ITC4212

Information Systems Strategy & IT Governance • Interactive Study Guide 2026

01
HIGH PRIORITY - Appears in Q1/Q2

IT Governance Fundamentals

  • ITG vs IT Management (WHAT vs HOW)
  • 5 Focus Areas Cycle (Strategic Alignment, Value Delivery, Risk, Resources, Performance)
  • Evolution of IT Function (3 Stages)
  • IT Maturity Model (Levels 0-5)

Key Concept: ITG vs IT Management

IT Governance
  • Strategic focus
  • Board & Executive level
  • Sets direction & policy
  • Doing the RIGHT things
IT Management
  • Operational focus
  • Middle & Project Management
  • Executes & delivers
  • Doing things RIGHT
University Online Learning System Example:
IT Governance (Board decides): Should we invest? What's the budget? Who approves changes?
IT Management (IT team executes): Which platform (Moodle, Canvas)? Server setup? Daily support?

The 5 Focus Areas (Must Draw in Exam!)

  1. Strategic Alignment - Link IT plans to business goals
  2. Value Delivery - Ensure IT delivers benefits & ROI
  3. Risk Management - Manage compliance & security
  4. Resource Management - Optimize people, infrastructure, knowledge
  5. Performance Measurement - Track progress using KPIs

IT Maturity Levels (Memorize All 6!)

0Non-existent - Complete lack of processes
1Initial/Ad Hoc - Unpredictable, reactive, fire-fighting
2Repeatable - Processes repeat but not documented
3Defined - Documented, standardized, communicated
4Managed - Measured using KPIs, quantitative control
5Optimized - Continuous improvement, automated best practices
02
MEDIUM PRIORITY

Frameworks & Implementation

  • COBIT (WHAT to do - Governance)
  • ITIL (HOW to do - Service Management)
  • ISO 27001 (Security Management)
  • JISC Framework (Universities - 5 Perspectives)
  • 5-Phase Implementation Process

Framework Comparison

COBIT

Focus: Governance & Controls

Best For: Compliance, bridging business-IT gap

Key Question: WHAT to do?

ITIL

Focus: Service Management

Best For: IT Operations, service desk

Key Question: HOW to do it?

ISO 27001

Focus: Security

Best For: Data protection

Key Question: Is it SECURE?

JISC

Focus: Higher Education

Best For: Universities

5 Perspectives: Governance, Management, Resources, Structures, Services

Why Universities Need Special IT Governance

  • Unique Processes: Teaching, research, administration - not just profit-making
  • Complex Stakeholders: Students, faculty, government, public - not just shareholders
  • Difficult to Measure Value: Educational quality vs. simple ROI

5-Phase Implementation Process

  1. Situational Analysis - Where are we NOW? (SWOT, maturity, gaps)
  2. Strategy Formulation - Where do we WANT to be? (Vision, mission)
  3. Framework Design - WHAT framework fits us?
  4. Implementation - HOW do we get there? (Resources, training)
  5. Monitoring & Measurement - Are we on TRACK? (KPIs, KGIs)
03
HIGH PRIORITY - Draw Triangle!

Strategic Alignment & Maturity

  • Symptoms of Poor Alignment (4 Warning Signs)
  • IS Strategy Triangle (Critical Diagram!)
  • Luftman's 6 Components

Symptoms of Poor Alignment

High IT costs but low business value
Lack of coordination between IT and business
Redundant projects and systems
"Fire-fighting" mode - always reactive, never proactive

IS Strategy Triangle (Practice Drawing!)

BUSINESS STRATEGY
(The Driver - Where is the business going?)
ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGY
(Structure, Processes, Culture)
IS STRATEGY
(Technologies, Systems, IT Delivery)
THE BALANCE RULE: If you change ONE corner, you MUST adjust the other two!
Tesla's Transformation:
Business Strategy Change: "Become world's leading electric car company"
Required Org Changes: Hire AI engineers, agile culture, direct sales
Required IS Changes: Over-the-air updates, mobile app, autopilot AI

Luftman's 6 Components of Maturity

1. Communication
How well do IT and business understand each other?
2. Competence/Value
Does business perceive IT as delivering value?
3. Governance
Are decision rights clear? Who makes IT decisions?
4. Partnership
Do IT and business share risks and rewards?
5. Scope/Architecture
Is IT infrastructure flexible and integrated?
6. Skills
Do IT staff have both technical AND business skills?
04
HIGH PRIORITY - Q4 Focus

Strategic Planning & Competitive Advantage

  • 6 Strategic Business Objectives
  • 3 Phases of Strategic Planning
  • Vision vs Mission (Don't Confuse!)
  • Porter's Generic Strategies
  • Hypercompetition Model (DYB)
  • Complementary Assets (Critical!)
  • Managerial Levers Framework (NEW 2025!)

6 Strategic Business Objectives for IT Investment

  1. Operational Excellence - Improve efficiency (e.g., Amazon warehouses)
  2. New Products/Services - Create new offerings (e.g., Netflix streaming)
  3. Customer/Supplier Intimacy - Strengthen relationships (e.g., Starbucks app)
  4. Improved Decision Making - Better data (e.g., Google Analytics)
  5. Competitive Advantage - Outperform rivals (e.g., Uber algorithm)
  6. Survival - Must adopt to stay in business (e.g., COVID online ordering)

Vision vs Mission (Common Exam Question!)

Vision
  • Future-oriented
  • Where are we GOING?
  • Inspiring, aspirational
  • Long-term (5-10 years)
Mission
  • Present-oriented
  • What do we DO?
  • Practical, specific
  • Current state

Porter's 3 Generic Strategies

Cost Leadership

Be the LOWEST-COST producer targeting broad market

Examples: Walmart, Xiaomi, Southwest Airlines
Differentiation

Offer UNIQUE product/service targeting broad market

Examples: Apple, Mercedes-Benz, Starbucks
Focus (Niche)

Target SPECIFIC market segment (cost or differentiation)

Examples: Rolls-Royce, CAT phones

Hypercompetition Model

When to use: Fast-changing industries where advantages are TEMPORARY

Short product lifecycles (months, not years)
Rapid technological change
Constant "moves and countermoves"
Destroy Your Business (DYB): Disrupt your own products BEFORE competitors do! Example: Apple killed iPod with iPhone

Complementary Assets (Critical Concept!)

Resources needed to derive value from primary IT investment. Technology alone NEVER delivers value without these!

  • Organizational: Business processes, culture, structure
  • Managerial: Training, incentive systems, teamwork, leadership
  • Social: Internet infrastructure, standards, regulations
CRM Failure Story: Company spends $500K on Salesforce but...
No training - team can't use it
No process change - still using Excel
No incentives - no motivation to change
Result: Zero ROI!

Managerial Levers Framework (NEW for 2025 Exam!)

