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Details relating to document and document owner Siemens Topic Corporate Information Technology Basic principles and processes of the company-wide IT Organization, Organization of Corporate Center CIT, Cooperation with IT Organizations in Siemens Units Corporate Center CIT and IT in the Company (Business Principles) Business Principles Binding CIT Intranet -> About Us -> Business Principles English
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Change history, version management and processing status (Outline draft, detailed draft, agreement pending, agreed, released, superseded) Date 2008-11-06 2010-02-01 Processed by Version Juergen Stapf V1.0 Juergen Stapf V1.1 Department Status CIT BA Final CIT BA Final 636-35372 juergen.stapf@siemens.com New illustration global Siemens IT Organization (section 1.) New section "Process Owner - IT Collaboration" (section 2.5) New reference to "Siemens Diversity Initiative" (section 3.) Telephone Comment 636-35372 juergen.stapf@siemens.com E-mail
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Change history, version management and processing status (Outline draft, detailed draft, agreement pending, agreed, released, superseded) Date Processed by Version Department Status Telephone E-mail
Comment Organizational change: new department CIT PCE (section 3.4) Revision of descriptions CIT BR, G and BA (sections 3.2, 3.3 and 3.6) Update IT Body Landscape (section 5.1) 636-35372 juergen.stapf@siemens.com Revision of descriptions CIT BR, PCE, BA (sections 3.2, 3.4 and 3.6), Cooperation of CIT and IT Organizations in Sectors and Regional Clusters (section 4) and CIO Board Meeting (section 5.2) 636-35372 juergen.stapf@siemens.com Renaming 'CIT BR' to 'CIT R' (effective 2012-02-01) Update of figures 1, 7, 8, 9, 11 and 12
2011-01-21
CIT BA Final
2012-04-02
CIT BA Final
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Table of Contents
1. 2. 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 3. 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 4. Business Mandate and Scope of Business Principles .....................................6 Basic Principles and Processes of the company-wide IT Organization ......... 7 Focal points of direction for IT in the Company ................................................7 Corporate IT Governance ................................................................................8 IT Demand Management ................................................................................9 IT Portfolio Management ..............................................................................11 Process Owner - IT Collaboration (Focus on Demand Management) ..............12 Corporate Center CIT ................................................................................... 14 Structural Organization of CIT .......................................................................14 CIT Regions (CIT R)........................................................................................15 CIT Governance (CIT G) .................................................................................16 CIT Procurement and Contract Execution (CIT PCE) ........................................19 CIT Corporate Automation (CIT CA) ...............................................................20 CIT Business Administration (CIT BA) .............................................................21 Cooperation of Corporate Center CIT and the IT Organizations in Sectors and Regional Clusters .................................................................................. 23 IT Body Landscape Decision Making Structure ........................................ 26 Principles of the Decision Making Structure ...................................................26 CIO Board Meeting .......................................................................................27 CIO Advisory Council.....................................................................................28 Topic Specific Committees ............................................................................28 Task Forces...................................................................................................29
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List of References
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. V Circular No. 15/2008: "Organization: Information Technology (IT) in the company" "Corporate IT Governance and Principles for IT at Siemens" (CIT G SPA, released by CIO Board on June 18, 2008) "Principles of IT Demand Management and IT Portfolio Management at Siemens" (CIT G SPA, released by CIO Board on June 18, 2008) CIT-Circular No. 04/2009: "Information Security Principles and Strategy Corporate Information Security Guide" "IT creates business value: business-oriented Information Technology for Siemens" (presentation, status June 16, 2008) Documents describing mission, tasks and responsibilities etc. provided by the individual CIT departments Siemens Organization Handbook, Version 1.1 September 1, 2010
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1.
The business mandate of Corporate Center CIT (Corporate Information Technology) has been specified with V Circular No. 15/2008: "Organization: Information Technology (IT) in the company" Moreover, this V Circular outlines the basic structure and responsibilities of the global Siemens IT organization, consisting of Corporate Center CIT and the IT functions in the Sectors/Cross-Sector Businesses and Regional Clusters as well as the basic principles of the decision making process within this company-wide IT organization. The business principles "Corporate Center CIT and IT in the Company" give a more detailed view on these topics, describing how Corporate Center CIT exercises its business mandate within its own organization as well as in close cooperation with other IT functions within Siemens.
