Skip navigation

Blogs

13 Posts tagged with the event tag
0
Joe Peppard

Joe Peppard

Join the Center for CIO Leadership and our partner, Cranfield School of Management, for this exclusive and highly topical session for CIOs and other C-suite executives. The roundtable, featuring Dr. Joe Peppard, Director, IT Leadership Program, Cranfield School of Management, and Len Peters, Associate Vice President and CIO, Yale University, focuses on Next Generation IT GovernanceThis Virtual Roundtable will take place Wednesday, October 19, 2011 at 9:00 am EDT (New York, USA).

 

IT Governance is today’s challenge and tomorrow’s leadership opportunity for CIOs as they expand their influence as business leaders.  This session will help CIOs explore opportunities and new ways to think about the next generation of IT governance, including evolving IT governance to enhance and enable integration, alignment and co-evolution with the business in the rapidly moving world of technology innovation.

 

Professor Peppard will open the session with findings from his research with CIOs around the challenges of governance in an increasingly devolved and localized IT environment.  He will be joined by Len Peters who will share his insights and experiences, successes and lessons learned on this key area that is required to lead the organization effectively.

Len Peters Oct 2011 event

Len Peters

 

Topic:

Next Generation IT Governance

Time:

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011 - 9:00 am – 10:00 am EDT (New York, USA)

Location:

Dial-in information will be provided upon registration

Format:

9:00 am: Presentation by Joe Peppard and Len Peters

9:25 am: Interactive Panel Discussion and Moderated Q&A with Joe Peppard, Len Peters, Harvey Koeppel and Virtual Roundtable participants

9:55 am: Final words

10:00 am: Adjourn

 

To register for the October 19th Virtual Roundtable or if you would like further information, please contact event@cioleadershipcenter.com.

0
George Westerman

George Westerman

Join the Center for CIO Leadership for this interactive virtual roundtable for CIOs and other C-suite executives, IT Risk: Turning Business Threats into Competitive Advantage featuring Dr. George Westerman, Research Scientist, MIT Center for Digital Business and Kris Lovejoy, Vice President of Risk Management, IBM.  The roundtable will take place Tuesday, September 27, 2011 at 9:00 am EDT (New York, USA).

 

Recent press about cyber and malware attacks, combined with ever-increasing regulatory compliance burdens, has Boards demanding that CIOs keep their companies out of the headlines.  At the same time, the consumerization of IT and exploding use of social media across enterprises are increasing the challenges of managing risk.  Yet IT risk management efforts are often seen as preventing progress rather than managing risk.  This session will explore key elements of the risk management challenge, the approaches to successfully manage risk and the potential for CIOs to find new value from risk management.  The speakers will explain how CIOs can reframe the discussion to turn these challenges into business opportunities.  The session will also feature a case study on how IBM is tackling the risk management challenge.

Kris Lovejoy

Kris Lovejoy

 

Topic:

IT Risk: Turning Business Threats Into Competitive Advantage

Time:

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011 - 9:00 am – 10:00 am EDT (New York, USA)

Location:

Dial-in information will be provided upon registration

Format:

9:00 am: Presentation by George Westerman and Kris Lovejoy

9:25 am: Interactive Panel Discussion and Moderated Q&A with George Westerman, Kris Lovejoy, Harvey Koeppel and Virtual Roundtable participants

9:55 am: Final words

10:00 am: Adjourn

To register for the September 27th Virtual Roundtable or if you would like further information, please contact event@cioleadershipcenter.com.