Organizational Variables
  • Decision rights
  • Reporting structure
  • Business processes
Control Variables
  • Data availability
  • Performance metrics (KPIs)
  • Incentives and rewards
Cultural Variables
  • Organizational values
  • Risk tolerance
  • Innovation mindset

Exam Preparation Checklist

Critical Diagrams to Practice

  • IT Governance Focus Area Loop (5 domains)
  • Evolution of IT Function curve (3 stages)
  • IS Strategy Triangle

Lists to Memorize

  • 6 Maturity Levels (0-5)
  • 6 Luftman Components
  • 5 JISC Perspectives
  • 6 Strategic Business Objectives
  • 4 Symptoms of Poor Alignment

Application Questions

  • Apply Porter's model to ANY industry
  • Select frameworks based on org type
  • Complementary Assets with examples

Day Before Exam

  • Draw all 3 diagrams from memory
  • Recite all memorized lists
  • Apply Porter's model to 3 companies
  • Review past papers (2023-2025)
  • Get good sleep!
Question

Click to flip

Answer

Past Papers & Model Answers

Model Paper 2025 - ITC4212

Full Model Answers
Q1 IT Governance Fundamentals (25 marks) +

(a) Explain the difference between IT Governance and IT Management with examples. (10 marks)

Model Answer:

IT Governance focuses on WHAT decisions need to be made and WHO makes them. It is a Board-level responsibility concerned with:

  • Strategic focus and direction setting
  • Decision rights and accountability
  • Ensuring IT sustains organizational objectives
  • "Doing the RIGHT things"

IT Management focuses on HOW to implement decisions. It is an operational responsibility concerned with:

  • Day-to-day operations and execution
  • Project management and service delivery
  • Network maintenance and support
  • "Doing things RIGHT"
University Example:
IT Governance (Board decides): Should we invest in online learning? What's the budget? Who approves major changes?
IT Management (IT team executes): Which platform to use (Moodle/Canvas)? How to configure servers? Daily user support?

(b) Draw and explain the 5 IT Governance Focus Areas. (10 marks)

Model Answer:

The 5 Focus Areas work together in a continuous cycle:

1. Strategic Alignment - Links IT plans to business goals
2. Value Delivery - Ensures IT delivers benefits & ROI
3. Risk Management - Manages compliance & security
4. Resource Management - Optimizes people, infrastructure, knowledge
5. Performance Measurement - Tracks progress using KPIs/KGIs
Food Delivery App Example:
1. Strategic Alignment: App strategy matches "30-min delivery" goal
2. Value Delivery: App reduces delivery time, increases satisfaction
3. Risk Management: Protect payment data, handle crashes
4. Resource Management: Hire skilled devs, use cloud efficiently
5. Performance: Track delivery time, crashes, ratings

(c) Describe the IT Maturity Levels (0-5). (5 marks)

Model Answer:
Level 0 Non-existent - Complete lack of processes
Level 1 Initial/Ad Hoc - Unpredictable, reactive, fire-fighting
Level 2 Repeatable - Processes repeat but not documented
Level 3 Defined - Documented, standardized, communicated
Level 4 Managed - Measured using KPIs, quantitative control
Level 5 Optimized - Continuous improvement, automated best practices
Q2 IT Governance Frameworks & Implementation (25 marks) +

(a) Compare COBIT, ITIL, and ISO 27001 frameworks. (12 marks)

Model Answer:
Framework Focus Best For Key Question
COBIT Governance & Controls Compliance, bridging business-IT gap WHAT to do?
ITIL Service Management IT Operations, service desk HOW to do it?
ISO 27001 Security Data protection, compliance Is it SECURE?
Hospital Example:
COBIT: Ensures patient data governance aligns with hospital strategy
ITIL: Creates incident management when systems go down
ISO 27001: Protects patient records with encryption

(b) Explain why universities need special IT governance frameworks like JISC. (8 marks)

Model Answer:

Universities differ from commercial organizations in three key ways:

  1. Unique Processes: Teaching, research, administration - not just profit-making activities
  2. Complex Stakeholders: Students, faculty, government, public - not just shareholders
  3. Difficult to Measure Value: Educational quality and research impact vs. simple financial ROI

JISC's 5 Perspectives:

  1. Governance - Strategic direction, policies
  2. Management - Day-to-day operations
  3. Resources - People, Technology, Finance
  4. Structures - Centralized vs. decentralized IT
  5. Services - Email, LMS, library systems

(c) Describe the 5-phase ITG implementation process. (5 marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Situational Analysis: Where are we NOW? (SWOT, maturity audit, gap analysis)
  2. Strategy Formulation: Where do we WANT to be? (Vision, mission, objectives)
  3. Framework Design: WHAT framework fits? (Select and customize domains)
  4. Implementation: HOW do we get there? (Allocate resources, execute, train)
  5. Monitoring: Are we on TRACK? (KPIs, KGIs, continuous improvement)
Q3 Strategic Alignment & IS Strategy Triangle (25 marks) +

(a) Draw and explain the IS Strategy Triangle. (12 marks)

Model Answer:
BUSINESS STRATEGY
(The Driver - Where is the business going?)
ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGY
(Structure, Processes, Culture)
IS STRATEGY
(Technologies, Systems, Delivery)

Key Concept: Business Strategy DRIVES both Organizational and IS Strategy. All three must be aligned.

THE BALANCE RULE: If you change ONE corner, you MUST adjust the other two!
Tesla Example:
Business Strategy Change: "Become world's leading EV company"
Required Org Changes: Hire AI engineers, agile culture, direct sales
Required IS Changes: Over-the-air updates, mobile app, autopilot AI

(b) Identify symptoms of poor IT-Business alignment. (8 marks)

Model Answer:
  1. High IT costs but low business value - Spending millions on servers but sales don't increase
  2. Lack of coordination - IT builds features nobody asked for
  3. Redundant projects/systems - Three departments each buy their own CRM
  4. "Fire-fighting" mode - Constantly fixing crises instead of preventing them

(c) Explain Luftman's 6 Components of Maturity. (5 marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Communication: How well IT and business understand each other
  2. Competence/Value: Does business perceive IT as delivering value?
  3. Governance: Are decision rights clear?
  4. Partnership: Do IT and business share risks and rewards?
  5. Scope/Architecture: Is IT infrastructure flexible and integrated?
  6. Skills: Do IT staff have both technical AND business skills?
Q4 Competitive Advantage & Strategic Planning (25 marks) +

(a) Explain Porter's 3 Generic Strategies with examples. (10 marks)

Model Answer:
1. Cost Leadership

Be the LOWEST-COST producer in the industry, targeting broad market

Examples: Walmart (retail), Xiaomi (phones), Southwest Airlines
2. Differentiation

Offer UNIQUE product/service valued by customers, targeting broad market

Examples: Apple (premium design), Mercedes-Benz (luxury), Starbucks (experience)
3. Focus (Niche)

Target SPECIFIC market segment with cost focus or differentiation focus

Examples: Rolls-Royce (luxury cars), CAT phones (rugged phones for construction)

(b) Explain Hypercompetition and the 'Destroy Your Business' concept. (8 marks)

Model Answer:

Hypercompetition: Markets where competitive advantages are TEMPORARY and rapidly eroded. Winners must constantly disrupt themselves.

Key Characteristics:

  • Short product lifecycles (months, not years)
  • Rapid technological change
  • "Winner-take-all" dynamics
  • Constant "moves and countermoves"

Destroy Your Business (DYB): Strategic approach where companies disrupt their OWN products before competitors do.

Apple's Cannibalization:
iPod (2001): Dominated music players, making billions
iPhone (2007): Apple KILLED their own iPod by making it part of the phone
Result: iPhone became trillion-dollar product. If Apple hadn't done it, Samsung would have.

