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Beyond technical sign‑off : Why ICT engagement must shift to enterprise‑wide alignment

Hermant Harie, Group CTO at Data Management Professionals South Africa,
Hermant Harie, Group CTO at Data Management Professionals South Africa,

As organisations move from transactional customer interactions to continuous, integrated engagement, the way they make technology decisions must evolve too. Information and Communications Technology (ICT) no longer sit behind a curtain, delivering systems that operate in isolation.

Instead, every technology choice now touches multiple business functions, influences customer experience and shapes organisational risk. Yet many enterprises still treat ICT approval as a technical milestone rather than a business decision requiring governance, accountability and executive alignment.

This gap between technical sign‑off and enterprise‑wide engagement is where the most serious risks emerge – and where governance frameworks provide the greatest return. Too often, organisations assume a project is complete once IT approves it. In reality, that is only the beginning. Without governance and C‑suite involvement, no one has clear ownership of the data, practices become inconsistent and accountability gaps multiply.

Organisations frequently face compliance risks, audit failures, duplicate systems, and a loss of trust in the data when governance is absent, as technical capability alone cannot compensate for weak oversight.

Data ownership is a business responsibility

A major source of misalignment stems from outdated assumptions about who owns data. IT may manage the platforms, but it cannot be the owner of the information flowing through them. Data ownership must sit with the business functions that generate and use it.

This shift requires clear role‑based accountability models that define who is responsible, who is accountable, who must be consulted and who needs to be informed. The RACI model, combined with data classification and ownership mapping, ensures that every system entering the environment has a defined owner and governance path. Without this, organisations fall back into the trap of IT being held responsible for decisions it is not empowered to make.

Alignment by design

To embed governance into everyday operations, organisations need structured, cross‑functional engagement that brings together ICT, risk, compliance and executive leadership.

This is not about having more meetings; it is about designing alignment into the systems themselves. Effective organisations create a shared reporting layer and one version of the truth and use automation and centralised reporting, so alignment happens by design rather than being dependent on ad‑hoc updates.

Weekly operational reviews, monthly governance forums, and embedded workflows ensure that accountability is not theoretical. It is enforced through process, visibility and measurable outcomes.

When misalignment becomes costly

The consequences of poor alignment are not abstract, but operational, financial and reputational. A common example arises in data protection and backup environments. IT teams often implement technically sound solutions that meet policy requirements, but the business assumes recovery will meet operational timelines – expectations that were never formally defined.

Recovery may therefore be technically successful, but operationally unacceptable because Recovery Point Objectives (RPOs) and Recovery Time Objectives (RTOs) were never agreed with business stakeholders.

Only when organisations begin aligning reporting and decision‑making to business expectations, rather than technical outputs, do these failures diminish.

Measuring and managing alignment

Sustaining ICT‑to‑business alignment requires measurable indicators. CIOs and CTOs should track Service-Level Agreement (SLA) adherence against business expectations, incident response performance against business impact and, critically, system adoption. A system is not live until it is used.

Centralised reporting and automation provide a single source of truth, enabling leaders to identify misalignment early rather than react after failures occur. Alignment becomes apparent rather than reactive when visibility is built into the environment.

What organisations must consider

Organisations seeking to modernise their ICT engagement model must take into account that technology must be transparent to the business. ICT cannot operate in isolation; its value is realised only when business stakeholders understand and shape decisions.

Additionally, data accountability must be enterprise‑wide. Ownership, classification, and decision‑making belong with the business, supported but not replaced, by IT. At the same time, alignment must be engineered, not hoped for. Governance frameworks, automation, shared reporting and role‑based accountability create the conditions for consistent, enterprise‑level decision‑making.

Modern ICT engagement is no longer about technical approval. It is about embedding governance, accountability, and business alignment from the outset, and thus ensuring technology delivers real, measurable value across the enterprise.

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