0

CIO Virtual Roundtable – Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

 

AriLightman-croppedMarc Brown-croppedKennethSpangler-cropped

Professor Ari Lightman

Carnegie Mellon University’s H. John Heinz III College

Marc Brown

Senior Vice President, Corporate Service Center and

Chief Information Officer

Del Monte Foods Company

Ken Spangler

Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer

FedEx Ground

 

 

Heinz_College_logoPlease join the Center for CIO Leadership and our partner, Carnegie Mellon University’s H. John Heinz III College, for this exclusive and highly topical session for CIOs and other c-suite executives.  The roundtable, led by Professor Ari Lightman and two leading CIOs, Marc Brown, Senior Vice President, Corporate Service Center and Chief Information Officer, Del Monte Foods Company and Ken Spangler, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, FedEx Ground, focuses on Getting Value from Social Media and Unstructured Data: The New Unified View.  This Virtual Roundtable for CIOs will take place Wednesday, June 22, 2011 at 9:00 am EDT (New York, USA).

 

Social media is now pervasive across companies and industries, representing an exploding opportunity to connect with customers and prospects, and internally to collaborate and innovate.  The customer interactions and engagement that proliferate across social networks represent a powerful, but unstructured data source to incorporate into a unified view of the customer.  CIOs are wrestling with how to access and integrate the results of social strategies and campaigns into their broader analytics efforts while providing support for various departments and acceptable levels of security.

 

Professor Ari Lightman, from CMU’s Heinz College, researches social technologies and trends in social media data analysis, and works with companies like EBay, Bayer, Comcast and the Pittsburgh Steelers looking to understand and measure benefit associated with social content.  In this exclusive roundtable, he will provide CIOs with key insights to get value from integrating online social strategies into analytics and go to market strategy.

 

Professor Lightman, with insights from Mr. Brown & Mr. Spangler, will discuss what makes online social initiatives successful, how CIOs are managing and measuring the impact of these efforts, and how the rapidly expanding body of unstructured data provides a critical data source for the customer-centric enterprise.

 

Topic:Getting Value from Social Media and Unstructured Data: The New Unified View
Time:Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011 - 9:00 am – 10:00 am EDT (New York, USA)
Location:Teleconference dial-in information will be provided upon registration
Format:

9:00 am:  Interactive Panel Discussion and Moderated Q&A led Professor Ari Lightman

Marc Brown, Del Monte Foods Company, and Ken Spangler, FedEx Ground

 

9:55 am:  Final words

10:00 am:  Adjourn

To register please contact event@cioleadershipcenter.com

 

Click here to read more about the Panelists.  NOTE: You must be a CIO member of the Center to access the panelist bios.  Join now.

0

MITCIO2011_212x235.JPG www.mitcio.com

 

This year, the MIT community is celebrating its 150th anniversary. That’s over a century and a half of knowledge-sharing that has lead to breakthroughs in science and engineering—innovations that have improved both social and economic welfare, year after year.

 

Graham Rong, SF ’06, has been the chair of the MIT CIO Symposium since 2009. Dean David Schmittlein noted that this event brings together MIT Sloan’s leading research and education with many great CIOs, business leaders, and innovators from around the world. It is a platform to engage in problem-solving dialogue, gain strategic insights, and obtain solutions to improve diverse organizational and business issues for the present and well into the future. 

 

Recently, Graham shared some of his thoughts regarding business trends, being a leader in innovation, and how his time at the MIT Sloan continues to shape his perspective.

 

Q. Refl ecting on your experience at MIT Sloan and the development of the CIO Symposium, what would you say were the drivers for the past themes and topics? Were the ideas based on the economic climate or technology?

 

A. We have a different symposium theme every year. It is driven by industry trend-setters in global CIO leadership and corporate IT. But the common thread carried through the years is that it is always forwardlooking in nature. A small group of us usually spends weeks drafting a theme based on research and reviews with thought leaders, both in academia and industry. Ideas for specifi c panel topics are based on the landscape of the economy and tomorrow’s technologies

 

For example, last year’s theme, “Top-Line Growth and Bottom-line Results,” refl ected the initial stage of our economic recovery. Turning a corner means being aware of and ready for the best opportunity to glean top-line or optimal growth. A recovery period is a time of opportunities and options for fresh avenues, but one still needs to focus on the current (realistic) business operation.

