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Purchase options: |
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£18.47 Amazon.co.uk
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$42.21 amazon.com |
Details: |
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ISBN:0471743593
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Published by John Wiley & Sons Inc
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Written by J. Bloem, M. van Doorm, P. Mittal
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Book published December 2005
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Other opinions: |
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Review and customer comments at amazon.co.uk |
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Title:
Making IT Governance Work in a Sarbanes-Oxley World
Review:
"Making IT Governance Work in a Sarbanes-Oxley World", by J. Bloem, M.
van Doorm and P. Mittal, contains a wealth of information about
governance of information technology in large corporations. If you are
new to this topic and want a detailed discussion of the intricacies of
IT governance, then this book may be for you. You will read an
introduction to most of the commonly accepted frameworks for
governance from KIMBIA to CoBIT to the managed scorecard. You will
also read a brief overview of the Public Company Accounting Reform and
Investor Protection Act of 2002 (Sarbanes-Oxley). Despite the title,
it doesn't touch much on the intricacies of Sarbanes-Oxley, but is
primarily a discussion of IT governance. In this, it goes into great
detail.
The preface to the book is excellent. It's a 22-page summary that will
provide an insight into what constitutes good IT governance and the
impact that Sarbanes-Oxley is making on corporations. In the preface,
the authors introduce a theme that continues throughout the book: the
role and importance that behaviour has on IT governance. This is
particularly important post-Sarbanes-Oxley where a CFO and CEO can no
longer rely on just 'trusting' financial accounts presented to them.
Developing the right employee behaviours has a major influence on
leadership and accountability within an organisation and thereby, on
compliance with governance structures in the corporation.
The book is not light reading, however. It is well arranged in three
inter-related sections: management, accountability and supervision.
Within each section, the flow of topics is logical, but they're not
well connected.
This book will also appeal more to a US audience. Some sections ('IT
pushes production up but Europe lags far behind' and 'Europe does not
have its statistical house in order', in particular) may even make
European readers bristle.
Despite its detractions, "Making IT Governance Work" is still useful.
Chapter 3, for example, includes a sound overview of some basic
management principles. I like the three critical success factors for
IT managers: (1) create the conditions in which IT managers can create
value; (2) IT managers have to prove themselves; and (3) IT managers
must deliver. Get these right and you are well on your way to
successful IT governance. Chapter 7 includes a very useful description
of leadership models, particularly in their relation to overseeing and
managing change, an essential component of IT governance in today's
world.
In a nutshell, this is a book with a great amount of valuable content,
but its style detracts from its readability. Read the preface from
start to finish and then dip into the rest from time to time when you
have a spare 10 minutes. It's a good book for the reference shelf, if
not something you'll read cover to cover.
Free Pint Reviewer:
Eldin Rammell is principal consultant and owner of Rammell Consulting,
a management consulting firm specialising in records and information
management. They provide a range of niche services to the business
community based on the principle that the information and records that
it creates, uses and retains are often critical to the efficient
running of that business and its compliance with applicable
regulations and legislation. As well as providing advice on business
continuity and disaster recovery, Rammell Consulting advises on topics
as diverse as filing and classification systems, managing email,
document management systems and the development of information
policies and procedures. Contact: ...
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