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In 2008, I wrote an article for Computerworld describing these ten qualities of a great IT shop based on my observations during my 40 years in IT. Here is the link to the entire article Top 10 qualities of a great IT shop. My idea was to try to list the 10 items that need to be present in a great IT shop to help a person analyze a company where they were thinking about taking a job or for consultative analysis. Here is my top ten list:

 

  1. IT Reports to the CEO (or COO)
  2. An IT Steering Committee determines the company automation agenda
  3. IT participates in the long-term planning process
  4. IT uses an system development life cycle (SDLC) for project management
  5. IT uses up-to-date hardware and software
  6. IT has a commitment to IT training
  7. IT has technical and management career paths
  8. IT has a defined business continuity program that is regularly tested
  9. IT has a high visibility system security function
  10. IT regularly uses metrics and status reports to show performance

 

It seems to me that each company manages IT in its own way and there is no universal consensus. This is not true for other organizational roles. For example, most if not all, CFOs report to the CEO, while CIOs may report to the CEO but just as frequently report to the CFO or some other C-level executive. I believe there’s value in coming together as a group of CIOs to evolve my list to create a universal top ten list of best practices for all IT shops.

 

While I initially wrote the list as a way to help ITers evaluate a company that they were thinking of joining, I realized that it could also be used to critique one’s own operation.

 

I recently was asked to put on a seminar at a firm in California discussing these ten qualities. It was very productive and at the end of the presentation, the team discussed how to implement the ideas in their IT department. There was consensus that these ten qualities would greatly solve many of the issues facing the department.

 

My challenge to you is to think about my list and let me know what you think about each item and what should be added, deleted or changed, and how it has evolved since 2008. Maybe you don’t agree with me on any items.

 

What is on your top ten list?

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One of the strongest messages I hear from my fellow CIOs – especially those in the US and Europe – is the all-consuming focus on cutting costs. The mindset is to optimize growth in order to overcome cost increases, while at the same time looking for ways to reduce the workforce.

 

In Asia – where I am based as a regional CIO in a multi-national company headquartered in Germany—businesses have a different view about resources and investing. This presents some interesting opportunities and challenges to my role, and I am curious how other Center members in a similar position approach this.

 

In Asia, the mindset is to lead today for business that comes in the next year or two. We are innovating for two years from now, rather than looking to cut costs today. The appetite is to take more risk today, to make sure we are looking ahead. In the case of building an innovative technology team to support this forward-looking focus, we are always looking at what can we do to find the qualified people that we will really need in one to two years. As a CIO in this region, if I am to continue to provide both the vision and execution on innovation to drive the future business, I have to participate in this active recruitment and acquisition of talent in advance of current need.

 

My challenge is – how do I convince my European-based headquarters to understand this perspective? How do I make the case to an executive team focused on cutting costs that competing in the Asia region requires a different approach to investing in resources? How do I construct a view into the longer term returns of laying the path to innovation? The response I get is “show me the business case” and this is a challenge in the context of risk-reward mindsets that have significant regional differences.

 

Here is the way I have approached this. I would be very interested to hear other experiences and ideas.

 

  • One of the challenges in getting global buy in for investment in the regions is to get alignment across the enterprise on what we mean by “internationalization of IT” and what it means to operate as an international company. The vision and needs of one region may be very different from the others, and we need to set priorities that balance the regional needs with the global strategy and vision for growth of the company.
  • At a recent international meeting of the IT services organization and the regions, I posed this question to the group. We had a useful conversation on how to approach communicating the needs of the international regions, and mapping an approach to manage regional vs global prioritizations for both investments, as well as defining expectations on returns based on what is growing, and how they deliver to the global strategy. We need to continue to push this common understanding to ensure our IT investment strategy ties to our goals as well as our outcomes.
  • In terms of trying to make the case from my own regional perspective, I start by taking the overall strategy and goals for where growth will come from within the enterprise and break it down to show how, where and when you need to invest in IT resources to make the growth strategy happen. I consider the whole enterprise when I develop this map, because we can often use the strength of the global nature of the business to fulfill the needs, making the acquisition of new resources more targeted and strategic. It may not be a linear solution. Sometimes it requires we bring new people in to a particular region to have them in place, but often I can show how others within the existing global organization can be re-deployed and work by taking advantage of the time zones to achieve the goals. Showing how you can maximize the global organization helps to make the case for selected new investments within the region. And even with shorter term investments and projects, linking the resources to the enterprise goals helps bring buy in and alignment.
  • As a final note, one of the areas where I do not have trouble getting investment buy-in is in the area of security and compliance. This done at the Group level and thanks in large part to the many high profile news stories of the cost and impact of security breaches, the Board and the Group leadership have a very keen awareness of why we have to invest in to protect the company. This is a case where I benefit from the enterprise perspective.