 

Q. The subject of leadership has always been a recurring discussion topic at these symposiums. What leadership qualities did you learn through your MIT Sloan experience and what are the skills needed to lead innovation in business?

 

A. The academic research and entrepreneurial experience provided me with an excellent balance between technical aptitude and business acumen.

 

Read more --> http://mitsloan.mit.edu/pdf/NewsAtMITSloan_Issue202.pdf

0

The Center recently hosted a virtual roundtable on an important topic to CIOs, Partnering to Drive Change through Analytics, where we explored how organizations are applying analytics best practices today, the business value that the best performing organizations are experiencing.

 

In preparing for the session, I developed some observations on the topic that I think provide a useful perspective for CIOs as you all consider taking action on getting value from leveraging analytics and creating business value in your own enterprise.

 

Not a new topic

In researching the literature prior to the session to provide some historical perspective on how far back this topic goes, I discovered that people have been talking about what we describe as this massive explosion of data, initially called information overload, for longer than many of us have been in this industry. From what I could ascertain, the earliest known attribution of the term “information overload” was credited to an IBM advertising supplement in the New York Times on April 30, 1961. So obviously this is not a new topic.

 

So what’s different now: more data than ever before

That being said, we are clearly at a new frontier of information overload and explosion of data, which is astronomically more challenging, but at the same time very exciting from the point of view of being able to impact the way we do business.

 

To put this into a context for today, I like to look at the retail industry, which is at the forefront of collecting massive amounts of data, and more importantly putting that data to use in changing the way they go to market, manage the customer experience, streamline the supply chain, and create the next generation customer. Walmart is often cited as a great example as a retailer leveraging data and analytics across all of these elements. A fact that I found particularly noteworthy - as of about nine months ago, Walmart was processing over a million customer transactions per hour, feeding databases that were estimated in excess of two and a half petabytes (roughly the equivalent of 167 times all of the books in the Library of Congress.)

 

Walmart has unprecedented insight into what their customers are doing, what they want, and how to respond across their 8,500 stores worldwide. At the same time, they need to find a way to translate that insight into actions that drive customer benefit and stakeholder value.

 

How should CIOs respond to this incredible opportunity?

“Revolutions in science have often been preceded by revolutions in measurement,” said Sinan Aral, a business professor at New York University, in a 2010 article in the Economist. He went on to say that just as the microscope transformed biology by exposing germs, and the electron microscope changed physics, the proliferation of data is turning the social sciences upside down.

 

I see that as representative of the conversation we as CIOs should be having now – how to apply this insight, these data, to become the microscope for how businesses can learn and advance ourselves and our industries. There are a few takeaways for me from Katharyn White’s presentation that I would encourage CIOs to consider in looking to manage these conversations.

 

  • It’s a journey – the research presented reflects the evolutionary process of adopting, implementing, and embedding the value of analytics in the enterprise. And as Katharyn emphasized, the process of gaining buy-in and creating change is actually a core part of the implementation. In leading change management efforts myself over the years, I see that implementing analytics is the type of program that requires deep change across the enterprise, and core shifts in the way people make decisions, operate and go to market. CIOs can leverage their expertise in change management, as well as their enterprise-wide view of data and information, to make the journey more successful.

 

  • Learn from others – the research also showed that companies can be successful getting to value across many industries; success in analytics is not industry dependent, or even geography dependent. There are companies of all types applying best practices and getting exciting results – whether it is in growing sales, increasing efficiencies, or improving individual customer interactions. Katharyn shared the view that success with analytics benefits greatly from a cross-industry perspective, and from seeking out examples from many other environments as a way to leapfrog in your own industry. This echoes my own experience – and that of the Center’s commitment to peer-sharing. CIOs should seek to systematically leverage learning from others to innovate in an emerging area like analytics.

