How to Demonstrate the Value of IT (Without Expressing Everything in Dollars)

It’s one of the most frustrating moments in an IT manager’s life. You’re in a budget meeting, presenting a plan for a critical network infrastructure upgrade or an investment in a new data platform. And then comes the inevitable question from the boardroom: “What’s the ROI on this?”

It’s a tough question. After all, what is the direct return on investment—expressed in euros—of a network that never goes down? Or of a backup system that actually works when you need it? The value of many IT investments lies not in what they deliver, but in the costs and risks they help prevent.

Trying to justify this often feels like defending your right to exist. But that’s because the question is fundamentally framed incorrectly.

The wrong question: “What’s in it for me?”

The demand for an immediate ROI is a reflex born of a world where every investment leads to higher revenue or lower production costs. But the IT department is not a means of production; it is the foundation on which the entire organization runs. You don’t ask what the ROI is of the foundation of your office building. The value lies in the fact that the building doesn’t collapse.

The right question: “What will it cost us if we don’t do it?”

The most effective way to demonstrate the value of IT is to shift the conversation. Change the question from “What’s in it for us?” to “What is the cost of the alternative?” Make the value tangible by highlighting the pain of not having it.

1. The value of a stable workplace:

  • The alternative: A slow, unreliable IT environment. Suppose that, on average, employees are unproductive for 10% of their time due to slow systems and outages. In that case, as an organization, you’re paying 100% of salaries for 90% of productivity. That 10% loss in productivity is the direct, measurable “cost” of a subpar IT infrastructure.

2. The value of an automated process:

  • The alternative: A manual process. You could hire three employees to manually collect data from various systems, verify it, and compile it into a report. Or you could invest in a system that does this faster, more consistently, and without human error. The value of the IT solution can be directly compared to the salary costs and error rate of the manual alternative.

From a cost center to a strategic enabler

By thinking this way, you change the dynamics of the conversation. You are no longer seen as a cost center that has to justify its expenses. Instead, you become a strategic partner who helps the organization manage risks and improve efficiency.

The true value of a mature IT department lies in its ability to enable the organization to operate more quickly, consistently, and reliably. It is the driving force that ensures decisions are better informed, reduces the risk of making the wrong choices, and empowers employees to do their jobs effectively.

This is the essence of modern IT services for housing associations: IT is not an end in itself, but an indispensable tool that demonstrably contributes to better decisions and improved business results. By framing its value in this way, IT shifts from being a necessary evil on the budget to a strategic asset for the entire organization.

Wondering what this means for your organization? We’d be happy to help you figure it out.