 

How does my approach and my experience resonate? What other experiences do members have that might help CIOs in my position?

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Harvey Koeppel and the Center for CIO Leadership were the hosts for the Virtual Roundtable, which focused on the ongoing education of CIOs, by providing real life examples from industry leaders from all facets of the industry.  Today’s session - Next Generation IT Governance continued to prove that Harvey has the right pulse on the industry and ongoing CIO needs. There were several key take-aways that surfaced from the conversation.

 

Leaders from Cranfield and Yale Universities led the group in a discussion regarding the need for IT Governance and in how to structure decision-making and create accountability when forging down the IT Governance path.  Having transparency and a framework for effective communications, aids in changing the organization’s behaviors that are necessary to implement successful IT Governance programs.  Another facet of the model is the need for companies to co-exist in a collaborative environment and to have a set of metrics and scorecards to promote the current state of the organization.

 

The speakers and participants shared their perspectives on this very important topic. How are you looking to evolve IT Governance and enable your businesses to succeed and thrive in this-hyper competitive environment?

 

Sue Bergamo

CIO

BTE Consulting

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Paul M. Ingevaldson

Former Sr. V.P. International and Technology, Ace Hardware Corp. (Retired)

U.S.A.

 

In my last position at Ace Hardware, I was responsible for all IT operations at Ace. In addition, I had responsibility for Ace’s international business with stores in over 70 countries. I previously worked at Sears and was in IT for over 40 years upon my retirement.

 

Top three CIO priorities for 2012

 

I believe that world events will have more effect on the IT department’s priorities in 2012 than any time in recent history. The major events I’m referring to are:

 

  1. The perceived recovery of worldwide financial markets
  2. The U.S. Presidential elections
  3. A major cyber warfare attack

 

Let me discuss these developments one-by one. I believe that there will develop a consensus by mid-2012 that the worst is over and that there will be growth again in the major western economies. Once this belief begins to pervade the mindsets of corporate boards, there will be lengthy discussions on how to maximize competitive advantage and begin to utilize the hoards of cash that is sitting on balance sheets.

 

These growth decisions will put great pressure on IT budgets since most CIOs have been cutting costs and downsizing during the last several years. As usual, companies will have no sympathy for the plight of an understaffed IT department and will expect IT to react quickly to the demands of the business. Once again, IT’s ability to move quickly will be challenged.

 

This will likely result in more outsourcing, cloud solutions and ERP solutions. There will be little time to evaluate long-term impacts. Instead, the cry will be to implement as fast as possible for the good of the corporation.

 

I believe this trend will also spawn a dramatic increase in mergers and acquisitions. This will have an even greater impact on IT resources since IT is usually brought into the picture too late and after the timeline has been negotiated. These actions tend to cause the development agenda to be put on hold and field expedient solutions which are favored just to get the work done.

 

The second major trend will be the U.S. elections. Again, if businesses begin to feel that a more business-friendly administration will win and taxes may be reduced, the power of the U.S. markets will be unleashed. This will have an equal if not greater effect on IT than was mentioned above.  Combine an improving financial environment and a business-friendly Washington, D.C., we would have the beginnings of a renaissance in IT development and great pressures on IT departments to deliver innovative solutions to move their companies forward.

 

The third trend that will impact IT in 2012 will be outside cyber attacks. Over the past several years, we have seen a rising escalation in these incursions. So far, none have had lasting effects on countries and companies although I’m sure some attacks have not been reported due to public image concerns. On an international scale, the attack by Stuxnet on the Iranian centrifuges is a case in point. The Economist magazine had a cover story about cyber warfare in its July 3rd 2010 issue. The U.S. now has a cyber command established in 2009 and commanded by a four star general.