 

  • Leverage your C-suite relationships – by definition, getting value from analytics, especially as companies migrate from aspirational to experienced or experienced to transformed (as described in the research), clearly requires data or information to be collected across functional silos and/or across multiple business units. Whether or not the data collection and management moves to the point of being centralized within the enterprise, there needs to be an integrated and shared view of who is doing what, and how they data can be cleaned, verified and leveraged across the silos. This is an important opportunity for CIOs to leverage your hard-won C-suite relationships, and reach out to connect on an integrated view of the possibilities to move to value in your enterprise. One partnership in particular that Katharyn mentioned – the one with the Chief Marketing Officer – struck me as interesting for CIOs to consider. Analytics is at the forefront of where marketing and technology are coming together, and the partnership represents an emerging opportunity for CIOs to truly push the needle on analytics and how the company goes to market.

 

What are you doing in your organization to move the needle on the path value through analytics? What lessons can you share with others?

0

CIO Virtual Roundtable – Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

 

Please join the Center for CIO Leadership for an exclusive Center-sponsored Virtual Roundtable for CIOs and other c-suite executives.  The Virtual Roundtable, Partnering to Drive Change through Analytics – features Katharyn White, Vice President, IBM Global Business Services and the perspectives of CIOs that advise Katharyn and IBM on its analytics strategy.  The session will take place on Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011. 

 

Join the Center for this unique opportunity to hear new research from MIT Sloan Management Review and IBM Institute for Business Value that explores how organizations are applying analytics best practices today, and highlights the business value that the best performing organizations are experiencing.  This session will feature the recommendations and experiences of CIOs who are partnering with their business peers to drive change through the use of analytics.  The discussion will focus on the strategies that are being employed, the challenges encountered and the lessons learned as CIOs look to business analytics to improve both operational performance and customer-facing functions.

 

Topic:

Partnering to Drive Change through Analytics

Time:

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011 - 11:00 am–12 noon EST (New York)

Location:Teleconference dial-in information will be provided upon registration
Format:

11:00 am:  Presentation by Katharyn White and CIO analytics leaders

11:20 am:  Moderated discussion with Katharyn and Virtual Roundtable Participants

11:50 am:  Final words

12:00 noon:  Adjourn

 

To register for the March 23rd Virtual Roundtable or if you would like further information, please contact event@cioleadershipcenter.com.

 

Click here to view a list of Center events.

1

Countdown: Take Advantage Of The Early Bird Registration Special - Ends March 1, 2011

Register today! www.mitcio.com

 

Now in its eighth year, the MIT Sloan CIO Symposium is a one-day conference, held on the MIT campus, where CIOs and senior business executives from around the world gather to explore leading-edge research and innovative technologies that can address the practical challenges in today’s changing economy. They engage with each other and thought leaders to find better ways to sustain their leadership and improve business performance through the effective use of technology. Keynote presentations and interactive panel discussions feature business leaders, technology trendsetters, and thought leaders from academia. More than a dozen sessions will explore topics ranging from mobile computing, risk and security, cloud computing, enterprise analytics and workforce 2015, to managing the extended enterprise, and economics-quality driven collaborative health care.

 

The Symposium will take place Wednesday, May 18, 2011, 7:30 am – 7:00 pm at Kresge Auditorium, MIT (77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA).

 

The MIT Sloan CIO Symposium seeks nominations for this year’s MIT Sloan CIO Symposium 2011 Award for Innovation Leadership which distinguishes CIOs who lead their organizations to pursue the innovative use of Information Technology (IT) and business processes to deliver business value. The 2011 Award recipients will be honored during a ceremony at the MIT Sloan CIO Symposium on May 18, 2011. 