Corporate IT Sector Energy IT 6 Divisions Sector Healthcare IT 4 Divisions Sector Industry IT 3 Divisions Sector I&C IT 5 Divisions*
Cluster IT units
The Sector IT Units are mainly responsible for business-specific design and implementation of Sector IT strategies
IT creates business value Page 1
* Excluding OSRAM
The decentral IT units in Clusters and Divisions focus on: Demand Management Implementation IT Operations
For internal use only / Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved. CIT [organizational unit] 24.01.2012, [Version], [Name]
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2.
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as well as the related processes. The execution of Corporate IT Governance is based on nine principles which reflect the business mandate given to Corporate Center CIT with V Circular No. 15/2008. 1. Our activities are driven by business requirements with committed and measured business benefits. 2. We ensure fulfillment of internal and external compliance requirements according to our assigned responsibility. 3. We enable business innovation with our IT Landscape. Proven technologies are used to reduce implementation risk. 4. We leverage Siemens products and services when technically and economically feasible. 5. We ensure that our IT is able to adapt to (business) portfolio and market changes in a fast and efficient fashion. 6. Our IT Landscape reflects an optimum between standardization with cost optimization and the enabling of vertical business excellence.
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7. We drive operational excellence by constantly identifying and implementing improvement potentials and by guaranteeing a pragmatic and cost-effective implementation approach by using existing solutions when technically and economically feasible. 8. Decisions are well prepared and made in a timely and comprehensible manner. We document these decisions and ensure their consequent implementation. 9. We focus on a verifiable Siemens optimum, considering the "right of way" rule of the Sectors/Cross-Sector Businesses.
Individuality
Critical success factors of the businesses have top priority for IT IT must never affect essential investments for the core business Develop applications on standard platforms with high flexibility
IT must follow business requirements to maximize business value Critical success factors IT, e.g. alignment of architecture, restrictive demand management up to complete implementation of new solutions, challenging business/ process benefits through IT Business, e.g. cultural change of process owner and end-user, traceable business benefits especially in case of individual solutions
IT creates business value CIT, 2008-10-06 For internal use only
IT Demand Management is the process which collects, analyzes, clarifies and bundles requirements towards IT from all sources (business requirements but also legal, compliance and technical requirements) in a systematic and proactive way, ensures that the proposed projects and service changes to implement these demands are consistently
IT creates business value
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planned (cost, resources, skills etc.) and supports a clear Portfolio Management by the appropriate decision making bodies. It also supports consistent tracking of a demand and its scope until customer acceptance (V-Model of IT Demand Management). Effective IT Demand Management therefore consists of five key components: collecting, analyzing, clarifying and bundling all kinds of demands (legal, compliance, business, technical), ensuring consistent transparency of planning, supporting systematic go/no go decisions based on defined portfolio criteria, tracking planned vs. actual demands through lifecycle, influencing the behavior that drives demands through increased transparency and clear upfront agreed financing models (e.g. consumption-based IT chargeback). support a common understanding of IT Demand Management on a CIO/IT and business side level at Siemens, ensure a high standard of business orientation and business alignment of IT activities, increase the value of IT (effectiveness) and the acceptance of IT activities by business,
In order to
the following seven principles have been set up. 2 1. All IT demands are derived from clear compliance or business requirements as well as technical requirements from the product roadmap of IT vendors. Legal and Compliance requirements must be fulfilled. Technical requirements without business benefits are kept to an unavoidable minimum based on common agreement for main strategic vendors. 2. Business driven IT demands are derived from business targets/requirements and do always have a dedicated business owner who is responsible for delivering the identified benefit (Profit and Growth) for the business. Commitments to benefits may only come from someone who has the authority to deliver the benefits. A clear financing model considering TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) is agreed in advance with the business owner. The proclaimed benefits will be tracked after implementation (in accordance with top+). 3. With IT Demand Management the complete project and service portfolio is targeted. IT demands drive changes in IT Portfolio and comprise a range from small change requests to large projects. The IT Demand Management process differentiates according to complexity and investment for IT demand implementation.
