Modern shadow IT demands visibility, not control

Modern shadow IT demands visibility, not control

PSA: We’re not trying to shut down your apps!

Shadow IT” can be a divisive subject depending on how long you’ve been in the IT field. There is a legacy attitude within many IT teams that shadow IT must be controlled – but it can bring significant benefits to an organization. Modern IT teams understand these benefits, and focus on balancing shadow IT’s value and risk

Moving past that legacy attitude and developing a modern IT mentality in your organization can be difficult. It helps to understand where that control-first attitude came from in the first place.

A brief history of shadow IT

Legacy IT teams custom-built and maintained on-premise technology, which was expensive to build and expensive to run. It took months, sometimes even years, to deliver. It was difficult to change a system once it was built, despite the fact that those systems rarely met business expectations. 

When those systems were delivered, the business partners for whom they were built often took one look at the situation – they were footing the bill for a project that wouldn’t meet their needs, while waiting months for it to be researched, built and delivered – and came to a “better” solution: We’ll build it and maintain it ourselves – we just won’t tell IT!

Anyone who has been in IT for more than a minute has heard the stories. During my own time in IT, I’ve heard some good ones: 

Obviously, the DIY approach can open a company up to risk in a number of ways. And when things go wrong, guess who gets called in to clean up the mess? That’s right: the IT team. 

It’s not hard to see how a team’s desire to build a “better” tool in the shadows – even if the intentions were good – evolved into an adversarial relationship between that business unit and IT. It also helps explain a misconception that continues to this day: that IT just wants to take control or shut down unsanctioned tools.

Visibility is key 

While there are legitimate situations in which controlling or shutting down a technology makes sense, it’s wrong to assume that all IT teams are the control-hungry, “no and slow” teams their reputation suggests. 

Modern IT teams must operate differently, and with a collaborative mindset. They need to focus on delivering business results and on working closely with their tech-savvy business partners. Thanks to the proliferation of cloud-based solutions (including SaaS) and new methodologies (like agile) for working collaboratively, IT can lower the barrier to entry for new tools, move quickly, and adapt as needed. They must also understand that shadow IT is a great opportunity to experiment with new tools and succeed (or fail!) quickly, with one caveat: IT needs visibility.

It’s important to understand that this need for visibility isn’t so IT can shut down new tools. Visibility allows IT to categorize each technology, quantify its importance to the business, analyze risk, and determine how to support it (or let it run free).

Legacy enterprise technology practices have largely been replaced by modern IT teams.

Taking a spectrum-based view of shadow IT

In the legacy IT days, IT either managed an enterprise tool, or they didn’t; they took a binary view of the technology of an organization. Today, modern IT teams can take a spectrum-based view of the tech landscape, illustrated by the diagram below. 

Modern IT teams take a spectrum-based view of the technology in their organizations.

In this view, IT still maintains the core systems that run an enterprise. Those platforms drive critical business processes: customer relationship management (CRM), human capital management (HCM), enterprise resource planning (ERP), and more. But with advances in integration, along with the availability of SaaS solutions, IT can maintain access to core systems while allowing data to pass to business-managed apps. 

This model accepts that some apps just don’t need to be managed by IT, especially if these apps have no need to integrate, or don’t contain critical data or support core business processes. Many apps used by modern teams have a short shelf life, either because they’re used only for certain events or because teams only want to try or test it. In this case, shadow IT apps have a great opportunity to prove out business value without involving IT (other than giving them a heads up, of course). 

Modern IT embraces even niche business apps (the outer circle in the chart) because:

  1. Cloud apps foster innovation via experimentation: With the proliferation of cloud apps, freemium models to encourage a try-before-you-buy approach, and the ease of getting started, business teams can explore and test different tools before committing to them. This is critical for moving quickly to drive innovation. 
  2. Cloud apps can be deployed rapidly: These days, products are built with ease of getting started and quick deployment in mind. What used to take months of custom app development by the IT team is now a simple task of adding users to an app being tested (see above) or a click-buy-deploy process that can be done in a matter of minutes.
  3. Modern tools often have a lower total cost of ownership (TCO): SaaS often offers a lower TCO than a custom-built or on-prem app because it doesn’t require IT build costs, hosting needs, or ongoing support. These services are packaged into the SaaS solution and are often much more economical – especially considering the niche nature of apps in this outer circle – than the alternative of having IT build and manage them.

As I mentioned above, modern IT teams don’t exist to control or shut your apps down. They just need visibility. Even if IT doesn’t choose to have high engagement – as in the case of niche business apps – visibility is key for all levels of the spectrum:

The new rules of shadow IT

There are a few things to keep in mind when reviewing your shadow IT footprint. Start by looking at the chart above illustrating the spectrum-based view, and determining what to include and exclude from each circle. Consider the following when determining where your tools fall in the circles:

After placing your tools in their appropriate circles, consider how data and applications could move between the circles: 

While I don’t expect you to convince your company to magically embrace a new approach to Shadow IT overnight, there are some resources your IT team can embrace today that will be helpful on any shadow IT journey. The Atlassian Team Playbook is a free resource for everyone, and can be valuable for IT teams. I recommend taking a look at the following elements:

Change is hard for just about any company, and almost always involves IT. But with the right frameworks and a focus on collaboration, you can make it easier.

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