 

Judging Criteria:

When reviewing applications, judges will examine candidates to see that they are a:

  • Trusted Advisor to the CEO, CFO and other senior executives  by demonstrating how they incorporated IT into business  decision-making, educated executives on IT’s potential, used IT to  manage risk, and participated in key operational and executive  committees.
  • Business Leader and can demonstrate how they understand  business challenges, competition, market trends, and the organization's  core competencies.
  • Strong Communicator who has articulated a vision for  IT-enabled innovation, and has worked across the organization and with  external stakeholders to gain support of and acceptance for this vision.
  • Proven Manager and have delivered core IT services that enabled innovation and growth within budget and staff constraints.

 

Apply or Nominate a CIO today!  http://mitcio.com/award/signup.php

 

The second annual Innovation Showcase, which will also take place at the Symposium will connect CIOs, senior business and IT executives with ten carefully selected early-stage technology companies which have the potential to help CIOs drive top line growth and bottom line results. This is an opportunity for

technology start-ups to gain access to senior IT executives, industry influencers and potential strategic partners.

 

Selection Process:

The ten early-stage technology companies will be decided by the Innovation Showcase Organizing Team. The team includes an industry wide group of MIT faculty, entrepreneurs, and early-stage investors. Finalists will be notified by April 8, 2011. All decisions are final.

 

Qualification Criteria:

The criteria for potential Innovation Showcase companies include the following:

  • Must be a start-up with less than $10 million in 2010 revenues.
  • Must be selling enterprise IT solutions to CIOs.
  • Must show innovation as well as potential impact on the top and bottom lines.

 

Deadline for submissions is March 15, 2011.  http://www.mitcio.com/innov.php

 

Media Contact:

Rachel Greenstein

rachel@warnerpr.com

617-569-6269

0

CIO Virtual Roundtable – Thursday, February 24th, 2011

 

 

Please join the Center for CIO Leadership for an exclusive Center-sponsored Virtual Roundtable for CIOs and other c-suite executives.

 

Fran DramisFrom the Machine Room to the Board Room: How CIOs Can Evolve From Technologists to Enterprise Leaders featuring Fran Dramis, former Chief Information, Security, E-Commerce Officer of BellSouth Corporation

 

This new roundtable session, From the Machine Room to the Board Room: How CIOs Can Evolve From Technologists to Enterprise Leaders, will showcase Fran Dramis’ own journey to strategic business leader, and lessons he has learned along the way to help member CIOs create value, drive business transformation and earn their “voice” at the executive table.

 

The conversation will explore the following themes:

 

  • Understanding the needs of the business – how CIOs can bridge the gap and connect to the executive teams’ needs, priorities and agenda
  • Building business skills – what key business skills will help CIOs as they move up the ladder to business leader
  • Creating a business-focused technology organization – how CIOs should focus on building a business-oriented team equipped to understand their internal and external customers and help create value
  • Finding the path to value creation – how CIOs can assess the opportunities and engage the executive team and business leaders to transform the business along the road to value creation

 

This is a unique opportunity for participants to hear from an innovative CIO who has led transformations in many organizations – including BellSouth, Bankers’ Trust, Citibank, Coopers & Lybrand and NASD – and has learned the key opportunities, challenges and paths to success for other CIOs to share in and consider as they work to drive business transformation in their own enterprise.  Come join the conversation on these opportunities – and other ways CIOs can make an impact.

 

Topic:From the Machine Room to the Board Room: How CIOs Can Evolve FromTechnologists to Enterprise Leaders
Time:

Thursday, February 24th, 2011 - 11:00 am – 12:00 noon EST (New York)

Location:Teleconference dial-in information will be provided upon registration
Format:

11:00 am:  Conversation with Fran Dramis and Harvey Koeppel

11:20 am:  Moderated discussion with Fran, Harvey and Virtual Roundtable Participants

11:50 am:  Final words

12:00 noon:  Adjourn

 

To register for the February 24th Virtual Roundtable or if you would like further information, please contact event@cioleadershipcenter.com.

0

Please join the Center for CIO Leadership for an exclusive Center-sponsored Virtual Roundtable for CIOs and other c-suite executives, Thursday, January 27, 2011.

