DXC Technology reveals new insights from global executives on the impact of tech debt and a four-step plan to pay down today’s debt and discourage it in the future.
SYDNEY, October 17, 2023 — A study of business leaders by DXC Technology (NYSE: DXC), a leading Fortune 500 global technology services company, has revealed that nearly half (46%) of executives say that technical debt, or tech debt, is the silent saboteur inhibiting their ability to innovate and grow.
Tech Debt is the implied cost of rework caused by choosing an “inferior but quick” solution over the “right” technology solution. In other words, while a past investment may have worked in the moment, it could fail to hold up well over time. Tech debt tends to be a series of trade-offs that lead to suboptimisation and becomes increasingly hard to undo. While different from obsolescence or depreciation it can be measured in billions for most large enterprises and have far reaching implications costing a business its talent, lower productivity, increase its security risk and ultimately be disruptive to an organisation’s success and stock price.
According to the report, there is an accountability crisis when it comes to tech debt. Of the executives interviewed, 99% recognised that tech debt was a risk to their organisations, despite the fact that three in four still believe that IT leadership should shoulder sole responsibility for fixing it.
Michael Corcoran, Global Lead, Analytics & Engineering, said, “We’re at a point in time where technology innovation is rapidly accelerating. The way we build, grow, and enable our teams and customers is changing and with that, our approach to managing the process of modernisation must as well. Sometimes the spread of tech debt across the organisation makes it hard for leaders to step outside of their team view, and this where a neutral third party can provide a holistic view that lets leaders consider a new perspective. If business leaders don’t commit to addressing tech debt now, it will lead to loss of resources, productivity, talent, and have huge security implications.”
Lack of awareness amongst business leaders also has a significant impact on their ability to manage technical debt. Executives were clear that there are barriers to progress which hinder modernisation efforts in their organisations; 47% of respondents scored knowledge barriers as very or extremely significant, and 38% did so for cultural barriers.
DXC has found that organisations can experience 39% in cost savings from technical debt reduction, while being able to retire 37% of redundant applications and has therefore identified a four-step plan to pay down today’s debt and discourage it in the future:
1. Reframe org debt as modernisation
Clearly articulating org debt is a way to ensure clarity of vision on the modernisation path. The mind shift toward future focus is essential. This is an appropriate time for candid executive conversations when taking stock of what you have.
2. Define opportunities
The first step in defining modernisation opportunities is to expand the circle beyond IT accountability. The CIO and CTO will lead modernisation, but the entire executive team is responsible for its success. Coordination between the business side and technical arm of the organisation is crucial. CTOs and CIOs are uniquely positioned to communicate org debt effectively to the C-suite and wider business stakeholders, with the CFO’s support. Making the case clearly and convincingly to enable effective collaboration is the next step for these leaders.
3. Clear your barriers
Every industry has a unique profile, as would every organisation. Therefore, clearing organisational barriers is a matter of defining them in light of your inventory and Wardley Maps. Use your industry profile as a baseline and modify it for your organisation’s needs.
4. Organise for execution
Having shifted the conversation, defined the barriers and gained alignment, an organisation can then focus on the desired objectives and impact of the activities. Modernisation is an ongoing collaborative process, involves not just the IT circle but the entire organisation. When done properly, the benefits are felt across the whole organisation. From cost savings to carbon reduction, to making employees’ work lives smoother, there’s a business case to be made across every arm of an organisation. When org debt is viewed clearly and articulated fully, it can be flattened, understood and managed thoughtfully as part of the balance sheet of a healthy business.
“Technical debt is an enduring topic across the intersection of business and technology, it’s long known about yet, often poorly understood. As it continues to accumulate, organisations around the world cite it as a top challenge, inhibiting their ability to transform and serve their customers into the future,” said Dave Reid, Research Director of DXC Leading Edge. “Today we’re releasing our landmark study to help our customers and partners tackle this issue head on and begin to reap the long-promised but hard-to-realise benefits of modernisation and transformation.”
In addition to the four ways organisations can clear tech debt, DXC has introduced The Tech Debt Audit business leaders can take immediately to understand the level of tech debt in their organisations and where their barriers to addressing tech debt lie.
For more information, explore:
· DXC Technical Debt page: Reframing Technical Debt https://dxc.com/au/techdebt?utm_source=media&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2309-APA-EML-APA-MUL-CRO-TDE
· DXC Leading Edge research report: Embracing modernisation: From technical debt to growth https://dxc.com/content/dam/dxc/projects/dxc-com/us/pdfs/insights/perspectives/dxc-leading-edge/Leading%20Edge%20Embracing%20modernization%20From%20technical%20debt%20to%20growth.pdf
Research Methodology
In 2023, DXC Leading Edge conducted a survey of 750 global IT executives, with a CI (confidence interval) of 95%. The survey comprises a senior group of 50% CIO or CTO respondents; the other half are VP level or above leaders. The survey is global in scope with companies ranging in size from US$1bn to US$10bn or more in revenue. Respondents are widely distributed across industries – Banking and Capital Markets; Insurance; Aerospace and Defence; Technology, Media and Telecommunications; Travel, Transportation and Hospitality; Energy, Utilities, Oil and Gas; Healthcare; Automotive; Consumer and Retail; and Public Sector.
About DXC Technology
DXC Technology (NYSE: DXC) helps global companies run their mission-critical systems and operations while modernising IT, optimising data architectures, and ensuring security and scalability across public, private and hybrid clouds. The world’s largest companies and public sector organisations trust DXC to deploy services to drive new levels of performance, competitiveness, and customer experience across their IT estates. Learn more about how we deliver excellence for our customers and colleagues at DXC.com.
Forward Looking Statements
All statements in this press release that do not directly and exclusively relate to historical facts constitute “forward-looking statements.” These statements represent current expectations and beliefs, and no assurance can be given that the results described in such statements will be achieved. Such statements are subject to numerous assumptions, risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in such statements, many of which are outside of our control. For a written description of these factors, see the section titled “Risk Factors” in DXC’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2023, and any updating information in subsequent SEC filings. No assurance can be given that any goal or plan set forth in any forward-looking statement can or will be achieved, and readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such statements which speak only as of the date they are made. We do not undertake any obligation to update or release any revisions to any forward-looking statement or to report any events or circumstances after the date of this report or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events except as required by law.