, we could tax-fund the data centre, network, help line, storage, and database and application server layers, as well as enterprise-wide applications such as payroll, finance, and email, and then cost-recover development and operation of services for specific clients.
We can also simulate cost recovery without the burden of financial transactions. Stay with a fully tax-funded IT organization, but don’t allocate all of the funded resources. Set aside a sizeable capability and let clients “purchase” work from that capability by spending “IT Bucks” — some kind of token purchasing power that is corporately-calculated and allocated to the client groups. To have the desired effect on business planning, the “IT Bucks” need to be multi-year and transferable, allowing clients to save, conserve, and barter with them.
Example: Shadow IT and the Gold Standard
Any time resources or funding prevents the IT group from doing everything clients want, “shadow IT” may pop up — clients doing IT themselves because the IT group can’t or won’t. This is often a nightmare for the IT group because of the effect of the non-professionally-done IT on the enterprise environment.
One partner organization that I worked with several years ago took on the issues of shadow IT and IT funding in a single approach. They redefined the IT group’s primary role as to deploy and support application development capability – from the data centre all the way up the stack to the development environment, programming language, workflow engines, and a set of services such as storage, database, user interface, user management, etc. Those services were well-defined, integrated, managed, secured, and accredited.
The IT group maintained a small cadre of business application developers available, on a cost-recovered basis, to build applications upon those services — not enough for all demand, but a number that was sustainable even in the low-demand seasons. Anyone else — client organizations, students, contractors — was also allowed to develop their own applications as long as they used those provided standard services and only those services.
Foundation services were pre-approved architecturally and accredited for security. End-user branches were not allowed to build or use competing foundation or services, or to omit mandatory ones such as security audit. An application built on pre-approved services with pre-approved tools was automatically approved for operation, including accreditation.
Clients with funds and no people would buy application development from IT, while clients with skilled people might prefer to build their own applications. The foundation was centrally-supported, while client-built applications were supported by the client, or support by IT could be negotiated and purchased in long-term deals.
Summary
The process used to allocate funding for your IT organization is an important consideration, and can affect how projects are selected and prioritized, and what business decisions clients make. Funding models deserve attention, and even occasional re-consideration. You probably have more options than you think.