 

The CIO Edge: Seven Leadership Skills You Need to Drive Results – featuring George Hallenbeck, Karen Rubenstrunk, and Graham Waller.

 

George_Hallenbeck_PhotoRubenstrunk_smallGraham_Waller_small2

George Hallenbeck

Director, Intellectual Property Development,

Korn/Ferry Leadership and Talent Consulting

Karen Rubenstrunk

Independent CIO Coach

Graham Waller

Vice President and Executive Partner, Gartner Executive Programs

 

 

What makes a great CIO?  Three years of research conducted by experts from Gartner and Korn/Ferry International provide the answer, something high-performing CIOs all have in common: the ability to forge superior working relationships to collaboratively deliver business results through people, by people and with people.  This session will offer a wealth of practical strategies and valuable tips for mastering the seven “soft” leadership skills proven to yield hard results—professionally and personally.

 

Join us for this unique opportunity to talk directly with the researchers and authors of this new insight into how great CIOs consistently exceed stakeholder expectations and maximize the business value delivered through their company’s technology.

 

Topic:The CIO Edge: Seven Leadership Skills You Need to Drive Results
Time:Thursday, January 27th, 2011 - 10:00 – 11:00 am EST (New York)
Location:Teleconference dial-in information will be provided upon registration
Format:

10:00 am:  Presentation by George Hallenbeck, Karen Rubenstrunk, and Graham Waller

10:20 am:  Moderated discussion with Harvey Koeppel, Graham, Karen, and George and event participants

10:50 am:  Final words

11:00 am:  Adjourn

 

To register for the January 27th Virtual Roundtable or if you would like further information, please contact event@cioleadershipcenter.com.

 

You can learn more about the authors, the recently published book The CIO Edge: Seven Leadership Skills You Need to Drive Results, and follow their blog by clicking here.

0

On behalf of the MITSloan CIO Symposium’s organizers, sponsors and partners, you are cordinally invited to visit The MIT Sloan CIO Symposium - Video On Demand. It's Free..


If you missed the live event this past May, it's a great opportunity to enjoy and benefit from the all of the Symposium’s seminal and innovative discussions and talks served to you by Symposium panels and speakers, on video,on demand, right now. By registering, free of charge, you will have access to thirteen engaging sessions, covering the most compelling topics influencing CIO’s and senior technology executives today.

 

You are invited compliments of the MIT Sloan CIO Symposium’s organizers, sponsors and partners. Access the complete 2010 Symposium on video ondemand...  Click here

 

Our mission is to explore how innovative technologies and leading-edge academic research can help address the practical challenges faced in today’s changing volatile business environment and economy. We trust that this new addition will be an important contribution to the IT and Business community globally. Senior IT decision makers engage with each other and with thought leaders from academia to find better ways to sustain their leadership in the effective use of technology to improve business performance.  This is where the future is made.

 

Please feel free to contact me should you have any question.

 

 

0

As the global economy slowly begins to emerge from the downturn, companies are evolving their focus on cost cutting to look for opportunities to emerge in the new “normal” more competitive and positioned for growth.  The role of technology in innovating out of the downturn is far-reaching, and the opportunities for CIOs to take the lead are wide-ranging.


The Center has teamed up with Cranfield School of Management to convene CIOs to uncover ideas and strategies for both of these aspects of the changing nature of innovation.  On Wednesday, October 6,  the Center and Cranfield are co-sponsoring an in-person education program,  “The Changing Nature of Innovation and the Role of the CIO to Drive and Lead the Opportunity."  The day-long program, taking place on the Cranfield campus outside of London, will examine these key themes:

 

  • Creating frameworks to drive collaboration and embed innovation within the business culture
  • Identifying and implementing technologies to lead product and service innovation
  • Innovating to transform the business model
  • Self-funding for innovation


We invite CIOs and other IT leaders to join their peers for :

 

