Media Relations
Media relations inquiries about The Hackett Group should be directed to Gary Baker, Communications Director at gbaker@thehackettgroup.com or +1 917 796 2391.
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June 12, 2007
ATLANTA, June 12, 2007 - "Does IT Matter?" While considerable difference of opinion about this issue exists among many business leaders, new research finds a conclusive answer. The best companies clearly use information technology (IT) as a strategic enabler to create competitive advantage, according to the latest Book of Numbers™ findings from The Hackett Group, a strategic advisory firm and an Answerthink company (NASDAQ: ANSR).
Author and former Harvard Business Review Executive Editor Nicholas Carr sparked intense debate among C-level executives with his 2004 book challenging the conventional wisdom that IT is a strategic business tool. His recommendation, among others, was that IT has become a ubiquitous commodity, and should best be treated as basic business infrastructure. He suggested that IT has little ability to drive competitive advantage, and companies should remain late adopters, minimizing investments in technology. The greatest IT risk companies face, he said, is overspending.
But Hackett's research, which is based on an analysis of its extensive knowledge repository of benchmark data from over 2,100 companies worldwide, finds that world-class IT organizations - those which achieve peak efficiency and effectiveness in Hackett's IT benchmark studies - spend 7% more per end-user on IT operations than typical companies. For a typical Fortune 500 company with a world-class IT function, this translates into increased IT spending of $29 million/year relative to their peers.
This investment more than pays for itself by enabling reduced cost and improved performance in finance, procurement, human resources (HR), and other areas of back-office operations. Hackett's research found that world-class Fortune 500 companies run these functions at lower operational costs of $134 million/year ($7.1 million/billion of revenue) compared to typical companies, and process automation and IT enablement play a very significant role in realizing these lower non-IT back-office costs. In addition to this efficiency impact of IT, a direct correlation was found between performance of the IT function and effectiveness in finance, procurement, and HR.
Hackett's new Book of Numbers edition, "ROI in Technology: The Key to World-Class Performance," finds that in order to drive the maximum value from IT, leading companies pursue five key strategies:
"It's easy for CIOs to find themselves on the defensive," explains Hackett Senior Business Advisor Erik Dorr. "They've heard from reputable experts that IT is just a support system, a cost center where the less you spend the better. It's also not hard to find tales of companies that have spent millions or even tens of millions on IT projects that have failed miserably. We agree that not all IT investments are good ones, and it's certainly true that in many cases IT investments can't be easily justified through a conventional financial ROI analysis. But that doesn't mean that the ROI doesn't exist. It's there, and the best companies know how to find it, and turn it to their advantage."
According to Hackett Senior Business Advisor Philip Carnelley, "Hackett's research clearly shows that for world-class companies, IT is an invaluable business resource that helps them lower costs and reduce staffing across the back office, streamline operations, and cut the time staff spend on transactional activities. These top performers also understand that the right IT systems make them smarter, facilitating improved strategic decision-making and enabling them to gain insights into their business, market, and competition. There's no doubt that IT can deliver tremendous business benefit, if companies invest the time and energy to do it right."
To see Hackett's Research Insight, which provides more details on this research, please click on the following link: www.thehackettgroup.com/insights/roi/.
The Hackett Group, a strategic advisory firm, is a global leader in best practice research, benchmarking, and business transformation services that enable world-class performance across selling, general & administrative (SG&A) and supply chain activities. Hackett provides strategic insight, best practice advice and implementation services grounded in performance metrics obtained through 15 years and 3,500 benchmark studies at 2,100 of the world's leading companies. Through its sister company REL, a world leader in implementing cash flow improvement, Hackett also offers tailored solutions that generate cash flow from operations in addition to process cost savings.
Executives use Hackett's unique, empirically-based approach to prioritize initiatives, execute faster, reduce risk and deliver sustainable results. Our clients comprise 97 percent of the Dow Jones Industrials, 77 percent of the Fortune 100 and 50 percent of the FTSE 100.
More information on The Hackett Group is available: by phone at (770) 225-7300; by e-mail at info@thehackettgroup.com; or on the Web at www.thehackettgroup.com.
This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause Answerthink's actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from the results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Factors that impact such forward-looking statements include, among others, the ability of the products, services, or practices mentioned in this release to deliver the desired effect, our ability to effectively integrate acquisitions into our operations, our ability to attract additional business, our ability to effectively market and sell our product offerings and other services, the timing of projects and the potential for contract cancellations by our customers, changes in expectations regarding the information technology industry, our ability to attract and retain skilled employees, possible changes in collections of accounts receivable, risks of competition, price and margin trends, foreign currency fluctuations, changes in general economic conditions and interest rates as well as other risks detailed in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 29, 2006 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We undertake no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law.
Media relations inquiries about The Hackett Group should be directed to Gary Baker, Communications Director at gbaker@thehackettgroup.com or +1 917 796 2391.