(c) Explain Complementary Assets and the Managerial Levers Framework. (7 marks)

Model Answer:

Complementary Assets: Resources needed to derive value from primary IT investment. Technology alone NEVER delivers value!

  • Organizational: Business processes, culture, structure
  • Managerial: Training, incentive systems, teamwork
  • Social: Internet infrastructure, standards, regulations
CRM Failure Example: $500K Salesforce investment fails because: no training, no process change, no incentives = Zero ROI!

Managerial Levers Framework: Three types of variables to execute strategy:

  1. Organizational Variables: Decision rights, reporting structure, processes
  2. Control Variables: Data availability, KPIs, incentives/rewards
  3. Cultural Variables: Values, risk tolerance, innovation mindset

Practice Questions for Self-Assessment

Try These!
1. Explain the difference between IT Governance and IT Management in the context of implementing a new student information system at a university.
2. Draw the IT Governance Focus Area diagram and explain how Strategic Alignment leads to Value Delivery.
3. An organization has documented processes but lacks quantitative measurement. What maturity level is this? How can they move to the next level?
4. Describe how IT's role changes from "Technology Provider" to "Strategic Partner" using a company like Netflix as an example.
5. Apply Porter's Generic Strategies to the fast-food industry. Give specific company examples for each strategy.
6. A startup is implementing a cloud-first strategy. Explain how they should use the Managerial Levers Framework to ensure successful adoption.

Model Paper 2026 - Based on 2024 Exam Trends

PREDICTED PAPER
Q1 Alignment & Maturity (25 marks) - Based on 2024 Q1 +

(A) Explain the Strategic Alignment Model (SAM) by Henderson & Venkatraman using its four domains. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:

The SAM Model has four domains:

  1. Business Strategy (External) - Competitive positioning
  2. IT Strategy (External) - Technology scope and competencies
  3. Organizational Infrastructure (Internal) - Skills, processes, structure
  4. IS Infrastructure (Internal) - Architecture, systems, platforms

Key Concept: Alignment requires fitting these four domains together - both Strategic Fit (external vs internal) and Functional Integration (business vs IT).

(B) List four (4) of Luftman's six components for assessing IT maturity and explain one. (4 Marks)

Model Answer:

Luftman's 6 Criteria:

  1. Communication
  2. Competence/Value
  3. Governance
  4. Partnership
  5. Scope/Architecture
  6. Skills
Example - Partnership: Measures the relationship between IT and business. At low maturity, IT is seen as a "cost center." At high maturity, IT and business share risks, rewards, and co-create value together.

(C) An organization has "processes that are documented, communicated, and institutionalized, but lacks automated continuous improvement."

(i) Identify the Maturity Level. (2 Marks)

(ii) Compare this level with Level 5 (Optimized). (4 Marks)

Model Answer:

(i) Level 3 (Defined) - Processes are documented and standardized.

Aspect Level 3 (Defined) Level 5 (Optimized)
Processes Documented, standardized Automated, continuously improved
Measurement Qualitative Quantitative feedback loops
Improvement Periodic reviews Continuous, proactive optimization
Best Practices Followed manually Automated and integrated

(D) Critically analyze the "Strategic Partner" stage. How does IT budget perception change from "Technology Provider"? (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
Aspect Technology Provider Strategic Partner
IT Budget View Expense to CONTROL Investment to MANAGE (ROI focus)
IT Role Cost center, technical support Inseparable from business strategy
IT Managers Technical experts Business leaders at executive table
Focus Infrastructure efficiency Business value creation & growth

(E) "IT Strategic alignment is not a one-time event but a continuous process." Discuss. (4 Marks)

Model Answer:

Alignment is a moving target because external factors constantly change:

  • Technology Changes: New platforms, AI, cloud require strategy updates
  • Market Regulations: GDPR, data privacy laws force IS changes
  • Competition: Competitor moves require rapid strategic responses
  • Customer Expectations: Digital experience demands evolve
Static alignment leads to failure. The "Strategic Fit" must be constantly adjusted!
Q2 Frameworks & Implementation (25 marks) - Based on 2024 Q2 +

(A) Differentiate between COBIT and ITIL. (4 Marks)

Model Answer:
Aspect COBIT ITIL
Focus Governance & Control Service Management
Answers "WHAT you should be doing" "HOW to do it"
Domain Risk, Objectives, Compliance Processes, Helpdesk, ITSM
Best For Bridging business-IT gap IT Operations excellence

(B) Why might standard commercial frameworks not fit universities? List JISC's 5 perspectives. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:

Why Universities Need Special Frameworks:

  • Commercial frameworks focus on PROFIT; universities focus on teaching/research/public good
  • Diverse stakeholders (students, faculty, government) unlike corporate shareholders
  • Difficult to measure "ROI" in educational outcomes

JISC's 5 Perspectives:

  1. Governance - Strategic direction, policies
  2. Management - Day-to-day operations
  3. Resources - People, Technology, Finance
  4. Structures - Centralized vs. decentralized IT
  5. Services - Email, LMS, library systems

(C) Using the ITG Focus Area Diagram, explain the relationship between Strategic Alignment, Risk Management, and Value Delivery. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

The Cycle:

Strategic Alignment (IT supports business goals) -> drives -> Value Delivery (IT delivers benefits/ROI)

Risk Management ensures these values are delivered SECURELY and without disaster

Relationship:

  • Strategic Alignment = WHAT we're trying to achieve
  • Value Delivery = The OUTCOME of good alignment
  • Risk Management = Protecting the value from threats

(D) Describe "Situational Analysis" phase and why Gap Analysis is critical. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:

Situational Analysis: Documents the "As-Is" (current) state vs. the "To-Be" (future) state.

  • Involves SWOT analysis of internal/external environment
  • Assesses current maturity level
  • Documents existing systems and capabilities

Why Gap Analysis is Critical:

  • Identifies EXACTLY what is missing (technology, skills, processes)
  • Prioritizes investments based on gaps
  • Creates roadmap from current to desired state

(E) Identify three (3) KPIs for measuring ITG implementation success. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. % of projects completed on time/budget - Measures execution efficiency
  2. Customer/User satisfaction scores - Measures service quality perception
  3. System availability/uptime % - Measures operational reliability

Other valid examples: IT spend as % of revenue, incident resolution time, security breach frequency

Q3 IS Strategy & Planning (25 marks) - Based on 2024 Q3 +

(A) State the six (6) Strategic Business Objectives for IS investment. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Operational Excellence - Efficiency, productivity improvements
  2. New Products/Services - Digital innovation, new business models
  3. Customer/Supplier Intimacy - Better relationships, personalization
  4. Improved Decision Making - Business intelligence, analytics
  5. Competitive Advantage - Outperform rivals
  6. Survival - Companies must adopt technology to stay relevant

(B) What happens if Business Strategy changes but Organizational Strategy doesn't update? (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
Example Scenario:
Business Strategy changes from "Cost Leadership" to "Customer Intimacy"
BUT Organizational Strategy remains rigid (strict hierarchy, no employee empowerment)

Result = FAILURE:

  • IS Strategy (e.g., CRM system) gets implemented...
  • ...but employees aren't empowered to use customer data
  • ...no incentives to build customer relationships
  • ...culture doesn't support personalized service
All THREE corners of the IS Strategy Triangle must balance. Changing one requires adjusting the others!