These principles are based on input from the Sectors as well as insights gained from Gartner, Forrester and CIO Executive Board.
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4. Any IT demand is to be documented in a comprehensible way fulfilling a set of minimal requirements, e.g. responsible people on business and IT side, objectives, scope, source (legal, compliance, technical and business), benefits, financing model. In this context, the actual business requirements have to be specified. 5. The feasibility of implementation of IT demands is checked including technical, economical, legal and expert resource constraints. This also includes a conformance check with Target IT Architecture and IT Strategy and consideration of commitment of non-IT resources. IT Demand Management has especially first to verify with reasonable effort that none of the existing solutions/services can fulfill the demand at hand. 6. Before transforming an IT demand into a project a clear decision gate is required to ensure that all principles related to Demand Management (e.g. Principle 1-5) are properly fulfilled. 7. Demand Management must ensure that the solution for the IT demand is not only implemented but also consequently used by the business. These principles intentionally define "what" the main attributes of effective IT Demand Management are. Principles of "how" IT demand is accomplished will only be defined on corporate level where necessary in the interest of Siemens and based on joint agreements with the Sectors. For Demand Management with focus on the collaboration between Process Owners and IT refer to 2.5 "Process Owner - IT Collaboration".
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The following two principles have been set up for IT Portfolio Management 3. 1. IT Project Portfolio Management has to ensure that the projects and change requests with the highest business benefit are realized first in addition to mandatory compliance projects. IT Project Portfolio Management is an ongoing process dealing with changes of priorities imposed during the fiscal year. This process is facilitated by the company-wide IT organization although the final decision about the portfolio is up to the relevant stakeholders. 2. IT Service Portfolio Management has to ensure that services operate on an efficient and reasonable basis. This is supported by a transparent service reporting and has also to consider potential phase-out of IT Services.
For objectives, deduction and implementation of these principles refer to 2.2 IT Demand Management.
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PO IT Collaboration: Overview
Process Owners (Business) PO* What
Definition of Demands: Single point of entry for demand, collection, classification and evaluation of demands, evaluation of business case, ensure funding, decision on IT-Need Awareness Building: Preparation and communication of process change / roll-out, buy-in of stake holders Functional Rollout / use: Establishment of process change and usage of IT solution Monitoring incl. top+: Usage - and business benefit tracking
Determination of IT solution: Build or use - and IT cost evaluation and IT migration planning Implementation / IT rollout: Implementation and rollout of solution decided upon, for mandatory solutions global implementation confirmation
PO IT Collaboration
Benefits Why
Clearly defined responsibilities for Demand Management i.e. business / process and IT-requirements in terms of collaboration resulting in optimized process quality and minor coordination efforts Sectors & Clusters are involved at every stage of the collaboration process e.g. participation in Governance bodies Fast and transparent process for introduction and implementation especially for legal requirements Enhanced Business- / Process- / IT-alignment resulting in high quality and acceptance of IT solutions by approved process/business demand and IT realization designed accordingly Usage aspects such as establishment of process change and tracking of usage are continuously in focus IT creates business value For internal use only / Siemens AG 2009. All rights reserved. *) Responsibility has to be assigned case by case to Corporate, Sector/Division/BU level
Determination of IT Solution
Implementation / IT Rollout
Single point of entry for demand, collection -, classification - and evaluation of demands, evaluation of business case, verification of funding and decision on IT need Preparation and communication of process change / roll-out, buy-in of stake holders Establishment of process change and usage of IT solution Usage - and business benefit tracking Build or use - and IT cost evaluation and IT migration planning Implementation and rollout of solution decided upon, for mandatory solutions global implementation confirmation
*) Responsibility has to be assigned case by case to Corporate, Sector/Division/BU level
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3.
