Migrating applications and services to the cloud creates many benefits intrinsically aligned with HFS’ concept of the journey toward the Digital OneOffice. As your organization becomes dependent on cloud-based technologies, astute leaders must pay close attention to the contracts and agreements they sign. Failing to do this can negatively impact business, customer, and supplier relationships.
An organization should carefully consider many aspects of the average contract, including remediation, assignment, termination, and intellectual property; however, clients often overlook how providers will deliver services in times of crisis. This is where the service level agreement (SLA) section in a contract plays a crucial part; do not overlook it.
In the context of the SLA, problems often boil down to a lack of pre-emptive auditing on how different technology towers need customized service and support. A lack of agreement within the organization between users and the IT department once services are in place could augment this problem. An organization can remedy much of this if technology leaders work with procurement and legal to set a base level of expectations to reflect in their contracts. Once they achieve this, both business and technology leaders can proactively work with vendors and service providers to harmonize SLAs with business needs.
Technology leadership, procurement, and legal teams should ask these five questions to set equal expectations across teams and providers and adapt their contracts appropriately
SLAs can ensure all parties involved know what to expect, when to elevate a discussion, and how to minimize risks for all stakeholders. However, it is up to the technology buyer to do the work by aligning expectations with selection, procurement, and vendor review processes. Failing to do so will create friction and lead to satisfaction issues with stakeholders and contention between the services seller and buyer.
SLAs aligned to business and stakeholder requirements have a critical role in streamlining end-to-end process delivery. Optimizing processes across the back, middle, and front offices is the foundation for implementing the Digital OneOffice.
Becoming a cloud-native organization will require your organization to rethink its service and support commitments to its stakeholders. This may manifest in the contractual SLAs you agree to. Being proactive can resolve many issues before they even exist. The result can be a better relationship with your provider and will go far toward ensuring both parties can work together and achieve success.
The Bottom Line: Relationships matter to achieve a Digital OneOffice, and having clear SLAs will foster productive engagements with your service providers.
As companies adopt the Digital OneOffice and migrate more solutions to the cloud, they need to understand that SLAs are critical for developing good, trusted, and dependable relationships with their partners. Aligning contractual dependencies, including SLAs, can promote a seamless migration to the OneOffice.
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