(C) Explain how "Decision Rights" and "Incentives/Rewards" from Managerial Levers Framework ensure IS strategy execution. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

Decision Rights (Organizational Variable):

  • Defines WHO has authority to approve/reject IT projects
  • Clear decision rights prevent bottlenecks and delays
  • Empowers right people to make quick decisions

Incentives/Rewards (Control Variable):

  • Motivates employees to USE new systems
  • Aligns individual goals with IS strategy goals
  • Without incentives, even the best system fails due to resistance
Example: New CRM system fails if salespeople aren't rewarded for entering customer data. They'll skip it and use spreadsheets instead!

(D) Differentiate Complementary Assets from IT Assets. Why does hardware alone fail? (7 Marks)

Model Answer:
IT Assets Complementary Assets
Hardware, software, networks Training, processes, culture
Tangible technology investments Organizational + Managerial + Social capital
Can be purchased Must be developed over time

Why Hardware Alone Fails:

  • Organizational: No new business processes to leverage technology
  • Managerial: No training, no incentives, no teamwork culture
  • Social: No supporting infrastructure or standards
CRM Failure Example: Company spends $500K on Salesforce but: no training (staff can't use it), no process change (still using Excel), no incentives (no motivation to change) = ZERO ROI!
Q4 Competitive Advantage (25 marks) - Based on 2024 Q4 +

(A) Apply Porter's Model to Automotive/Smartphone Industry with examples. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:

Smartphone Industry Examples:

Strategy Company How?
Cost Leadership Xiaomi, OnePlus Good specs at lowest price, efficient manufacturing
Differentiation Apple iPhone Premium design, ecosystem, status symbol, unique experience
Focus (Niche) CAT Phones Rugged phones for construction workers

Automotive Industry:

  • Cost Leadership: Toyota, Hyundai - Efficiency, reliability at low price
  • Differentiation: Mercedes, BMW - Luxury, unique features, prestige

(B) Explain "Destroy Your Business" (DYB). Why would Apple cannibalize the iPod? (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

Destroy Your Business (DYB): A strategy where firms disrupt their OWN business model before competitors do.

Apple's Cannibalization Story:
iPod (2001): Dominated music players, making billions in revenue
iPhone (2007): Apple KILLED their own iPod by building music into the phone
Result: iPhone became trillion-dollar product
If Apple hadn't done it: Samsung or Google would have disrupted them instead!

Why Companies Self-Cannibalize:

  • Better to lose sales to yourself than to a competitor
  • Essential for survival in fast-moving markets
  • Creates next-generation revenue streams

(C) Describe two characteristics of hypercompetitive industries. How do IS help companies survive? (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

Characteristics of Hypercompetition:

  1. Rapid erosion of competitive advantage - What works today fails tomorrow
  2. Short product life cycles - Months, not years (e.g., smartphone models)

How IS Helps Survival:

  • Agility: Cloud-based systems allow rapid scaling and pivoting
  • Business Intelligence: Real-time analytics spot trends instantly
  • Speed to Market: DevOps, automation reduce launch times
  • Customer Insights: Data analytics anticipate needs before competitors

(D) Describe the main output of the Direction Phase (Strategy Formulation). (8 Marks)

Model Answer:

Direction Phase Output = IS Strategic Plan containing:

  1. IS Vision: Future-oriented statement of what IS will achieve
  2. IS Mission: Current purpose of IS function
  3. Strategic Goals: High-level objectives aligned with business strategy
  4. Strategic Initiatives: Major programs to achieve goals

Key Question Answered: "Where do we want to be?"

This sets the high-level direction BEFORE detailed project planning begins in the Implementation phase.

Full Model Examination Paper 2026

WITH READING AREAS
Q1 IT Governance Fundamentals (25 marks) +

(A) Differentiate between IT Governance and IT Management. (4 Marks)

Model Answer:
  • IT Governance: Focuses on decision rights, setting strategic direction, ensuring IT aligns with business goals. Board/Executive responsibility. Answers "WHAT decisions" and "WHO makes them." "Doing the RIGHT things."
  • IT Management: Focuses on implementation, day-to-day operations, service delivery. Answers "HOW do we execute." "Doing things RIGHT."

Reading: Introduction to IT Governance slides

(B) Draw the Evolution of IT Functions diagram and explain Technology Provider to Strategic Partner transition. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
Evolution Curve (over time):
1. Technology Provider (IT Infrastructure) -> 2. Service Provider (ITSM) -> 3. Strategic Partner (Business Value)
  • Technology Provider: IT = cost center, focus on infrastructure efficiency
  • Service Provider: IT delivers services to business (ITIL implementation)
  • Strategic Partner: IT fully integrated, enables new business models, investment not expense

Reading: Evolution of IT within organisations slide

(C) Using the IT Governance Focus Area diagram, explain how the five domains create stakeholder value. (8 Marks)

Model Answer:
Strategic Alignment -> Value Delivery -> Risk Management -> Resource Management -> Performance Measurement (cycle)
  • Strategic Alignment: Links IT/business plans
  • Value Delivery: Ensures benefits/ROI throughout delivery
  • Risk Management: Manages compliance and security
  • Resource Management: Optimizes apps, infrastructure, people
  • Performance Measurement: Tracks strategy using BSC

Reading: Focus areas of IT governance slide

(D) Define IT Maturity and list the six levels (0-5). Give one characteristic of "Optimized". (7 Marks)

Model Answer:

Definition: Measure of how well processes and strategic alignment are defined, managed, and controlled.

Levels: 0-Non-existent, 1-Initial/Ad Hoc, 2-Repeatable, 3-Defined, 4-Managed, 5-Optimized

Optimized Characteristic: Best practices are followed AND automated; continuous improvement based on quantitative feedback.

Reading: IT Maturity Levels slides

Q2 ITG Frameworks for Universities (25 marks) +

(A) List three reasons why universities need specific IT governance frameworks. (3 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Unique processes (teaching, research) unlike standard commerce
  2. Difficulty measuring "profit" - academic success metrics differ
  3. Diverse stakeholders (students, government, academics) vs. shareholders

Reading: ITG frameworks for universities slides

(B) JISC Framework: (i) Identify 5 perspectives. (ii) Explain two perspectives. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

(i) Perspectives: Governance, Management, Resources, Structures, Services

(ii) Examples:

  • Resources: Covers People (skills), Technology (infrastructure), Finance (budgeting/VFM)
  • Structures: Organizational setup - centralized vs. decentralized IT, roles/responsibilities

Reading: JISC Framework slides

(C) Identify four key stakeholders in university IT governance and explain IT Steering Committee role. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

Stakeholders: Students, Academics/Faculty, Government/Ministry/UGC, IT Vendors/Administrators

Steering Committee Role: Oversees IT strategy implementation, ensures alignment with institutional goals, approves significant investments, represents all stakeholders in decision-making.