Corporate Center CIT is strongly committed to the three pillars of the Siemens Diversity Initiative, focusing within the CIT organization and its cooperation with the IT Community on the areas "Networking and Visibility", "Work Life Balance" and "Mentoring".
What Diversity means for Siemens At Siemens we understand Diversity to be the creative interplay of different modes of thinking, backgrounds, experiences, types of expertise and individual qualities across all organizational levels. With innovation driving global competition at an ever-accelerating rate, a company like Siemens needs more than ever to tap the full imaginative potential of its workforce if it is to succeed in the future. With talent spread evenly throughout the world and with customers in all corners of it, Siemens will remain on the cutting edge only if it recruits from and reflects the many different societies it serves.
Figure 6: What Diversity means for Siemens Source: Siemens Diversity Initiative
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Guidance, in terms of governance, for Regional Clusters in close cooperation with CIT Governance (CIT G), Facilitation between Sectors and Clusters and support of Clusters in case of conflicting requirements coming from the Sectors, Representation of the Regional Clusters in the IT Body Landscape (CIO Board, CIO Advisory Council, Task Forces).
In addition, CIT R hosts the communications function of Corporate Center CIT (CIT R CC). CIT R CC has the following tasks and responsibilities within and for CIT: Siemens-wide communication of (C)IT topics, supporting the mission "IT creates business value", CIT-internal communication and change management, contributing to a motivating and stimulating working environment, Providing and maintaining CIT media, e.g. CIT All Hands Meetings, CIT Breakfasts, CIT Tea Time (CIT-internal media) and CIT intranet homepage/structure, IT Newsletter (CIT-external media), Communication and change management support for Corporate IT projects and to key players in Corporate Center CIT and the IT Community Professional Siemens-external communication on demand, Approval of external communication about Siemens-internal IT as described in CIT Circular No. 17/2009.
Special Projects (SP) The Service Management Organizations (SMOs) deliver IT Services to their respective customers. Primary task of a SMO is to perform Service Management within the context of the TOPAS 4 contract.
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The scope of the TOPAS contract is essentially the application maintenance and development of the application portfolio of the SMOs. Application Management encompasses application development on behalf of the respective governance organization and with architectural approval of CIT.
CRM SCM
PLM
M&S
IN
SU
Information Security
Figure 7: Functional structure of the CIT G organization
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Tasks and Responsibilities of "Strategic Planning & Architecture" (CIT G SPA): Corporate IT Strategy Development (including Consolidation of Strategic Demands), Corporate IT Portfolio Management (Projects, Services and Tasks), Corporate IT Architecture Development (e.g. Organization, Processes, Applications, Data and IT Infrastructure), IT Innovation Management to evaluate trends and their impact to Siemens business (in close collaboration with Corporate Department CT), Vendor-specific Technology Management for our main vendors, Definition of processes, methods and tools related to collaboration with Sectors, Siemens Process Framework Maintenance (incl. related tools).
CIT G SPA is responsible for Corporate IT Strategy and Corporate IT Architecture in close alignment with CIT G Topic Owners
Responsibilities: Corporate IT Strategy Development (including Consolidation of Strategic Demands) Corporate IT Portfolio Management (Projects, Services, Tasks) Corporate IT Architecture Development (e.g. Organization, Processes, Applications, Data, IT Infrastructure) IT Innovation Management to evaluate trends and their impact to Siemens business (in close collaboration with CT) Vendor-specific Technology Management for our main vendors (e.g. UGS, SIS, SAP, MS) to evaluate their strategic direction Definition of processes, methods and tools related to collaboration with Sectors Siemens Process Framework Maintenance (incl. related tools) Focus on: Overall Strategic Planning Process Definition and Steering Overall Consistency and Quality Assurance Release of Corporate IT Strategy and IT Architecture, IT Portfolio Cross-functional topics (e.g. Data Architecture,...) IT Innovation Management in early evaluation phase with Sectors Overall alignment with CIT PCE and Strategic Vendors with focus on process-independent application parts (e.g. Technology)
IT crea tes business value
CIT G S PA
CIT G CRM
CIT G SCM
CIT G IN
CIT G SU
Working Principles: Ongoing close collaboration with CIT G Topic Owners for Corporate IT Strategy & Architecture development Involvement in CIT G Topic Owner Roadmap/Architecture activities
For internal use only / Copyright Sieme ns AG 20 08 CIT G collaboration O ctober 2008
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Tasks and Responsibilities of "Topic Units" (CIT G CRM, CIT G SCM, CIT G PLM, CIT G M&S, CIT G IN and CIT G SU) within their respective areas of responsibility: Identification and evaluation of strategic demands, Development of committed topic-specific roadmaps, Development of topic-specific IT Architecture and definition of related topicspecific standards, services and solutions, Topic-specific evaluation of strategic vendors, IT Innovation Management in detail after first evaluation and assignment to topic cluster.