 

I believe that there will be a major attack somewhere in the world in 2012 and this will result in placing even more attention on IT by corporate boards and management to assure protection from similar attacks. This will put pressure on CIO’s to learn more about the subject, enhance internal security measures and prepare action plans should the worst occur. It will become clear to business that this is a major vulnerability that could put their company’s very existence at risk.

 

Therefore, I think that it is necessary for CIO’s in 2012 to become more politically savvy and more internationally savvy in order to anticipate the development of these trends.  In addition, CIO’s should be thinking today of how to protect their firms from attack and at the same time figure out how to grow in the post-recession economy. As usual, the CIO role is ever-changing, demanding new and different skills as the world adapts to growing technology dependence.

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On October 19th the Center for CIO Leadership had a very interesting panel discussion entitled “Next Generation IT Governance.” I was interested in the discussion since I teach this topic each semester in an IT Management MBA class at a local university. I believe that the speakers did an excellent job discussing this subject which is an essential element of any successful IT organization. However, I did not think that it raised many ideas that I haven’t already heard, discussed, and debated.

 

Professor Peppard shared many of my own thoughts about how a governance system in IT should work. He feels it must involve top management, it must be integrated across the entire organization to maximize strategic impact and it must take its place within the organization right next to the financial, structural, performance and regulatory governance protocols that exist, both formally or informally, in all companies. Having structured IT governance is the only way to achieve alignment to corporate strategy – which is still an illusive goal in many IT shops.

 

Len Peters of Yale also presented a typical governance model involving all aspects of a complex university IT environment. However, I disagreed with his opinion about the role of senior management in the process. I feel that it is imperative to involve the corporation’s top officers in the IT governance process to guarantee that the limited IT resource be used in a manner that is most in-sync with the corporation’s objectives. I sometimes feel that some IT leaders do not believe that the top echelon should be involved with major IT decisions. I feel that is one of their most important responsibilities since the IT agenda is a most critical component to the success of the organization.

 

I would recommend that all CIO members listen to the audio replay of the session and make your own decision. The creation of an effective IT governance environment is one of the most important responsibilities of the CIO. Every IT organization has a governance approach. The only question is whether of not it is managed by the CIO.

 

Do you believe all top officers should be involved in IT governance or should only IT leaders be involved in decision-making?

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Arun Gupta, Customer Care Associate & Group Chief Technology Officer, Shoppers Stop Limited, India

 

You can read more about Arun on his blog Oh I See ! (CIO Inverted)

 

The Center for CIO Leadership has requested CIO members and other industry experts to answer three questions regarding predictions for the CIO in 2012. Here's my approach to answering thse questions.

 

Like the sun goes down in the west every day, the earth goes round the sun, people make New Year resolutions and the IT industry makes predictions for the coming year. These lists offer hot technologies, CIO priorities, business priorities, technologies that will not last the year, ad infinitum. So what kind of list am I going to create ?

 

Every CIO already knows his/her current priorities, for the next year, and over the next 3 years (broadly) that fits in somewhere in the organization long-term strategy. These are dependent on many factors, some are (though not limited to) industry, size of the organization, geopolitical situation, global market dynamics, consumer sentiment, organization dynamics, profitability of the company … The broad collation of priorities through research conducted is generic enough to statistically fit over 80% of the CIOs globally and is available free or paid depending on whose list it is. So I will not pursue this line.

 

Different matrixes once again based on widespread research and opinions will tout waves, quadrants, hype curves, scatter charts, bubble charts and so on about disruptive technologies that would matter in the future. Stay with the bleeding edge or lose competitive advantage is the mantra. Some remain emerging technologies for decades like a solution searching for a problem to solve, while many remain niche or never get out of the lab to be adopted in mainstream business. I do not believe I understand enough about these esoteric technologies to offer predictions.

 

Having been a CIO or equivalent for more than decade and half across 7 different industries, I think I do understand the CIO travails and tribulations. To me every industry brought new opportunities for learning as well as new paradigms on how existing or new technology can be used. Every slowdown or black swan provided a platform to introspect on successes and lack of some. The next decade and half will bring disruptions unimaginable today. So here is my list for 2012 and beyond; can’t predict that all of these will be applicable to everyone, but statistically over the year you will find some connect.

