Most IT budgets are a wishlist with last year's numbers nudged up 10%. We build technology roadmaps that tie initiatives to business outcomes, cost them honestly, and give finance a defendable position when the board asks where the money is going.
Big line items with no rationale. CFO can't defend them, so they get cut.
The roadmap reads like an IT shopping list. Why does it matter to the company?
Hardware refresh? Surprise. Microsoft license bump? Surprise. Nothing is budgeted because nothing is planned.
$200k contract auto-renews because nobody had a strategy. Now you're locked in 3 more years.
Initiatives, dependencies, business cases, ownership. Refreshed quarterly so the plan is always current.
Operational + capital + headcount equivalent. Multiple scenarios (steady, growth, M&A).
Every major contract, every renewal date, every decision needed in advance. No more 'oh, that auto-renewed.'
Each major project: problem, options, recommendation, cost, ROI. Board-ready one-pagers.
Half-day session: actual vs. plan, what to adjust, what's next quarter.
Same vocabulary as your finance team uses. Cleanly integrates with annual budgeting cycle.
Inventory current state — tools, contracts, team, projects, costs. Interviews with leadership and finance.
Business goals reviewed. Where does technology enable them? Where is it in the way? Initiatives proposed.
Each initiative costed. Phasing decided. 3-year budget model built. Scenario analysis run.
Draft reviewed with CEO, CFO, IT lead. Adjusted. Final roadmap + budget delivered. Board-pack drafted.
Same advisor, same cadence. Roadmap doesn't go stale.
Average year-1 savings from rationalization and renewal timing.
Every contract on the calendar with 60-day advance notice.
No 'because IT said so' projects.
Quarterly cadence. Always current.
“Our last IT budget meeting with the board took 90 minutes of arguing. After Senator built our roadmap, it took 15. Numbers tied to outcomes. Outcomes tied to strategy. The board approved without a single edit.”
No. Most engagements end with a flat or lower budget — savings from rationalization fund the new initiatives. We make decisions defensible, not bigger.
Yes — and that's the point. The roadmap output integrates with your annual budgeting cycle and your finance team's format.
No. We work alongside them. The roadmap is theirs to own and execute. We help build it and refresh it quarterly.
That's why it's rolling. Quarterly reviews adjust the plan. Big shifts can trigger a roadmap reset.
Walk us through your current IT planning process. We'll tell you honestly where it's strong, where it's weak, and what a 60-day engagement would change.