CIT G Topic Owner are responsible for Topic-specific Roadmaps and Topic-specific Architectures in close alignment with CIT G SPA
Responsibilities: Identification and Evaluation of Strategic Demands Development of committed topic-specific Roadmaps Development of topic-specific IT Architecture and Definition of related topic-specific Services and Solutions Topic-specific evaluation of strategic vendors IT Innovation Management in detail after first evaluation and assignment to topic cluster Focus on: Detailing of Corporate IT Strategy in form of committed topic-specific Roadmap Detailing of Corporate IT Architecture in form of topicspecific Architecture Proactive identification of need for action in form of strategic demands and development of first ideas in form of White Papers or Statement of Direction Topic specific discussions with strategic vendors with focus on topic-specific application parts (e.g. Finance, Logistics,)
CIT G SPA
CIT G CRM
CIT G SCM
CIT G P LM
CIT G M&S
CIT G IN
CIT G SU
Working Principles: Ongoing close collaboration with CIT G SPA for CIT G Topic Owner Roadmap/Architecture activities Involvement in CIT G SPA Corporate IT Strategy & Architecture development
For internal use only / Copyright Sieme ns AG 20 08 CIT G collaboration O ctober 2008
All activities connected with and regulations governing Information Security company-wide are implemented in the Siemens Units, with support from the InfoSec community. Tasks and Responsibilities of "Information Security" (CIT G ISEC): Siemens-wide InfoSec program and the processes connected with it (e.g. definition of roles, interfaces and principles of collaboration), Governance of the corporate Information Security services,
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The head of CIT G ISEC is also the Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) of Siemens AG. The CISO of Siemens AG is responsible for: Defining the roles, interfaces and principles of collaboration within the InfoSec community, Issuing Information Security regulations and standards that are binding company-wide, and their continued development, Defining, as well as supervising and controlling the implementation of, the company-wide InfoSec program, External representation of Information Security on behalf of Siemens, Control of the corporate Information Security services, Regular reporting to the Executive Board and the corporate IT community on the status of Information Security, Organizing cooperation and exchange of experiences within the InfoSec community.
Value proposition: CIT PCE drives the process to Achieve best cost positions for market-level services adequate to Siemens requirements Ensure that savings implementation plans potentials are realized according to ambitious
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Topics: Significantly reduce Siemens IT costs on a global basis Establish a central and decentral management of Siemens IT costs Establish trustful and effective partnerships with Siemens major IT suppliers
IT Infrastructure Management (IM) IM has the worldwide responsibility for the implementation of corporate contracts (guarantee of realization of contracts and conditions), the optimization of contracts and the Service Management for IT Infrastructure (guarantee of sustainability of cost position and quality), structured in Performance Management Product Management SNX (Siemens Network eXchange)
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secure access of workstations and applications. These "cross sector solutions" are supplemented by applications to ensure worldwide uniform master data (e.g. of customers and suppliers). For further details refer to CIT CA Intranet
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Securing closing figures according to regulations, Cost/Profit centre controlling and reporting for each cost centre including the development of the appropriate controlling structure within SAP, Ensuring effective risk and opportunity management (process ownership), Developing business cases, Enhancing the productivity mindset and verifying the productivity reporting according to top+ methodology.