 

  1. CIOs globally will continue to be challenged on operating budgets. Capital investments will become relatively easier; operating expenses will need to be controlled very tightly.
  2. BITA (Business IT Alignment) will fall off the priority list for many as it will no longer be an issue. Business will acknowledge IT contribution and will work with IT to plan business goals. There will be no separate IT goals.
  3. Attrition will not be the problem, retention will be; with economic and political uncertainty, staff will hang on to their respective jobs. CIOs will have to take some hard decisions.
  4. Clouds will be the first choice for deploying apps for the mobile workforce. The rest will continue to access applications behind the firewall. Hybrid clouds will remain experimental as CIOs figure out that it really does not save money. CIOs will no longer build data centers.
  5. Lead by Consumerization, mobile devices will be out of IT control (for good) and the personal device will find a way to get inside; resisting CIOs will have to provide equivalent additional device, which eventually the Business will turn down. Managing multiple screens will become a pain for the Executive who will challenge IT to make it simpler. The phone as a corporate device will thus be replaced by the tablet over the next 2 years.
  6. CIOs will or be forced to challenge the cost of sustaining big ERP (licenses, support, etc.) as it keeps growing; alternate support vendors will gain market share. Usage will shift out from the office to using marketplace supplied micro-apps thereby challenging the existence of big ERP in 5 years.
  7. Social media fatigue will set in and even marketing teams will be asked to create ROI for expenses and investments on such initiatives. CIOs will need to manage expectations around social analytics while Consultants will thrive with maturity models and make loads of money.
  8. The CIO will continue to be tasked with managing information security with the CISO reporting into him/her. A few cloud bursts (cloud security breaches) will make matters worse before things settle down over 2013 and beyond.
  9. Big Data will remain high on hype with vendors pushing and CIOs scratching their heads if it really gives the benefits promised.
  10. Custom development of solutions will wane with ocean of micro-apps promising to enable business processes as effectively. At the same time appliances will replace generic hardware.
  11. Many CIOs and research analysts will not agree many with the above points.

 

I could have gone on and on but will stop now. I thought 11 is good for now; why 11 and not 10 ? According to Hindu scriptures it is an auspicious number and if you don’t believe in such things, then I would ask why 10 ? I know Moses had something to do with it !

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Carlos Francavilla, Director, BITCompany, Argentina.

 

Business & Technology Advisor, more than 25 years of working with IT to enable business transformations.

 

The Center for CIO Leadership has requested CIO members and other industry experts to answer three questions regarding predictions for the CIO in 2012.  Here are my answers to these three questions.

 

What are your predictions for the top 3 CIO priorities for 2012?

 

  1. Using IT to attract and retain customers.
    Innovation and transformation of existing and new products will be used to satisfy the very fast change in the behavior of customers who are becoming more IT savvy, global, and connected – any time, any place, and with any gadget.
    The CIO will need to combine their knowledge of the entire value chain and processes of the company with the unique awareness of technology's capabilities to push the company beyond merely what is has been and toward what it must become.
    What does this mean?  IT is not aligning with the Business; IT is part of the Business.
    Do you present budget proposals for IT, or budget proposals for growth and innovation and bigger customer engagement enabled by IT?
  2. Technology Diversity.
    The old days of a central IT Organization dictating and imposing which Technology is the right to use is gone forever.
    Consumerism of IT will become a reality and the IT Organization needs to be flexible and support any device that the market is producing, and that the people in the organization will choose to buy and bring to the enterprise.
    This process starts at the Board and includes all the people in the organization.  Today which technologies to use is becoming a business and a personal decision, IT must transform itself to be an “advisor” to people in the organization about the capabilities and the risk of the technology diversity and prepare the IT operations to understand this new reality and support it.
  3. People Skills.
    The central IT unit with a focus in Technology is leaving room for an IT Organization with more people closer to the rest of the company and the CUSTOMERS.
    Do you have the right people for this this job?  Do you have an IT Organization with a lot of certifications in any international standard or framework for IT that are in the market? Would you be proud of the culture of the IT Organization?
    Prepare the IT people to be an “Advisor” and work head to head with all the other departments in the company.  Think for a moment, with which Business Unit do you work more closely, today?  Operations?  Marketing?  Finance?  You guessed it; Operations will be the answer in more than 60% of the IT Departments!
    Your Department needs new skills far beyond the comfort zone of the IT people, prepare for this transition, embrace the challenge and be proud of your people. 

