Help
CEOExpress Home | News Center | Contact Us
  McKinsey Quarterly

 
Industries
Automotive
Energy, Resources, Materials
Financial Services
Food & Agriculture
Health Care
High Tech
Media & Entertainment
Nonprofit
Public Sector
Retail
Telecommunications
Transportation
Function
Corporate Finance
Economic Studies
Governance
Information Technology
Marketing
Operations
Organization
Strategy
Search Articles:

All of these words Any of these words
Summary
Please note: The McKinsey Quarterly has agreed to a special arrangement for CEOExpress members that allows member access to their articles. Articles must be clicked on directly through the links below to gain access to this group of articles.
More bang for the IT buck
In the postbubble market, companies are buying new technology products at discounts not seen in years. That's good news because IT accounts, on average, for nearly 7 percent of a company’s operating expenses. Yet most companies are still spending too much—as much as 20 percent more than necessary. They could get even better deals by looking more closely at costly terms and conditions in vendor contracts, by limiting their purchases and coordinating them across divisions, and by negotiating aggressively with vendors.

The take-away: Companies can slash their IT-purchasing costs deeply in a few months by looking at today’s deals with an eye on the total cost of IT spending and by building more integrated and disciplined IT-procurement capabilities over the longer term.
  


Articles provided by The McKinsey Quarterly
© 1992-2003 McKinsey & Company, Inc

 

Copyright ©1999-2024 CEOExpress Company LLC.