by cromwell » 28 Jun 2017, 08:49
Eventually they will learn, but they would learn a lot quicker if the people who are in charge of IT departments had a background in IT. Many times, they don't. I used to work for a northern police force and out of five top managers / heads of section, only two were IT pros. One was a former accountant, one from HR and one an ex-police officer. This approach spread and you ended up with ex-police officers as project managers and in other posts with yard long job titles. The idea that the IT dept exists because of the technical expertise it can bring to the job had got a bit diluted, we'll say.
The amount of money spent on generalist managers could and should have been spent on IT professionals, some in the area of IT security, which was never in my experience taken seriously or staffed and funded appropriately.
"Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored" - Aldous Huxley