 

How will 2012 be different from 2011 for CIOs and IT?

 

The convergence of the Internet, Web 2.0, and mobile technologies has created a disruptive shift in business.  The era of Business-to-Person (B2P) communications driven by all social (social media, social networks, and social influence) things has emerged as a new model for engagement.

 

In today’s global environment;

 

  • One billion people connected to Internet
  • Four billion have mobile phones with data capable smart phones now providing over 50% of new phone sales
  • More than four hundred million people are sharing billions of pieces of content and experiences each week via online exchanges

 

Social Media have changed the way we do business (customers, partners, prospects, and employees).  We use social media as a platform for discussion of ideas, experiences, and knowledge-exchange. A s we enter the era of business-to-person (B2P) customer relationship systems, those organizations that harness Web 2.0 technologies and platforms to enable B2P communications will be the winners.

 

As a CIO and leader of an IT Department, are you embracing this disruptive shift?  Are you sharing with your colleagues what you know most, technology capabilities and how to use them in this new Social Media World?

 

2012 will differ from 2011 in a way that if we as a CIO couldn’t move the Company fast enough in that direction, others will be doing it.

 

Come on, tweet now with the CMO and other CxO colleagues and start working together to transform the company processes to this Business to Person communication.

 

Your Board and CEO will be glad to approve your investments when you walk together to the corner office and talk about this transformation.

 

What business shifts are you expecting in 2012?

 

Uncertainty will be the word of 2012 and the CEO and Managers will be looking for ways to defend the company against this threat and/or taking advantage of this world in recession.

 

Are you applying IT to enable the business so that you and your colleagues find the answers?

 

Are you helping the company to choose the right strategy?

 

According to Mckinsey, are you thinking about your decisions being better for a company’s competitive position, trying to influence, or even determine, the outcome of crucial and currently uncertain elements of an industry’s structure and its conduct?  Or is a wiser course to scope out defensible positions within an industry’s existing structure and then to move with speed and agility to recognize and capture new opportunities when the market changes?

 

IT can enable companies to change the structure of entire industries and/or gain speed and agility to companies.  Are you ready for these business shifts?

 

Are you enabling that your company play and win in the Champions League of your Industry?

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As part of its Centennial celebrations, IBM held a conference in New York in September - THINK: A Forum on the Future of Leadership.  The two day THINK Forum brought together leaders from government, business and academia to discuss the future of leadership from a number of angles, including the changing nature of the corporation, the importance of systems thinking, leading in times of deep structural changes and bringing science to leadership.

 

After the Forum, I spent some time reflecting on what I had heard in the various talks and panels.  Lots of different opinions and points of views were expressed.  But, I believe that an overriding message kept coming through loud and clear: to make progress in addressing the very complex problems that we all face, we must leverage the power of rational thinking.

 

Several speakers pointed out that the world is no longer just connected via the Internet, as we have been saying for the past fifteen years.  It is now becoming hyperconnected, given the proliferation of smart mobile devices and sensors all around us.  In such a hyperconnected world, changes now propagate and build on each other faster than ever, rendering just about all private and public institutions increasingly unpredictable and harder to manage.

 

But, a number of speakers also pointed out that our ability to understand the world around us is directly related to the tools at our disposal.  And, we now have an array of highly sophisticated tools that, when properly used, can help us make sense of all that complexity.  In particular, just like centuries ago telescopes enabled us to peer into the sky and better understand the universe and our role in it, information has now become a similar such tool, enabling us to now peer into our highly complex world and help us understand what is going on.

 

What do we mean by rational thinking? Gathering and analyzing information to understand what is going on.  Conducting experiments to see what works and what does not.  Developing models of our ideas and building simulations to see how they might work under different assumptions about the future.  And, getting a good handle on the limits of such rational thinking approaches, - when they work, and when they do not.

 

The importance of information-based evidence, experimentation and learning was a recurring theme in many of the talks.  But, in particular, it was the direct focus of the session on Bringing Science to Leadership, a provocative juxtaposition of two major disciplines not usually associated with each other.

