DSI Budget : Methods and best practices

Defining an IT budget is a key step to ensuring effective management of an organization’s digital resources.

A rigorous and structured approach helps align IT investments with the company’s strategic objectives.

It is essential to build the budget by conducting a value analysis of each investment (cost vs. utility), using project sheets that can be prioritized.

Evolving the information system is also a high-risk change management process—an area often overlooked.

Here is the recommended 7-step method:

7-Step Method for Building an Effective IT Budget

  • Assess the Current IT Environment
    Evaluate existing infrastructure, software, services, and recurring costs. Identify what’s working, what’s outdated, and what needs to evolve.
  • Define Strategic Business Objectives
    Align IT needs with the company’s strategic goals (growth, innovation, compliance, customer experience, etc.).

  • Identify and Prioritize Projects
    Create detailed project proposals including objectives, costs, expected benefits, and risks. Prioritize based on strategic value and ROI.

  • Estimate Costs and Resources
    Forecast expenses for each initiative, including hardware, software, licenses, consulting, training, and internal labor.

  • Perform Value Analysis (Cost/Benefit Assessment)
    Evaluate each investment’s utility versus its cost. Justify expenses with qualitative and quantitative benefits.

  • Anticipate Risks and Plan for Change Management
    Recognize the impact of IT evolution on teams and processes. Include support for change management and user adoption.

  • Monitor, Adjust, and Communicate
    Set up governance and KPIs to track budget execution. Regularly review and adjust. Communicate progress to stakeholders.

Best practices

  • Understand the current state and identify gaps to be addressed.

  • The IT budget is not standalone — it must support business priorities.

  • Don’t overlook recurring costs or planned renewals.

  • Include a buffer for unexpected events or technology-related inflation.

  • Using an impact/urgency matrix can help with decision-making.

  • The IT budget is cross-functional: involvement leads to better adoption.

  • The IT budget must remain dynamic and flexible, especially in uncertain environments

Example – IT Budget Tracking Table

CategoryProject / Expense ItemAllocated Budget (€)Incurred Expenses (€)Remaining to Commit (€)Variance (€)% SpentComments / Status
InfrastructureServer upgrades50,00030,00020,000060%Second delivery scheduled for Q3
Software / LicensesSaaS subscriptions (O365, etc.)25,00025,00000100%Paid annually in January
CybersecuritySecurity audit + EDR tools15,00010,0005,000066%Finalizing with vendor
Strategic ProjectsCRM / ERP implementation100,00040,00060,000040%Phase 2 planned for H2
Maintenance / SupportManaged services / SLA contracts40,00020,00020,000050%Quarterly contract
Training / Change MgmtUser training / ITIL workshops10,0002,0008,000020%Planned for autumn
Contingency / BufferAdjustment reserve10,000010,00000%To be used for unforeseen needs

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