Triple the return: How companies can get more from enterprise tech

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Could companies be on the verge of a breakthrough to get more value from enterprise technology? The answer is yes, but only for companies that can harness AI1 to both reinvent their enterprise technology functions and pursue new business opportunities. Those companies could triple the EBITDA lift they receive from their technology investment, according to our analysis.

Many technology leaders may turn a skeptical eye to this possibility. After all, technology modernization efforts have traditionally required massive investment for uncertain returns. But the rapid maturing of AI-enabled development and agentic workflows could create very different, and largely more favorable, enterprise technology economics in the next five years.

AI is poised to upend decades of assumptions about what technology can accomplish, in what time frame, and at what cost. Importantly, AI can reduce the unit cost of introducing new functionality and increase engineering productivity (see sidebar, “Gen AI is increasing developer productivity”). Companies then enter a virtuous cycle where improved productivity both removes capacity constraints and expands business value. Better engineering productivity frees up resources to modernize technology platforms and implement business-improving capabilities. Modernized platforms further increase engineering productivity, which further reduces technical debt. The result is higher ROI from enterprise technology investment, which leads to larger technology budgets and even higher value creation, as Jevons paradox goes to work.2

Six imperatives for enterprise technology value

Putting this flywheel of growth in motion won’t be easy. It’s not just a question of buying some tools or spending more on platforms and developer talent (though it will require significant and sustained investment). Take gen AI tools for software development. The quality of these tools is improving exponentially3 and creating the opportunity for material improvements in engineering productivity.4 Yet despite this promise, our research has found that most organizations using gen AI coding tools at scale have achieved less than 10 percent improvement in team productivity.

Capturing AI’s full potential to improve the value of enterprise technology will involve operational and behavioral changes across every aspect of the technology function. It will also require more collaboration between business and technology leaders than ever before.

To better understand what this change could look like, we interviewed more than 100 technology officers worldwide.5 Based on those discussions and detailed analysis of our client work, we formulated six imperatives that can transform enterprise technology, leading to significantly more value for companies. We found that nearly all technology leaders agree that these imperatives, and their underlying action principles, are critical. Yet few are applying these practices at scale. Those that adopt these imperatives will be best positioned to extract the highest return from their enterprise technology investment:

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Recalibrate to the new economics of IT

Rebuild technology platforms

Renovate enterprise data

Redesign the talent model

Revamp the vendor equation

Remodel risk and resiliency

How these six imperatives transform enterprise technology ROI

Companies that reprioritize how enterprise technology investments are split between business-driven application development and IT can wring significantly more return out of their technology investment. Allocating more money toward IT early on (for example, investing in platforms and tools for automation and standardization) while slightly reducing spending on business-driven application development can lead to higher returns in the future. This is because developers use tools that increase their productivity and decrease maintenance and rework.

Most companies have heard the arguments for investing in IT, but that value has not been credibly quantified. Drawing on our collective experience working with large companies and having seen multiple scenarios in play, we analyzed the different enterprise technology investment choices that leaders can make and their overall impact on returns. To illustrate this analysis, we modeled three scenarios based on a $1 billion IT budget (Exhibit 1).

Exhibit 1
Prioritizing IT investments early on results in greater EBITDA lift from  technology spend over a five-year period.

In the first scenario, allocating only 20 percent of investment to IT creates a negative spiral of rising run costs and limited EBITDA gains from technology investment.

In the second scenario, shifting 40 percent of investment to IT for the first three years reduces run costs, boosts engineering productivity, and delivers more than twice the EBITDA lift by year five compared with scenario one, without increasing budgets.

In the third scenario, starting at a baseline of 4 percent higher spend overall, while allocating 33 percent of investment to IT in the first four years and increasing the overall budget by 4 percent annually, achieves the most dramatic results. This scenario sustains cost reductions and achieves more than three times the EBITDA lift by year five compared with scenario one.

These scenarios illustrate the value of investing in improving core IT, a move that can dramatically lower the time and cost to deliver new products and significantly increase engineering productivity. The result is that enterprise technology delivers significantly more value. While this strategy may be second nature to “born digital” companies, it is misunderstood by many large enterprises, which continually view IT as a cost rather than as a source of future value creation.

This view is borne out in our interviews. We found that most technology leaders understand that managing technology investment for value and not for cost is optimal, but few have fully made that shift when managing technology economics. They also receive little support from management to make this kind of change.

Executing on the six imperatives requires business–tech collaboration

Today, technology officers tell us they get demands and mandates from the rest of the management team, which creates an impetus for short-term and suboptimal decision-making. Our interviews show that only 13 percent of technology officers say that their business counterparts exhibit all the behaviors required for capturing value from technology investments most of the time (Exhibit 2).

Exhibit 2
Only 1 in 10 CIOs say they get eective support from business partners  across all critical interactions.

Companies have an opportunity to mend this disconnect. That starts with the entire executive management team supporting long-term investment in technology. Business leaders can fund investment in IT platforms, support technology teams in mitigating risks, help specify product requirements, and equip their technology teams to embrace new ways of working based around AI.

In parallel, technology officers can enhance their credibility when it comes to execution by rolling out products with the right functionality on time and on budget. They can increase buy-in for enterprise technology initiatives by establishing themselves as full partners in defining and achieving business strategy.

The path forward requires bold leadership from both business and technology leaders, but the choice is clear: Continue with the status quo and risk falling behind or embrace this AI moment to transform enterprise technology from a cost center into a value creator.

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