 

One of the panelists in this session was IBM Fellow David Ferrucci, principal investigator of Watson, IBM’s Question Answering system that earlier this year won the Jeopardy! Challenge against the two best human Jeopardy! players. 

 

Ferrucci compared the computational patterns in Watson with leadership in a complex, uncertain world.  He said that when you solve problems with Watson, there isn’t a single solution, there isn’t one way of attacking the problem.  Rather, you have many alternatives and you are not sure which will work because you are operating in such an uncertain space.  Watson uses a statistical approach, pursuing these alternatives in parallel, assigning to each a confidence factor and then selecting the answer most likely to be right, if there is indeed such an answer with a relatively high confidence factor.

 

Leaders generally face this kind of environment when they are called upon to make tough decisions.  They don’t have exact information, they have lots of uncertain inputs, many experts weigh in, each often taking a different perspective.  Leaders are then challenged to look at that broad space of alternatives, break down their initial biases that come from their narrower experiences, combine and balance the huge reservoir of inputs at their disposal, evaluate the most promising alternatives amids all that uncertainty, and finally decide how to proceed.

 

Another panelist, MIT professor Tom Malone, talked about the research that he and his collaborators are conducting on  collective intelligence.  In their work, they are trying to understand if there is such a thing as a general cognitive ability for groups, and if there is, whether you can you measure it like you do with individual IQs.  They studied a number of groups, and found that there is indeed such a cognitive ability for groups which they call collective intelligence.  This means that just like with IQ measures for individuals, there are statistical ways of predicting how well groups will perform on a wide range of tasks. 

 

They discovered that collective intelligence is only weakly correlated with the average and maximum intelligence of the individual members of the group.  Rather, they found that a higher collective intelligence is primarily based on three key factors: the group members’ ability to read each other’s expressions; the evenness of participation, that is, how well all the group members are engaged in the deliberations as opposed to one individual dominating the conversation; and the proportion of women in the group, which might be a corollary of the previous two factors.  In this recent article on his research, Professor Malone said:

 

“Intuitively, we still attribute too much to individuals and not enough to groups.  Part of that may just be that it’s simpler; it’s simpler to say the success of a company depended on the CEO for good or bad, but in reality the success of a company depends on a whole lot more.  Essentially what’s happening as our society becomes more advanced and more developed is that more things are done by groups of people than by individuals.  In a certain sense, our intuitions about how that works haven’t caught up with the reality of modern life.”

 

The third member of the panel was Harold Schmitz, Chief Science Officer of Mars, Inc, the makers of M&Ms, Milky Ways, Snickers and other well known chocolate products.  Schmitz said that in the 1980s, a fungal disease wiped up the whole cocoa crop in Brazil, where cocoa was first discovered.  Since little research had been done on the cocoa crop, people did not know the reasons for the disease and how to prevent it in the future.  That left the whole cocoa ecosystem vulnerable to some catastrophic future disease that could affect the whole crop around the world, including millions of farmers in the equatorial regions where the crop grows, as well as companies like Mars.

 

In 2007 Mars decided to sequence the genome of the cocoa tree in order to develop the fundamental platform for conducting research and better understanding the nature of the crop.  It formed a partnership with IBM, the US Department of Agriculture and other institutions.  In September of 2010, Mars and its partners released their preliminary findings and made it available in the public domain so everyone could now conduct the necessary research.

 

Schmitz said he learned three key leadership lessons from this collaboration.  First, we are dealing with an unprecedented scale of complexity.  Second, we have to deliver breakthrough insights and solutions so researchers have something concrete to build on.  And finally, we all have a duty to bring an ethical view to solving such complex and important problems, which Mars and their partners did by putting the results of their cocoa research in the public domain.

 

The Bringing Science to Leadership panel was moderated by Joi Ito, a well known technology entrepreneur who was recently appoint Director of MIT’s Media Lab.  In this blog written for the THINK Forum, Ito observes that the explosion of ideas and low cost of collaboration all around us, is prompting a great deal of innovation, “but also a complexity, speed and capacity for amplification that makes the world a difficult and dangerous place for many organizations and human-made systems designed for a slower and simpler era.”

