The most consequential technology decisions in your business no longer happen in the server room. They happen in the executive office, in the boardroom if you have one, and across the table from your accountant and your attorney.
Welcome to Net Effect, a new column about what technology decisions actually add up to — the cost, the risk, and the return that land on the business after the technology choice is made. Because that is the part most leaders never see clearly: not how the tool works, but what it nets out to in business outcomes.
Technology long ago stopped being a support function and became the thing the business runs on. What changed alongside it is who answers for it, and how much is now riding on getting it right.
A decade ago, when I joined GBQ, technology was something a business leader could reasonably delegate. Information technology (IT) handled it, raised issues when it had to, and the rest of the leadership team paid attention mainly when something broke. That model is over, and many organizations are still running as if it weren’t.
Look at what now lands on the executive’s desk. The core system you are preparing to replace is a ten-year financial and operational commitment dressed up as a software purchase — and chosen well, it is a decade of advantage rather than a decade of constraint. Your employees are already using artificial intelligence (AI) tools, with or without approval; handled deliberately, that same wave is the largest productivity opening in a generation, and handled carelessly, it is open exposure. Your cyber insurer now sets your premium, and sometimes your eligibility, on controls you are accountable for. Your customers expect a defined standard of care over their data, and the regulatory obligations around it keep expanding whether or not anyone got to the work.
Every one of those is a business decision with technology embedded in it, and each cuts both ways. Get it right, and the return shows up as lower cost, faster operations, and durable advantage. Get it wrong, and the bill arrives as risk, waste, and missed ground you don’t get back.
The accountability has risen to match. When something goes wrong now, the question has changed from “what failed?” to “who was accountable, and what oversight did they exercise?” Regulators, insurers, and courts are converging on that second question in practice, treating failures of cybersecurity, privacy, and technology governance as failures of leadership judgment. You do not need a formal board for the expectation to apply; if you are an owner or an executive, the standard follows the role. But accountability is only one side of the ledger. The same decisions that carry that exposure are the ones that create the return — which is precisely why they belong to leadership rather than to IT.
Yet the default response in most organizations hasn’t changed: “IT will handle it.” More and more, that answer leaves value on the table and risk unmanaged at the same time. The cost of treating technology as someone else’s job rarely shows up on the day the decision is made. It shows up later, and larger. Budgets drift because no one owns them. Risks surface only once they’ve been realized. Investments underperform because the decision was made without the right business context, one level too low in the organization. And the upside that a sharper decision would have captured quietly never arrives.
This is the gap Net Effect exists to close.
Twice a month, we will take the technology issues now reaching the executive agenda and put them in business terms: what they mean, what they cost, and what a sound decision returns. Not how the technology works ( that you can delegate), but how to govern it, fund it, and turn it into advantage. We will cover governance and risk, cybersecurity and privacy, AI adoption, the core systems that run your operations, the data you make decisions on, the technology debt that accumulates when choices are deferred, and the spend that grows when no one is watching it. The test for every piece is the same: if it isn’t a decision you own, it isn’t what we’ll write about.
This is the work we do every day in GBQ’s Business Technology Solutions practice. We advise owners, executives, and boards across software and technology, professional services, manufacturing, healthcare, financial services, construction, restaurants, and real estate, bringing a business-first, risk-informed read on technology rather than a purely technical one. For the first time, we have put the full scope of that work on public view.
If your last serious conversation about technology happened only because something broke, it is worth seeing what else belongs on the agenda.
And because this column is about the decisions you own, I would rather not guess at what matters most to you. If there is a technology question you are wrestling with, or one you wish someone would finally answer in plain business terms, send me a note at ddavidson@gbq.com. What you want to see will shape what I write.