Reading: ITG frameworks for specific organizational requirements

(D) Describe Situational Analysis phase and why "As-Is" state is critical before "To-Be". (10 Marks)

Model Answer:

Situational Analysis: Documents "Where are we today?" Includes:

  • Internal IS situation analysis (strengths/weaknesses)
  • External environment (opportunities/threats)
  • Current maturity level assessment

Why Critical:

  • Cannot plan future without understanding current capabilities
  • Gap Analysis identifies what's missing (tech, skills)
  • Determines if current systems meet business requirements
  • Identifies redundant/obsolete systems

Reading: IS Strategy Planning slides, Situation Analysis

Q3 IS Strategy & Planning (25 marks) +

(A) State the six Strategic Business Objectives driving IS investment. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Operational excellence
  2. New products, services, and business models
  3. Customer and supplier intimacy
  4. Improved decision making
  5. Competitive advantage
  6. Survival

Reading: Role of IS in today's business slides

(B) Explain IS Strategy Triangle with diagram. How does Business Strategy change impact others? (8 Marks)

Model Answer:
BUSINESS STRATEGY
(Driver)
ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGY
IS STRATEGY

Business Strategy DRIVES both others. A change (e.g., going global) requires:

  • Org Strategy change: new structure, skills, culture
  • IS Strategy change: new networks, cloud infrastructure

Reading: Linking systems to strategy, IS Strategy Triangle

(C) Compare Vision and Mission statements. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:
Aspect Vision Mission
Focus Future-oriented Present-oriented
Question "Where are we going?" "What do we do?"
Nature Aspirational Operational
Example "To be most admired..." "Committed to bringing..."

Reading: Vision/Mission slides

(D) Explain Complementary Assets and why technology alone doesn't guarantee returns. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

Definition: Assets required to derive value from primary investment. Categories:

  • Organizational: Appropriate business models, efficient processes
  • Managerial: Incentives for innovation, teamwork, training
  • Social: Internet infrastructure, technology standards

Why Technology Alone Fails: Without training staff or redesigning processes, new hardware will not increase productivity. Technology is just one piece of the puzzle.

Reading: Complementary assets slides

Q4 Competitive Advantage & Planning (25 marks) +

(A) Define Porter's Model. Differentiate Cost Leadership vs. Differentiation. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:

Model: Framework for sustainable competitive advantage through strategic positioning.

  • Cost Leadership: Lowest-cost producer in industry (e.g., Toyota, Hyundai)
  • Differentiation: Unique product perceived as valuable, premium price (e.g., Mercedes)

Reading: Generic Strategies Framework slides

(B) Hypercompetition: (i) Explain the model. (ii) Discuss Moves and Countermoves. (8 Marks)

Model Answer:

(i) Model: Applies to turbulent environments where advantages are short-lived. Agility and speed are key, not static positioning.

(ii) Moves/Countermoves:

  • Companies launch "strategic moves" (Apple FaceID) for temporary advantage
  • Competitors respond with "countermoves" (Samsung facial recognition)
  • Cycle of disruption creates "Winner-take-all" environment
  • Firms must be willing to cannibalize own products (DYB) to survive

Reading: Hypercompetition Model slides

(C) Apply Managerial Levers Framework. Explain Organizational, Control, Cultural variables. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

Framework: Used to execute organizational strategy effectively.

  • Organizational Variables: Decision rights, business processes, reporting structure
  • Control Variables: Data availability, planning quality, KPIs, incentives
  • Cultural Variables: Values, beliefs, risk-taking culture, innovation mindset

Reading: The Managerial Levers slides

(D) Describe Strategy Formulation vs. Strategy Implementation phases. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
Phase Focus Output
Strategy Formulation "Where do we want to be?" IS Vision, Mission, Goals
Strategy Implementation "How do we get there?" Roadmap, Projects, Budget, Business Case

Reading: Phases of the planning process slides

2024 Actual Past Paper - ITC4212

ACTUAL EXAM
Q1 IT Alignment & Maturity (25 marks) +

(A) State four (4) symptoms of poor IT alignment. (4 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. High IT costs with low perceived value - Spending millions but sales don't increase
  2. Lack of coordination between business and IS department
  3. Redundant projects or cancelled projects that fail to deliver value
  4. Reactive "fire-fighting" mode - constantly fixing crises instead of proactive planning

(B) Define IT maturity. (3 Marks)

Model Answer:

IT maturity refers to the degree to which an organization has defined, managed, and optimized its processes, particularly regarding the strategic alignment of IT with business goals. It involves measuring current performance and identifying what must be done to improve, using metrics to determine the level of governance and alignment.

(C) Explain the stages of IT maturity and characteristics of each stage. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
Level Name Characteristics
0 Non-existent No processes, no top management involvement
1 Initial/Ad Hoc Disorganized, case-by-case, reactive, limited measurement
2 Repeatable Practices occur but depend on individuals, not formal
3 Defined Processes documented, standardized, institutionalized
4 Managed Monitored with KPIs, business outcomes, balanced scorecards
5 Optimized Best practices automated, continuous improvement, proactive

(D) Discuss the evolution of IT functions with diagram. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
Evolution Curve (over time):
Stage 1: Technology Provider -> Stage 2: Service Provider -> Stage 3: Strategic Partner
  1. Technology Provider (IT Infrastructure): IT is a cost center, focus on infrastructure efficiency
  2. Service Provider (ITSM): IT delivers services, ensures customer access to relevant services
  3. Strategic Partner (IT Governance): IT fully integrated with business, viewed as investment for growth not expense to control

(E) Assess the impact of external environment on IT governance strategies. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

External environment heavily influences IT governance:

  • Dynamic Environments: In hypercompetition, static strategies insufficient. Organizations must value agility as competitive advantage
  • External Domains: SAM includes Business Strategy and IT Strategy covering business scope, competencies, technology scope
  • Market Pressure: Globalization, price wars, rapid technological disruption force continuous reinvention and R&D investment

ITG must ensure systems are flexible enough to support rapid "moves and countermoves"

Q2 ITG Framework Implementation (25 marks) +

(A) List three (3) ITG frameworks. (3 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. COBIT (Control Objectives for Information and Related Technologies)
  2. ITIL (Information Technology Infrastructure Library)
  3. ISO 17799/ISO 27001 (Information Security Management)

(B) Discuss two risks of lacking structured ITG framework. (3 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Inability to Measure Value: Difficult to ascertain if IT spending contributes to objectives or achieves "value for money"
  2. Unmanaged Risks: Poor risk management leads to legal compliance issues, security breaches, and business continuity problems

(C) Evaluate impact of 3 organizational factors on framework selection. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Industry/Sector: Universities need specialized frameworks (JISC, ITG4U) because teaching/research differs from standard commerce
  2. Organizational Structure: Centralized vs. decentralized IT affects framework choice - must align with decision-making hierarchy
  3. Stakeholder Composition: Universities have diverse stakeholders (students, government, academics) requiring steering committees representing all groups

(D) Justify why stakeholder involvement is crucial in framework selection. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

Stakeholder involvement is critical because IT governance is a shared responsibility aimed at maximizing business value for all parties.

