Technology Cost and Value Management makes the full IT cost base, applications, cloud and XaaS, infrastructure, platforms and shared services, transparent, explainable and steerable, so technology spend can be defended and directed instead of simply questioned.
In technology-intensive organisations, IT is asked to cut cost and fund innovation at the same time, while every figure gets challenged. The usual response is more dashboards. The real fix is a financial model of technology: the full cost base, attributed to the services it powers and the business outcomes it supports, so cost discussions become investment decisions rather than justification exercises.
Recurring variance debates. A budget line nobody can fully explain. Innovation framed as a cost to be defended, and discipline that blocks it. Every board cycle reopens the same fight.
Forecasts people actually trust. Each application, platform and service costed and tied to value. Retire what does not earn its keep, invest with confidence in what does. Cost discipline funds innovation instead of stalling it.
Applications, cloud and XaaS, infrastructure, platforms, products and shared services, in one structured model. The same attribution discipline we use for cost-to-serve, pointed at IT.
Spend rolls up from what you buy to what IT runs, then to the products, channels and business units that consume it. Shared cost stops hiding in overhead.
Each service carries both a cost and a reason to exist. The model makes the trade-offs explicit, so investment and retirement become decisions, not negotiations.
IT and Finance run it together. Variance debates give way to forecasts both sides believe, refreshed as the numbers move.
Technology cost is just another cost base that deserves real attribution. It runs on the same engine as our cost-to-serve work and produces the same multi-layer view as the margin cascade, applied to services instead of customers.
If your IT cost figures do not survive a board meeting without caveats, that is the gap we close.
No deck, no follow-up sequence. A senior partner. Thirty minutes. Free.