What Challenges Do IT Departments Face? Solutions for the Talent Shortage Era


Why the in-house IT (情シス) team at Japanese companies is increasingly overloaded, the five core challenges they face, and how to solve them without inflating fixed costs.

1What does the Information Systems department actually do?

The real role of the IT department

At many companies, the Information Systems department (often called “情シス” in Japan) is casually seen as “the people who fix computers.” In reality, this team carries the entire digital backbone of the business: infrastructure operations, security, account management, user support, business-system development, and leading digital transformation (DX).

The problem is that this workload keeps growing in step with digitalization, while headcount stays almost flat. The result is that a strategic function is forced to operate in constant firefighting mode.

“The work keeps piling up, but the team never grows.”

A sentiment you’ll hear in almost every IT department — cases stack up while headcount stays the same.

2Five core challenges of the IT department

The root problems information systems teams face

Working with many Japanese companies, BAP has found that the difficulties usually come down to six main areas:

① Talent & skills gap

Not just too few people, but the wrong skill mix: cloud, AI, security, modern architecture. In-house training takes years.

② Operations & maintenance load

Keeping existing systems running consumes most of the team’s time, leaving almost no room for new development.

③ Aging legacy systems

Old, patched-together systems dependent on a few individuals — the very “2025 digital cliff” risk METI has warned about.

④ DX pressure from leadership

Expected to drive digital transformation, yet without the resources to both operate and innovate at once.

⑤ Knowledge locked in individuals

Critical system knowledge lives in a few people’s heads. When they leave, it becomes a genuine operational risk.

⑥ Hard to prove value

IT is treated as a “cost center” and struggles to demonstrate contribution — so budgets and headcount get squeezed.

3Why is the pressure growing now?

Why the load on IT departments keeps rising

Three forces are squeezing the in-house IT team at the same time, turning overload into a structural — not temporary — problem:

~790,000IT professionals Japan may be short of by 2030 (widely cited METI figure)2025 CliffRisk of major economic loss if companies fail to escape legacy systemsEvery deptWants to digitalize — but central IT has hard limits

Three currents — a structural talent shortage, urgent DX pressure, and fast-rising expectations from the field — converge on a single bottleneck: the Information Systems department.

4Three options companies typically weigh

In-house · Hiring · Outsourcing

Faced with this, Japanese companies usually consider three directions. They are not mutually exclusive — the optimal model often keeps the strategic core in-house and outsources what can be standardized.

OptionSpeedUpfront costFlexibilityInternal knowledge
In-houseSlowModerateLowHigh
HiringVery slow (6–12 mo)High & fixedLowHigh
OutsourcingFast (weeks)Variable per projectHighModel-dependent

Because it grants access to development capacity immediately, without raising long-term fixed costs, system development outsourcing is increasingly seen as a strategic lever rather than a stopgap.

5The benefits of outsourcing system development

Why outsourcing pays off

⚡ Speed to launch

Partners come with a ready team and process — projects start in weeks instead of the months hiring takes.

💰 Cost optimization

Shift from fixed costs to per-project variable costs. Offshore in Vietnam offers a clearly competitive cost structure.

📈 Flexible capacity

Scale the team up or down by project phase — nearly impossible with fixed permanent hiring.

🚀 Access to new tech

Partners accumulate cloud, AI and blockchain expertise across projects that in-house teams can’t build overnight.

6Risks you must face honestly

The three outsourcing risks to confront directly

Outsourcing is not risk-free. The three main risks below are all manageable with the right partner and the right method:

Requirement misalignmentIf requirements definition is unclear, the delivered product misses expectations and forces costly rework — a risk amplified by language barriers.
Choosing the wrong vendorA partner lacking domain experience or strong Japanese-language capability can turn cost savings into real losses.
Weak project managementOutsourcing is not “hand it over and forget.” Without clear progress and quality tracking, projects slip out of control.
7How to outsource successfully

The path to a successful engagement

1Choose a long-term partner, not just the lowest priceJudge on communication (especially Japanese-language support and cultural understanding), technical strength, and project-management capability.
2Start with a PoC or small projectValidate the partner’s ability on a small scope before scaling — this lowers risk and builds trust.
3Communicate clearly and with structureInvest seriously in requirements definition, set up regular reporting, and agree acceptance criteria upfront. Most failures come from communication, not technology.

BAP — a development partner, not just a contractor

BAP Solution Japan Co., Ltd. — a software development and offshore company serving the Japanese market, with a legal entity and offices in Tokyo and Osaka. Why BAP fits Japanese companies:

✓  Quality & security: internationally certified to ISO 27001 and ISO 9001.
✓  Broad service range: web/mobile, business systems, SAP/ERP, Salesforce, AI & IoT, system migration and 24/7 operations & maintenance.
✓  Flexible models: a “Lab” model for continuous resourcing and a “Contract” model for fixed-requirement projects.
✓  Track record: collaboration with major Japanese enterprises, including large manufacturers and financial institutions.

Talk to BAP — free consultation →

We understand your business problem before writing the first line of code.

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