  • Justification: Steering Committees must represent all stakeholders to ensure decisions align with broader strategy, not just technical needs
  • University Example: Stakeholders include students, academics, government. Missing "Student" input means service delivery may fail learning expectations
  • Resource Example: Business managers must be involved in budget allocation or IT remains viewed as cost center only

(E) Provide implementation plan overview for ITG framework. (7 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Visioning & Assessment: Determine current status using self-assessment, establish baseline maturity level
  2. Strategy Formulation: Define IT vision aligned with business strategy, set up Steering Committee
  3. Framework Design: Select relevant domains (e.g., COBIT's Planning, Acquisition, Delivery, Monitoring OR JISC's 5 perspectives)
  4. Implementation: Establish policies, define decision rights, allocate resources (Finance, People, Technology)
  5. Monitoring & Improvement: Use KGIs/KPIs to measure progress, continuous audits for evolution
Q3 Business Strategy & Information Systems (25 marks) +

(A) State main components of a Business Strategy Plan. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:
  1. Mission: Core purpose ("What do we do?")
  2. Vision: Aspirational future goal ("Where are we going?")
  3. Values: Ethics and principles the company stands for
  4. Strategic Objectives: High-level goals and sequencing
  5. Actions & KPIs: Specific steps and metrics to measure success

(B) Explain the ever-increasing importance of IS in modern organizations. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

IS has moved from support role to central strategic enabler:

  1. Strategic Interdependence: Growing link between IS capabilities and corporate strategy implementation
  2. Operational Excellence: Major tool for efficiency, productivity, profitability
  3. Decision Making: Real-time data enables informed decisions vs. guessing
  4. Competitive Advantage: Enables new business models (Uber, Apple ecosystem)
  5. Globalization: Reduces costs of global operations, enables distributed decision-making

(C) Explain differences between Vision and Mission statements. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
Aspect Vision Mission
Focus Future, aspirational ("Where are we going?") Present, operational ("What do we do?")
Timeframe Long-term (5-10 years) Current state
Content Ambition, hope, ultimate achievement Business definition, purpose, stakeholders
Example "To be most admired company..." "We provide cloud computing services..."

(D) Describe the IS Strategy Triangle with diagram. (8 Marks)

Model Answer:
BUSINESS STRATEGY
(DRIVER - "Where is business going?")
ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGY
("What is required?" - people, structure, processes)
IS/IT STRATEGY
("How to deliver?" - architecture, infrastructure)

Key Relationships:

  • Business Strategy DRIVES Organizational and IS Strategies
  • IS Strategy SUPPORTS and impacts Organizational Strategy
  • Changes in any corner require adjustments in others to maintain balance
Q4 Competitive Advantage & Strategic Planning (25 marks) +

(A) Explain Porter's Competitive Advantage model with examples. (5 Marks)

Model Answer:

Porter's model: Firms achieve sustainable competitive advantage through strategic positioning:

  1. Cost Leadership: Lowest-cost producer (e.g., Hyundai, Toyota)
  2. Differentiation: Unique product justifying premium price (e.g., Mercedes, Porsche)
  3. Focus: Narrow market segment with Cost or Differentiation focus (e.g., Porsche - high-performance niche)

(B) Examine benefits of social business strategies. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:

Social IT aligned with organizational strategy offers:

  • Collaboration: Extends stakeholder reach, enables finding/connecting with experts through social networks, breaks down silos
  • Engagement: Deeper stakeholder involvement through communities and blogs, creating connection to brand
  • Innovation: Acts as "super idea box" - stakeholders suggest, comment, vote on ideas for new innovation sources

(C) Are IS Strategies critical for dynamic environments? Justify using appropriate model. (8 Marks)

Model Answer:

Yes, IS strategies are critical in dynamic environments.

Hypercompetition Model Justification:

  • In turbulent markets, speed and aggressiveness of moves/countermoves determine success
  • Agility itself becomes competitive advantage

Role of IS:

  • Sensing & Responding: Business Intelligence predicts opportunities, dynamically adjusts resources
  • Moves & Countermoves: In smartphone wars (Apple vs Samsung), IS enables rapid product launches and strategic pivots
  • Disruption: IS enables "Destroy Your Business" (DYB) - disrupting own practices before competitors do

(D) Discuss the 3 phases of strategic planning process. (6 Marks)

Model Answer:
Phase Question Activities
1. Situation Analysis "Where are we today?" SWOT Analysis, document internal/external environment, benchmark capabilities
2. Strategy Formulation "Where do we want to be?" Define IS vision, mission, goals; translate future vision into IS strategies
3. Strategy Implementation "How do we get there?" Define projects, create roadmap, summarize costs, develop business case

Study Hub - Exam Focus Area

Visual diagrams, key concepts, and everything you need to ace your exam

Quick Numbers to Memorize Must Know

5 ITG Focus Areas
6 Maturity Levels (0-5)
6 Luftman Components
5 JISC Perspectives
3 Porter's Strategies
6 Strategic Objectives
3 Planning Phases
3 Evolution Stages

IS Strategy Triangle Draw in Exam

BUSINESS STRATEGY (THE DRIVER) ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGY (Structure, People) IS/IT STRATEGY (Systems, Tech) Drives Drives Supports
Key Rule to Remember

THE BALANCE RULE: If you change ONE corner, you MUST adjust the other two!

Example: Tesla's "become EV leader" strategy required: (1) Hiring AI engineers (Org), (2) Building autopilot systems (IS)

IS Strategy Triangle Diagram

Detailed View: The Information Systems Strategy Triangle

Evolution of IT Function Draw in Exam

1
Technology Provider

IT = Cost Center
Focus: Infrastructure
Budget: Expense to CONTROL

2
Service Provider

IT delivers services
Focus: ITSM, helpdesk
Budget: Service costs

3
Strategic Partner

IT = Business itself
Focus: Growth, innovation
Budget: Investment to MANAGE

Real-World Example
Amazon's Evolution:
  • Stage 1 (1990s): IT just maintained the bookstore website
  • Stage 2 (2000s): Created recommendation engine, faster checkout
  • Stage 3 (Now): IT IS Amazon - AWS, Alexa, Prime Video drive EVERY decision
Evolution of IT Function Curve

Detailed View: Evolution of IT Maturity Stages

IT Maturity Levels (0-5) Memorize All

0
Non-existent Complete lack of processes, no management involvement
1
Initial / Ad Hoc Disorganized, reactive, fire-fighting mode, case-by-case
2
Repeatable Processes occur but depend on individuals, not formal documentation
3
Defined Processes documented, standardized, and institutionalized
4
Managed Monitored with KPIs, balanced scorecards, quantitative control
5
Optimized Best practices automated, continuous improvement, proactive optimization
Exam Pattern Alert

Common Question: "An organization has processes that are documented but lacks automated improvement. What level is this?"