Predominantly IT Community: Commercial management of saving and productivity programs, including controlling of measure ramp up, Reporting of I&C Financials, Coordinating and driving commercial activities within the development of the IT Planning Letter (e.g. service calculation, productivity tracking), Developing financing models, Billing and allocation (e.g. of Corporate services to the Siemens Units).
Non-financial Tasks and Responsibilities CIT BA also assumes non-financial tasks and responsibilities, predominantly but not exclusively relevant for Corporate Center CIT, e.g. Organization, such as holding the CIT Business Mandate/Principles, facilitating CIO Board Meetings and supporting/following-up Corporate Audits (regarding Corporate Center CIT), Regulations, such as coordinating the release of CIT Circulars and CIT internal Organizational Rules (including quality control), Compliance: Applying appropriate actions to ensure compliance to Siemensinternal and -external regulations (e.g. implementation of Anti-Corruption Kit), Integrated Enterprise Risk and Internal Control (RIC) Management including related tasks, Export Control and Customs: Monitoring and assisting proper compliance with the statutory and Siemens-internal regulations on export control and customs within Corporate Center CIT in Germany, Achieving SOX compliance of Corporate Center CIT ( e.g. by enforcing the implementation of relevant methods and processes), Achieving EHS (Environmental Protection, Health Management and Safety) compliance of Corporate Center CIT, Support within order processing ("Banf-Pool"), Human Resources, as an interface to the respective CHR units (e.g. definition and implementation of HR strategies and processes as well as operational HR topics), Support of the "Siemens Global Diversity Initiative" by implementation of appropriate measures within Corporate Center CIT and the worldwide IT Community (Diversity@CIT), Representation of the local/site management at site Mch P ("Betriebsleitung").
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4.
Cooperation of Corporate Center CIT and the IT Organizations in Sectors 5 and Regional Clusters
Corporate Center CIT works closely and directly with the CIOs of the Sectors and Regional Clusters.
The Chief Information Officer (CIO) is the head of the function IT on Sector, Cross-Sector Business and Cluster level; he reports to the CEO of the respective organizational unit or a person appointed by the CEO (generally the CFO of the respective organizational unit) and to the functionally responsible person within CIT (shared management responsibility): for the CIOs of Sectors and Cross-Sector Businesses this is the Head of CIT, for the CIOs of the Clusters this is the head of the CIT unit Business Relations (CIT BR) or a managing function within CIT BR 6.
On Division level the following organizational models are possible: (a) Department below the Sector CIO typical management responsibility A Department below the Sector CIO performs the IT function for the Division. The Head of this Department reports to the Sector CIO. No reporting line of this Department Head to the Division CEO.
(b) Model with shared management responsibility The Head of the Division Function IT reports to the Division CEO or a person appointed by the Division CEO (e.g. CFO) and to the Sector CIO.
On Country level the following organizational models are possible: (a) Department below the Cluster CIO typical management responsibility A Department below the Cluster CIO performs the IT function for the Regional Company. The Head of this Department reports to the Cluster CIO. No reporting line of this Department Head to the Country CEO.
(b) Model with shared management responsibility The Head of the Country Function IT reports to the Country CEO or a person appointed by the Division CEO (e.g. CFO) and to the Cluster CIO.
Within this section also including Cross-Sector Businesses 'CIT R' as of 2012-02-01
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Together with the Sector CIOs, Corporate Center CIT has the overall responsibility for Corporate IT Governance. IT strategy and IT architecture tasks are concentrated at Corporate and Sector levels, in order to ensure alignment of IT activities across Siemens. The IT functions on Division and Cluster level focus on demand management, implementation and rollout activities. Increasing IT productivity and at the same time the enabling of productivity improvement in the business has to be enforced at all levels. The responsibilities of Corporate Center CIT (according to V Circular No. 15/2008) refer to the exercise of Corporate IT Governance (for details refer to 2.2 Corporate IT Governance), including the necessary guidelines' responsibility as well as the related responsibility for monitoring implementation. Responsibilities of the CIOs/CFOs of the Sectors according to V Circular No. 15/2008: business-specific design and implementation of the IT strategies of their respective Sectors on the basis of the stipulated company-wide IT strategy (CIOs), advising managers with business responsibility and supporting management in achieving its business targets within their areas of responsibility (CIOs), overall responsibility for the relevant IT budgets (CFOs).
