Understanding the Maturity of Sustainable ICT
Date
2012Author
Curry, Edward
Donnellan, Brian
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Curry, Edward; Donnellan, Brian (2012) 'Understanding the Maturity of Sustainable ICT' In: Green Business Process Management. Heidelberg : Springer.
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Abstract
Sustainable ICT (SICT) can develop solutions that offer
benefits both internally in IT and across the extended enterprise. However,
because the field is new and evolving, few guidelines and best practices are
available. There is a need to improve the SICT behaviours, practices and
processes within organizations to deliver greater value from SICT. To address
the issue, a consortium of leading organizations from industry, the nonprofits
sector, and academia decided to develop a framework for systematically assessing
and improving SICT capabilities. The SICT Capability Maturity Framework
(SICT-CMF) gives organizations a vital tool to manage their sustainability
capability. The framework provides a comprehensive value-based model for
organizing, evaluating, planning, and managing SICT capabilities. Using the
framework, organizations can assess the maturity of their SICT capability and
systematically improve capabilities in a measurable way to meet the
sustainability objectives including reducing environmental impacts and
increasing profitability. The core of SICT-CMF is a maturity model for SICT
which provides a management system with associated improvement roadmaps that
guide senior IT and business management in selecting strategies to continuously
improve, develop, and manage the sustainable IT capability. This chapter
describes the SICT-CMF and the use of it to determine the maturity of
sustainable IT capability within a number of leading organisations. The chapter
highlights the challenges in managing SICT and motivates the benefit of maturity
models. The development process for the SICT-CMF is discussed and the role of
Design Science in the development cycle is explored. The application of the
resulting model and its use to measure SICT maturity is discussed together with
an analysis of the average results for organisations using the model. The
chapter concludes with practical insights gained from the assessments.
Description
Book chapter