Cultural elements are part of a company's intangible assets, and C-level executives are becoming savvier about the importance of such intangibles as drivers of business value. In a new InformationWeek Research survey designed to gauge the collaborative relationships between the CIO, CFO, and CEO, most of the 225 respondents say intangible results carry as much weight as hard ROI. Now, there's a new study out of MIT that quantifies what intangibles can do for your business-something that's become increasingly intuitive to executives.
Brynjolfsson places value on intangibles such as open communication, employee empowerment, performance-linked incentives, training, and other investments in human capital (for more on workforce optimization, see "Hitting The Target," April 15, p. 41). Such characteristics help create what he calls a "digital organization." Editor at large Eric Chabrow and senior editor Eileen Colkin delve deeper into the research on page 22.
In times when companies weigh every dollar spent on IT initiatives, the research gives managers something else to think about when measuring the return on their investments.
Stephanie Stahl
Editor
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