  • Theme:  “The Changing Nature of Innovation and the Role of the CIO to Drive and Lead the Opportunity.”
  • Date:  Wednesday, October 6, 2010, 8:30 am – 5:00 pm BST
  • Audience:  Senior executives including CIOs, Directors of IT, VPs
  • Location:  The Cranfield Management Research Institute, Cranfield University, College Road, Cranfield, Bedfordshire, MK43 0AL
  • Registration fee:  £100 + VAT

 

The one-day program includes panel sessions, breakouts and networking opportunities that will connect you with other industry leaders.  You will come away with practical approaches and techniques that will help you to take action, and lead  your organization to emerge stronger in today’s economy.  The agenda for this interactive program will feature peer presentations and provide real life examples of how CIOs have led innovation in their own organizations.

 

Agenda and Speakers

 

The Changing Nature of Innovation and the Role of the CIO to Drive and Lead the Opportunity
8:30 am

Networking over breakfast

9:00 am

Session Introduction and Overview


Joe Peppard, Director Information Systems Research Centre, Cranfield School of Management

9:30 pmFrameworks for Innovating: Creating and Managing
  • Creating the Innovation Eco-system – Ken Douglas, Technology Director, British Petroleum
  • Managing the Innovation Portfolio – Gary Hird, Head of Technology, John Lewis Partnership
10:30 amCoffee Break and Networking
11:00 amFrameworks for Innovating: Uncovering and Showcasing
  • Uncovering Innovation: Seeking Emerging Technologies – Jason Haines, Director of IT, CIO, Allen & Overy LLP
  • Showcasing Innovation: The Innovation Lab – Gary Gascoigne, General Manager ISD, Asda Stores Ltd
12:00 pmBuffet Lunch and Networking
1:00 pmInnovating for Business Impact

Overview on Evolving Opportunities for CIOs
Harvey Koeppel, Executive Director, Center for CIO Leadership

  • Product Innovation for Expanding Market Opportunities – Stefan Wagner, EMEA Head for Retail and Structured Products, Citigroup London
  • Innovating the Business Model: Outsourcing for Advantage – Mike Vincent, former CIO, ING Group, Center Advisory Council member and Noel Thomas, Principal/Consultant, Digizone Global Services BV
2:30 pmLeading the Innovation Opportunity
  • Self Funding for Innovation – Jose Carlos Eiras, former CIO of General Motors in Europe and LA, author of “The Practical CIO”
3:00 pm

Coffee break and shift to Roundtable discussions

4:15 pm

Report out and Group Discussion

4:45 pm

Wrap up and Perspectives on the Day - Harvey Koeppel and Joe Peppard

5:00 pmAdjourn

 

Click here for the Cranfield University Registration Form to register for this event.

 

If you would like more information, please contact the Center.

0

The Center for CIO Leadership is hosting an exclusive executive event Thursday, October 21, 5:30 pm to 8:30 pm in New York City.

 

  • Salon Theme:  CEOs See Technology as Growth Driver; CIOs Don’t… a Discussion.
  • Date:  Thursday, October 21, 2010 from 5:30–8:30 pm
  • Audience:  CEO, CFO, CIO and other C-suite executives

 

Recent IBM studies show that CEOs view technology as a game changer for the future of their businesses; whereas CFOs and CIOs don’t share this perspective.  This session will feature CEOs, CFOs and CIOs who will discuss this gap and will offer their thoughts on the future that technology will enable in their businesses in 2011 – and what CIOs can do differently to seize the opportunity to lead the way.

 

Join panelists:

 

  • Marianne Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, Omgeo
  • Jim Metzger, Chief Financial Officer and Senior Vice President, Finance & Administration, TM Forum
  • Lou Trebino, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, The Harry Fox Agency

 

This exclusive session will also feature other leading CIOs and academics that will lead round table discussions that will focus on the perception of technology in organizations and the role that CIOs can take to enable and drive business growth.

 

Given the unique value that this conversation will provide, we encourage you to invite one or more of your executive team peers to join you at this special event.

