CFO Expectations of IT


Follow us





Contracting is a liability

Deciding who is liable for what is the sticking point of many an IT contract, but a balance can be found

The hardest part of an ICT contract to negotiate is usually the liability clause.

This stipulates who pays what should something go wrong, what types of loss can and can’t be recovered and, most controversially, the maximum liability of either party in the event that something does go wrong.

This particular topic always seems to lead to a ritual dance around some fairly well-rehearsed issues.

It’s a bit chicken-and-egg in that no-one wants to agree the liability exposure without knowing the overall level of risk and value, but then the price partly depends on the liability exposure.

But it’s frustrating that every negotiation seems to start from square one without there being a recognition by either the customer the or service provider of some of the realities of their current situation.

Too often, I seem to be faced with untenable negotiating positions: the customer who expects a service provider to pick up uncapped liability, and the service provider who refuses to accept responsibility for its customer’s obvious potential losses.

The resolution usually lies in the recognition that the right solution is a balance of the two parties’ interests which enables them both to feel as if they have got a fair deal.

Too often, negotiations become bogged down because parties don’t recognise the potential exposures on the other side of the table.

So, for example, customers often over-egg their demands for liability protection and seek to set liability clauses against the worst case, even though in reality the effects of mitigation (which will be legally required anyway) may bring the maximum possible claims down to a more moderate level.

Registration is free, and gives you full access to our extensive white paper library, case studies & analysis, downloads & speciality areas, and more.

Likewise, ICT service providers are routinely disingenuous about potential exposure. Modern ICT contracts sit close to the heart of customers’ operations, but many service providers cling to old norms on liability clauses that were developed when potential exposures were much different.

It therefore seems unfair to seek to apply outdated expectations of low caps on liability (or areas where liability is completely excluded) to the current generation of increasingly high-value, lucrative contracts.

Protracted negotiations could be an awful lot shorter if customers stopped setting liability expectations against the worst case, and if service providers were prepared to accept the downside of liability exposures commensurate with the upside of the profits available from the services that they now provide.

Next month, I’m going to offer suggestions on a few areas where agreement on liability issues ought to be easy to reach.



Email Updates

CIO Newsletters: Expert insight, advice and tools for technology, business, leadership and the CIO career.


Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:

PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.


CIO White Papers

The cloud 2015 vision

Cloud computing is an important transition and a paradigm shift in IT services delivery - one that promises large gains in efficiency and flexibility at a time when demands on data centers are growing exponentially. The tools, building blocks, solutions, and best practices for cloud computing are evolving and challenges to deploying cloud solutions need to be considered.

The consumerisation of technology

iPads are the must-have fad. Android is the rising mobile platform -- Everywhere you turn, the news is about personal, smart, mobile devices and their impact on business and on IT.

Desktop modernisation

On the one hand, there is the need to keep the existing desktop environment efficient, secure and running. On the other hand, there are workforce demands to use new devices and applications, to increase productivity. How can you address both of these requirements? The answer is... Desktop modernisation.

Aligning CFO and CIO priorities

Forward-thinking organisations are viewing cloud computing as an investment in business transformation, not just a way to cut costs for IT. Thanks to the cloud, CFOs and CIOs are moving beyond the “either/or” discussions that once forced them to make tradeoffs between IT cost cutting and the creation of new business agility and value.


CIO UK - Business - Technology - Leadership

On Demand Webcast
Analyse Data In Real Time


Increasingly businesses require the ability to analyse information quickly. Find out how to handle growing data volumes more efficiently while reducing the cost of managing your organisation's IT landscape

Watch now

SAP Logo

What do CFOs expect from IT?


Watch our sister publication's latest webcast.
Hear a case study from the Guardian News and Media's Technology Director, Andy Beale, and join the discussion on the role of the CFO in technology innovation.

Watch Discussion

CFO World webcast in assocation with Google

On Demand Webcast:
Maximising business flexibility with virtualisation


Register for this on demand webcast and find out how technologies can enable cost effective and secure virtualisation from your server deployments.



Watch now

Dell VMware logo


CFO Expectations of IT


* *