Responsibilities of the CIOs/CFOs of the Regional Clusters according to V Circular No. 15/2008: business-specific design and implementation of the IT roadmaps in the relevant Regional Clusters, taking into account the requirements of the Regional Clusters and the company-wide and Sector-specific IT strategies and IT architectures (CIOs). The IT roadmaps of the Regional Clusters must be coordinated with and approved by the CIO Board. overall responsibility for the relevant IT budgets (CFOs).
The CIOs of the Regional Clusters will report to the head of CIT Business Relations in functional matters. Their selection, appointment and dismissal as well as the establishment of their targets and their performance reviews will be performed jointly by Corporate Center CIT and the CFO of the relevant Regional Cluster.
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Respective Member
CFO
Corporate Center CIT Corporate Center CIT Regions Business Relations (CIT R) (CIT BR)
Functional reporting line Disciplinary reporting line Source: Global G&A Program For internal use only / Siemens AG 2008. All rights reserved
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5.
IT Body Landscape
permanent decision level
(discontinuation after completion of task/project)
temporary
InfoSec Committee IT Infrastructure Committee 1) ERP Services Committee 2) topic HR IT Committee Germany specific CRM IT Service Committee committees
working level
1) GAIN topics are reported to GAIN Steering Committee as long as GAIN is a project 2) includes CIP2SAP, EDI, Corp Layer, CMD IT creates business value Page 3 For internal use only / Copyright Siemens AG 2012. Jan-2012 / Version 2.0 / C. Gebhardt, CIT G
The IT body landscape is designed to make the voting and decision making processes of the IT Community fast, effective and less complex. It consists of three levels: Decision level: Decision preparation level: Working level: CIO Board Meeting and Project Steering CIO Advisory Council Topic specific Committees Task Forces Whereas CIO Board Meeting (CBM), CIO Advisory Council (CAC) and topic specific Committees are permanent institutions, Project Steering bodies and Task Forces are temporary bodies that are disbanded once the objectives have been achieved. Voting in the CBM and the CAC always follows the same principle: Corporate Center CIT and the Sectors have one vote each. Decisions in the CBM and the CAC are made unanimously.
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All decisions of the CIO Board have to be prepared by the CAC, which meets two weeks in advance of the CBM. For a detailed illustration of the CAC's and CBM's sequence including "milestones" for specific topics refer to figure 12.
Annual Body Calendar CIO Advisory Council and CIO Board Settled topics of CIO Advisory Council Meetings
Oct
CAC CAC
Nov
CAC
Dec
Jan
CAC
Feb
CAC
Mar
CAC
Apr
May
CAC
Jun
CAC
Jul
CAC CAC
Aug
Sep
CBM
CBM
CBM
CBM CBM
CBM
CBM
CBM
CBM
CBM
Risk WS
Planning Letter
Corp. Demands
Cluster IT Roadmaps additional CAC participants: Clusters (AAE, CEE, SWE, NWE, Canada RoW) Cluster experts from Sectors
additional CAC participants: Clusters (AAE, CEE, SWE, NWE, Canada, RoW) Cluster experts from Sectors
CBM CIO Board Meeting For internal use only / Copyright Siemens AG 2012. Jan-2012 / Version 2.0 / C. Gebhardt, CIT G
Each CIO Board member has one vote. Decisions have to be made unanimously. Additional participants of the CBMs are: CIO(s) of the Cross-Sector Businesses, department heads of Corporate Center CIT.
The agenda as well as the decisions of the CIO Board are prepared by the CAC.
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Documents required for CIO Board decision are distributed to the CBM members one week in advance of a CBM.
Corporate Center CIT and the Sectors have one vote each. Decisions are made unanimously. The CAC initiates, coaches, steers (refer also to 5.4 "Topic Specific Committees") and closes Task Forces.
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