 

Agenda

 

5:30 pm

Networking over cocktails and hors d’oeuvres

6:15 pm

Panel Discussion: C-Suite Perspectives: What’s Working, What’s Not—Communicating the Value of Technology

7:00 pm

Breakout Discussions: Advancing the C-Suite Technology Conversation in Your Organization

7:45 pm

Closing Thoughts & Takeaways

8:00 pm

Networking over cordials, coffee / tea and dessert

8:30 pm

Adjourn

Date: Thursday, October 21, 2010
Location:

Hotel Plaza Athenee, Le Trianon

37 East 64th Street (between Madison & Park)

New York, NY 10065-7003

(212) 734-9100

Event registration:There is no fee for this event

 

For more information on the event, please send us an email.

 


 

Information for Out of Town Participants

 

We have arranged with the Hotel Plaza Athenee to provide our attendees a special room rate of $375 + tax for the night of our event.  If you wish to secure a room, please call (212) 734-9100 between 8:00 AM and 7:00 PM Eastern time and ask for Reservations.  Be sure to indicate that you are attending the "Center for CIO Leadership Salon" on July 27th in order to qualify for the special rate.  This rate is available for advance reservations only and while supply lasts.  Please note that you will be responsible for all charges.  Alternatively, you can follow your organization's travel policy to make your own arrangements.

0

The Center for CIO Leadership is pleased to offer a free Salon, “Increasing the Value of Technology in the C-Suite: Challenge and Opportunity.” An event in New York City taking place on Thursday, October 21 at 5:30 PM.

 

This Salon will feature an interactive panel comprised of C-Suite executives who will share their perspectives on current challenges and opportunities, and underscore the imperative for CIOs, as members of the executive team, to have significant impact on their business.  Our panelists include:

 

  • Marianne Brown, President and Chief Executive Officer, Omgeo
  • Jim Metzger, Chief Financial Officer and Senior Vice President, Finance & Administration, TM Forum
  • Lou Trebino, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, The Harry Fox Agency

 

The panel session will be followed by breakout discussions on how to integrate these important insights into your own organization, and on how to increase your impact as a member of the executive team.

 

This peer-to-peer conversation will focus on what C-Suite executives expect from their CIOs to drive business growth and effectively communicate the value of technology.  Panelists will address the challenge of how CIOs can secure a key role in leading the business.  Given the unique value that this conversation will provide, we encourage you to invite one or more of your executive team peers to join you at this special event.

 

Below is the agenda as well as key logistics for the event.

 

Agenda

 

5:30 pm

Networking over cocktails and hors d’oeuvres

6:15 pm

Panel Discussion: C-Suite Perspectives: What’s Working, What’s Not—Communicating the Value of Technology

7:00 pm

Breakout Discussions: Advancing the C-Suite Technology Conversation in Your Organization

7:45 pm

Closing Thoughts & Takeaways

8:00 pm

Networking over cordials, coffee / tea and dessert

8:30 pm

Adjourn

Date: Thursday, October 21, 2010
Location:

Hotel Plaza Athenee, Le Trianon

37 East 64th Street (between Madison & Park)

New York, NY 10065-7003

(212) 734-9100

Event registration:There is no fee for this event

 

For more information on the event, please send us an email.

 


 

Information for Out of Town Participants

 

We have arranged with the Hotel Plaza Athenee to provide our attendees a special room rate of $375 + tax for the night of our event.  If you wish to secure a room, please call (212) 734-9100 between 8:00 AM and 7:00 PM Eastern time and ask for Reservations.  Be sure to indicate that you are attending the "Center for CIO Leadership Salon" on July 27th in order to qualify for the special rate.  This rate is available for advance reservations only and while supply lasts.  Please note that you will be responsible for all charges.  Alternatively, you can follow your organization's travel policy to make your own arrangements.

 


 

This post was edited 8/3/10.