Answer: Level 3 (Defined) - Has documentation but no automated continuous improvement (Level 5)

Luftman's 6 Components of Alignment Maturity

1 Communication
2 Competence/Value
3 Governance
4 Partnership
5 Scope/Architecture
6 Skills
Memory Trick: "CC GPS S"

Communication - Competence - Governance - Partnership - Scope - Skills

Framework Comparison Know Each

COBIT
Governance & Controls
"WHAT to do?"
Best for: Compliance, bridging business-IT gap
ITIL
Service Management
"HOW to do it?"
Best for: IT Operations, helpdesk, ITSM
ISO 27001
Security Management
"Is it SECURE?"
Best for: Data protection, compliance
JISC
Higher Education
"5 Perspectives"
Best for: Universities only

JISC Framework - 5 Perspectives (Universities)

1 Governance
2 Management
3 Resources
4 Structures
5 Services
Why Universities Need Special Frameworks
  • Unique Processes: Teaching, research, administration (not just profit)
  • Complex Stakeholders: Students, faculty, government, public (not shareholders)
  • Difficult to Measure: Educational quality vs. simple financial ROI

5 IT Governance Focus Areas Draw the Cycle

STAKEHOLDER VALUE STRATEGIC ALIGNMENT Link IT to business goals VALUE DELIVERY Ensure ROI RISK MANAGEMENT Security & Compliance RESOURCE MGMT People & Infrastructure PERFORMANCE KPIs & Tracking
Memory Trick: "SVRPP" - Start Very Risky, Prepare Performance

Strategic Alignment > Value Delivery > Risk Management > Resource (People) > Performance

ITG Focus Areas Cycle

Detailed View: 5 Focus Areas of IT Governance

Porter's 3 Generic Strategies

1. Cost Leadership

  • Goal: Lowest cost producer in industry
  • Target: Broad market
  • Examples: Walmart, Xiaomi, Hyundai, Southwest Airlines
  • IT Role: Automation, efficiency systems

2. Differentiation

  • Goal: Unique product/service valued by customers
  • Target: Broad market
  • Examples: Apple, Mercedes-Benz, Starbucks
  • IT Role: Unique features, experience platforms

3. Focus (Niche)

  • Goal: Serve specific market segment
  • Target: Narrow market
  • Examples: Rolls-Royce, CAT phones, Porsche
  • IT Role: Specialized solutions

Hypercompetition Model Q4 Focus

When to Use Hypercompetition

  • Fast-changing industries (smartphones, tech)
  • Short product lifecycles (months, not years)
  • Rapid technological change
  • Constant "moves and countermoves"
  • Competitive advantages are TEMPORARY

Destroy Your Business (DYB)

  • Concept: Disrupt your OWN products before competitors do
  • Why: Better to lose sales to yourself than to a rival
  • Example: Apple killed iPod with iPhone
  • Result: iPhone became trillion-dollar product
Apple's Cannibalization Story
Why Apple killed their own iPod:

6 Strategic Business Objectives for IS Investment

1 Operational Excellence
2 New Products/Services
3 Customer/Supplier Intimacy
4 Improved Decision Making
5 Competitive Advantage
6 Survival
Memory Trick: "ON CIC S"

Operational - New products - Customer - Improved decisions - Competitive - Survival

Complementary Assets Critical Concept

Why Technology Alone Fails

  • Rule: Technology NEVER delivers value by itself!
  • Needs complementary organizational changes
  • Needs training and process redesign
  • Without these = Zero ROI

3 Types of Complementary Assets

  • Organizational: Business processes, culture, structure
  • Managerial: Training, incentive systems, teamwork, leadership
  • Social: Internet infrastructure, standards, regulations
CRM Failure Example (Common Exam Question)
Company spends $500K on Salesforce CRM but...

Managerial Levers Framework

Organizational Variables

  • Decision rights (WHO decides)
  • Reporting structure
  • Business processes

Control Variables

  • Data availability
  • Performance metrics (KPIs)
  • Incentives and rewards

Cultural Variables

  • Organizational values
  • Risk tolerance
  • Innovation mindset

Vision vs Mission (Don't Confuse!) Common Q

VISION

  • Focus: Future-oriented
  • Question: "Where are we GOING?"
  • Nature: Aspirational, inspiring
  • Timeframe: Long-term (5-10 years)
  • Example: "To be the most admired company..."

MISSION

  • Focus: Present-oriented
  • Question: "What do we DO?"
  • Nature: Practical, specific
  • Timeframe: Current state
  • Example: "We provide cloud computing services..."

3 Phases of Strategic Planning

1
Situation Analysis

"Where are we TODAY?"
SWOT, current capabilities, gap analysis

2
Strategy Formulation

"Where do we WANT to be?"
Vision, Mission, Goals

3
Strategy Implementation

"HOW do we get there?"
Roadmap, Projects, Budget

ITG vs IT Management Always Asked

IT GOVERNANCE

  • Focus: WHAT decisions & WHO decides
  • Level: Board & Executive
  • Purpose: Strategic direction, decision rights
  • Motto: "Doing the RIGHT things"
  • Example: Should we invest in AI? What's the budget?

IT MANAGEMENT

  • Focus: HOW to implement decisions
  • Level: Middle & Project Management
  • Purpose: Execution, operations, delivery
  • Motto: "Doing things RIGHT"
  • Example: Which AI platform? How to deploy?

Exam Question Patterns (Based on Past Papers)

Question 1 Pattern

  • ITG fundamentals & definitions
  • Evolution of IT diagram (3 stages)
  • Maturity levels (0-5)
  • ITG vs IT Management
  • 5 Focus Areas

Question 2 Pattern

  • Framework comparison (COBIT vs ITIL)
  • JISC for universities
  • Implementation phases
  • Stakeholder involvement

Question 3 Pattern

  • IS Strategy Triangle (DRAW IT!)
  • 6 Strategic objectives
  • Vision vs Mission
  • Complementary Assets

Question 4 Pattern

  • Porter's 3 strategies with examples
  • Hypercompetition & DYB
  • Managerial Levers
  • Strategic planning phases

Strategic Alignment Model (SAM) 4 Quadrants

EXTERNAL INTERNAL BUSINESS IT BUSINESS STRATEGY Scope, Competencies, Governance IT STRATEGY Technology Scope, Competencies, Governance ORGANIZATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE Structure, Processes, Skills IT INFRASTRUCTURE Architecture, Processes, Skills
Henderson & Venkatraman's SAM Model Key Points
Henderson & Venkatraman SAM Model

Detailed View: Strategic Alignment Model (SAM)

Symptoms of Poor IT Alignment Exam Q1

Organizational Symptoms

  • Cancelled projects frequently
  • Never enough IT resources
  • Fighting for resources between teams
  • Redundant projects across departments
  • Slow progress on initiatives

Delivery Symptoms

  • Projects don't deliver intended benefits
  • Lack of credibility of IT with business
  • Disconnect with business direction
  • IT perceived as roadblock to business needs
  • Too much "firefighting" instead of strategy

Business Diamond Model (Organizational Design)

1 People
2 Structure
3 Tasks
4 Information/Control
Using Business Diamond with IS

Key Insight: When implementing IS, you MUST consider impact on ALL 4 components.

Example: New ERP system affects: People (training needed), Structure (new reporting lines), Tasks (automated processes), Info/Control (new dashboards)

2024 Actual Exam - Key Questions Must Prepare

Q1: ITG Fundamentals (25 marks)

  • (A) 4 symptoms of poor IT alignment [4 marks]
  • (B) Define IT maturity [3 marks]
  • (C) Stages of IT maturity + characteristics [6 marks]
  • (D) Evolution of IT functions + diagram [6 marks]
  • (E) External environment impact on ITG [6 marks]

Q2: Framework Implementation (25 marks)

  • (A) List 3 ITG frameworks [3 marks]
  • (B) 2 risks of lacking ITG framework [3 marks]
  • (C) 3 org factors affecting framework selection [6 marks]
  • (D) Stakeholder involvement importance [6 marks]
  • (E) Implementation plan overview [7 marks]

Q3: Business Strategy & IS (25 marks)

  • (A) Components of Business Strategy Plan [5 marks]
  • (B) Importance of IS in modern orgs [6 marks]
  • (C) Vision vs Mission differences [6 marks]
  • (D) IS Strategy Triangle + diagram [8 marks]

Q4: Competitive Advantage (25 marks)

  • (A) Porter's model with examples [5 marks]
  • (B) Social business strategies benefits [6 marks]
  • (C) IS in dynamic environments + model [8 marks]
  • (D) 3 phases of strategic planning [6 marks]

JISC Framework - 5 Key Areas in Detail

1. Governance

  • Vision: Is IT strategy defined and documented?
  • Alignment: Are IT systems aligned to institutional strategy?
  • Assurance: Do governors receive progress reports?

