Early in my nonprofit career, I was working on an IT strategy for my organization.  In a number of small group meetings, I began to hear a common issue: how could we use technology in our field work if we couldn't get connectivity out the last 100 kilometers.  At the time, even larger cities in emerging countries were a telecommunications challenge. 
 
One of my colleagues told a story of having to travel four hours to a hotel on the coast in  the Dominican Republic for a one-hour conference call on a pay phone and then drive four hours back to his office, a nine-hour day for one meeting! 
 
In one of the small group meetings, I drew a picture (below [1]) of how information flowed from headquarters, to regional offices, to country office and program areas and back again.  It was clear that there was a "red zone" around program areas.  Like the old Get Smart TV show, this was a cone of silence. [2] 
 
The one-page diagram became the core of the IT strategy.  We needed to break through the "red zone" and "wire" our field offices.  This basic objective became a focus for global IT for the next 8 years, first from the US and later from the UK HQs.  Indeed, one of our key accomplishments was connecting 186 field offices with broadband communications.  It became the foundation for operating a digital business.  And it began with a single drawing.  |