Rationalize your applications, they say. It will lead to cost savings, streamline your portfolio, and release resources for innovation and technological advancement, they say. So why do we groan at the idea of starting an application rationalization effort? Immediate reactions to AppRat, as it is commonly called, are often due to the complexity of the work and lack of employee bandwidth to do the work thoroughly. AppRat is often deemed a “not now, but maybe later” task that is driven by bigger strategic moves like M&A, cloud migration and EHR implementations, further complicating these mission imperatives, adding to their timelines, and increasing their cost.
Consider these proof points about all there is to gain from having full visibility into your application portfolio before, rather than during, another strategic undertaking at your organization.
Application Sprawl is Expensive and Risky
Over time, even the most well-managed IT environments accumulate technical debt. Siloed purchasing, legacy systems, and Shadow IT can create a bloated application portfolio that could:
Application sprawl quietly erodes operational efficiency and financial flexibility, with the most significant impact observed at small to mid-sized hospital systems. However, application rationalization as a strategic lever introduces efficiencies through the elimination of overspending on resources and duplicated functionality.
Why AppRat Is a Strategic Lever—Not Just a Cleanup Task
Too often, we think of AppRat as a “someday” project—something to tackle after the dust settles from a major initiative. But done right, it can:
AppRat’s Anticipated Impact on Operations
Our application rationalization experts have led programs that decommissioned as many as 30% of an organization’s applications over five years, resulting in savings of as much as $70M. Given the value of resources that can be redirected to patient care, staff development, and digital innovation, the potential impact of an AppRat initiative is even higher.
Timing Is Everything—But So Is Framing the Purpose and Value of AppRat
Yes, timing matters. No one wants to launch a rationalization project in the middle of a go-live or construction phase. But waiting for the “perfect time” often means it never happens.
Instead, we need to reframeAppRat as a foundational part of transformation, not a follow-up act. AppRat should be a thoughtful, repeatable process embedded in the planning phase of any major initiative—not left for the post-project cleanup crew.
Use Industry Tools Instead of Devising Your Own AppRat Approach
Leverage the findings and tools of those who have done the work before you. The CIO Council’s The Application Rationalization Playbook is available as a free download. It’s a great starting point to understanding methodology.
Lean on companies like CereCore who offer Application Rationalization advisory services if your staffing bandwidth just isn’t there or you simply don’t know where to start. Consider staffing support for parts of the work or support developing an organization-specific program from initial assessment to decommissioning and archiving data. Prioritize a partner that knows healthcare.
Final Thought: Rationalization Is Essential
Application Rationalization should become a regularly performed assessment of your overall application portfolio. It is never finished, but it is foundational. Start your organization’s next major technology innovation or change with full transparency into your organization’s IT costs and cost of ownership by conducting AppRat before it even starts.