2. Management

  • Leadership for IT strategy implementation
  • Responsibility and accountability structures
  • Resource allocation and budget control

3. Resources

  • Funding and investment management
  • Human resources and skills
  • Infrastructure and technology assets

4. Structures

  • Decision-making frameworks
  • Disaster recovery plans
  • Risk assessment processes

5. Services

  • Systems architecture support
  • Project management methodologies
  • Service delivery meets user requirements

IS Strategic Planning Process (4 Phases)

1
Visioning

Establish planning project
Define project plan, schedule
Set tasks & deliverables

2
Analysis

Document IS environment
Objectively analyze
Communicate to executives

3
Direction

Express IS mission/vision
Formulate objectives
Align with business

4
Recommendation

Document roadmap
Summarize costs/time
Identify options

Benefits of IS Strategic Planning

Effective management of critical assets
Better business-IT communication
Align IS priorities with business
Identify competitive opportunities
Efficient resource allocation
Reduce system lifecycle costs

External Environment Impact on ITG 6 Mark Q

Regulatory Factors

  • Data protection laws (GDPR)
  • Industry compliance requirements
  • Government IT policies

Technological Factors

  • Rapid technology changes
  • Cloud computing adoption
  • AI and automation trends

Economic Factors

  • Budget constraints
  • IT investment priorities
  • Cost-benefit pressures

Competitive Factors

  • Industry benchmarking
  • Digital transformation pressure
  • Customer expectations

Model Answer Templates for 2024 Exam

Q1(A): 4 Symptoms of Poor IT Alignment [4 marks]

  1. Cancelled projects frequently - Projects start but never complete due to changing priorities
  2. Never enough IT resources - Constant fighting for budget, staff, and infrastructure
  3. Redundant projects - Different departments building similar solutions without coordination
  4. IT perceived as roadblock - Business views IT as barrier rather than enabler

Q1(B): Define IT Maturity [3 marks]

IT Maturity is a measure of an organization's capability to effectively govern and manage IT resources. It assesses how well IT processes are defined, documented, managed, and optimized. Organizations use maturity models (e.g., COBIT) to determine their current level and identify improvements needed.

Q1(D): Evolution of IT Functions + Diagram [6 marks]

Draw the 3-stage curve showing progression:

  1. Technology Provider (Stage 1): IT as cost center, focuses on infrastructure maintenance, hardware/software management. Example: University IT maintaining computer labs.
  2. Service Provider (Stage 2): IT delivers services (ITSM), focus shifts to user needs, service desk, SLAs. Example: IT providing email, LMS support.
  3. Strategic Partner (Stage 3): IT drives business growth, fully integrated with strategy, innovation enabler. Example: IT leading digital transformation initiatives.

Q3(D): IS Strategy Triangle + Diagram [8 marks]

Draw triangle with 3 corners:

  • Business Strategy (Top): DRIVES the other two. Includes mission, vision, competitive positioning.
  • Organizational Strategy (Left): Structure, people, processes, culture that support business strategy.
  • IS Strategy (Right): Systems, applications, infrastructure that enable business and org strategies.

Key Principle: Change in ANY corner requires adjustment in the other two. Misalignment leads to failure!

Example: Tesla - Business strategy (sustainable energy) drives Org (flat hierarchy, innovation culture) and IS (AI autopilot, battery management systems).

Q4(A): Porter's Competitive Advantage [5 marks]

3 Generic Strategies:

  1. Cost Leadership: Lowest cost producer. IS enables automation, supply chain optimization. Example: Walmart - RFID, automated inventory
  2. Differentiation: Unique valuable products. IS enables innovation, customer experience. Example: Apple - Integrated ecosystem, premium UX
  3. Focus: Serve niche market extremely well. IS enables specialized solutions. Example: Rolls-Royce - Luxury customization systems

Q4(C): IS in Dynamic Environments + Model [8 marks]

Answer: YES, IS strategies are critical in dynamic environments!

Use Hypercompetition Model:

  • Traditional Porter strategies assume stable environments
  • Dynamic environments require: rapid moves, temporary advantages, agility
  • "Destroy Your Business" (DYB): Companies must disrupt themselves before competitors do
  • Example: Apple killed iPod with iPhone; Netflix killed DVD rentals with streaming

IS enables: Real-time analytics, rapid deployment, market sensing, customer feedback loops

Q4(D): 3 Phases of Strategic Planning [6 marks]

  1. Situation Analysis: "Where are we today?" - SWOT analysis, current capabilities assessment, market position, stakeholder analysis
  2. Strategy Formulation: "Where do we want to be?" - Define vision, mission, strategic objectives, competitive positioning
  3. Strategy Implementation: "How do we get there?" - Action plans, resource allocation, timeline, KPIs, change management

Pre-Exam Quick Revision Checklist

1 ITG vs IT Management
2 5 ITG Focus Areas
3 6 Maturity Levels (0-5)
4 3 IT Evolution Stages
5 IS Strategy Triangle
6 Porter's 3 Strategies
7 Hypercompetition + DYB
8 SAM Model 4 Quadrants
9 Complementary Assets
10 COBIT vs ITIL vs ISO
11 Luftman's 6 Components
12 Vision vs Mission

Exam Preparation Tips

Critical Diagrams to Practice

  • IT Governance Focus Area Loop (5 domains)
  • Evolution of IT Function curve (3 stages)
  • IS Strategy Triangle
  • SAM Model quadrants
  • IT Maturity Levels (0-5)

Lists to Memorize

  • 6 Maturity Levels (0-5) with characteristics
  • 6 Luftman Components of alignment
  • 5 JISC Perspectives
  • 6 Strategic Business Objectives
  • 4 Symptoms of Poor Alignment
  • Porter's 3 Generic Strategies
  • 3 Complementary Asset Types

Application Questions

  • Apply Porter's model to ANY industry
  • Select frameworks based on organization type
  • Explain Complementary Assets with real examples
  • Hypercompetition: DYB strategy with Apple/iPhone
  • University vs. Commercial - why different frameworks?

University-Specific Content

  • Why universities need special frameworks (JISC, ITG4U)
  • University stakeholders: Students, Academics, Government, IT Vendors
  • Role of IT Steering Committee
  • Difference in core processes: Teaching/Research vs. Commercial

Framework Comparison Table

Framework Focus Best For Key Question
COBIT Governance & Controls Compliance WHAT to do?
ITIL Service Management IT Operations HOW to do it?
ISO 27001 Security Data Protection Is it SECURE?
JISC Higher Education Universities 5 Perspectives?

Day Before Exam Checklist

Remember: This course tests UNDERSTANDING, not just memorization. Use EXAMPLES in your answers. Draw DIAGRAMS when possible. MANAGE YOUR TIME!