James Watson
Posts: 2024
Nickname: watson
Registered: Sep, 2005
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Re: Application Longevity
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Posted: Jun 6, 2007 1:39 PM
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> If you look at it from a pure dollars standpoint, the > company is doing well. (Of course, it's going through a > growth by acquisition stage, so I'd caution judgment on > its financial health until all the costs have been paid.)
I've worked at a couple places that follow this and it always seemed to me that the incidental costs of things not working properly or creating more work for others in the organization were never accounted for in these costs. For example, ITs budget might have gone down 1 million but we lost 2 million on improperly placed orders, 6 million from hackers, and another 5 from lost business. IT should never be a net cost. If it is, it should be fixed, not made cheaper. I mean, saving money is good and you shouldn't waste money but I see so much penny wise, pound foolish decisions it makes my head spin. Somehow it makes sense to have one hundred people spend 2 hours a day doing data entry for years than to have one developer spend a month or two writing some custom code.
> From an IT standpoint, the systems are definitely not > extensible and are hard to maintain. Fortunately (read > with sarcasm), they've solved this problem by taking a > "buy" approach and just having developers create reports > and provide "glue" code. Everything is pretty much a stove > pipe application.
Oh, you work here? Where do you sit? We are going to solve this with an integration architecture. We'll buy something for that too. It's amazing how much it costs to save money.
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