 

“The cost of planning, predicting and managing rapidly changing, complex systems often exceeds the cost of actually doing whatever is being planned and managed.  In fact, it can be often easier to try something and iterate than to try to predict the outcome and manage the risks.  Most great ideas as well as dramatic failures have been unpredictable and are only obvious in hindsight.  (Don’t get me wrong: foreknowledge and planning are useful and, often, necessary; they’re just not sufficient.)”

 

“In such a world, leadership hinges on the ability to master a broad set of skills and character traits necessary for fostering a robust system, including courage, flexibility, speed, values and a strong vision and trajectory.  It’s more important to have a strong compass than a detailed street map since the map is probably outdated and wrong.”

 

In his remarks to the THINK Forum audience, IBM Chairman and CEO Sam Palmisano's framed the keys to be a successful leader in the 21st Century:

 

“The first key is to take advantage of the powerful new capabilities we have available.  Seizing upon an instrumented, interconnected and intelligent world enables any organization to take waste out ... to give customers and communities what they want ... to organize work differently.”

 

“The second key is to see yourself not only as a fierce competitor, but also as a broad collaborator.  Don't get me wrong: Competition is essential as a spur to innovation.  But in a world of increasingly interdependent systems ... the Wild West of competition needs to be complemented and tempered by far more collaboration across old boundaries.  Across academic disciplines ... and industries ... and nations ... and even among competitors.”

 

“The importance of collaboration applies very much to individual leadership styles.  The old model of the heroic superman is increasingly archaic.  The most active and successful leaders today see themselves as part of global communities and peer groups.  They listen as much as they speak.  They are hungry to learn from other people, from colleagues and communities ... even people they will never meet in person.”

 

“Finally, you need to manage for the long term.  This is something we've thought about a lot at IBM — especially as we approached our centennial.  We've asked ourselves: What is it that enables an enterprise or institution to survive and thrive through decades, much less a century?”

 

“You need to confront difficult questions, such as: How does an organization outlive its founder? . . . How does an organization deal with the inherent tensions among its constituents? . . . How does the organization respond to relentless commoditization? This is an acute issue for the tech industry - but it actually applies in any field, from commerce to public services.”

 

“But it's not just about what you create.  It's also about what you leave behind.  History is a bone pile of enterprises, cities and societies that had great first acts, but were unable to achieve a second.  Why? In most cases, it is because they couldn't break their emotional attachment to what had brought them success in the past.”

 

Leverage analytical thinking and tools, embrace collaboration to address highly complex problems, and have a strategic vision to serve as a compass into the future.  These were the recurring themes that we heard throughout, and that made the Think Forum such a great celebration of leadership and rational thinking.

 


 

This post was originally published on my blog, Irving Wladawsky-Berger: A collection of observations, news and resources on the changing nature of innovation, technology, leadership, and other subjects.

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As a CIO, there are a lot of things that can cause insomnia even among the best of us. It could be that new application that went in with a minimum of testing due to pressure from the boss or the user. Or it could be that major vendor that just raised the support fees for their software and totally blew the support budget.  Or it could be the loss of a key person who just left the company and went to work for a competitor. Or it may be the soft sales that are going to put pressure on the overall IT budget.

 

However, these are minor inconveniences compared to the one issue that kept me awake at night and that was business continuity interruption due to a disaster in the IT department. It could be a fire or a flood or a hurricane or a tornado or some other act of God. However, the most likely cause in today’s age is some kind of intrusion from a person or organization bent on doing damage to the company’s systems and thus the company.

 

The potential affects on the company can be devastating. Just imagine if the employees can’t use their computers due to an outside intrusion that has prevented access to our systems. Or it could be that sensitive customer data has been compromised. Or competitive information has been pirated. What would happen to your company if you could not process orders from customers, you could not pay your bills or you could not order inventory. And remember, everyone in the company would be looking at you, the CIO, to explain the problem and tell when a solution would be found.

 

In addition, if you work for a publicly held company, the disclosure of a business interruption can have a major impact on your stock price. This then broadens the people searching for answers to Wall Street analysts, the company’s Board and the company’s shareholders. There is no doubt that this is the stuff of nightmares.

 

So what should you do. I would recommend that you, the CIO, become a lot more engaged in the security side of the business. Many CIO’s are not up-to-date with this area since it is relatively new and not generally part of the background of CIO’s today. The usual approach is to be aware that there is a security department in IT and that it is understood by the management structure that oversees this function. It usually only gets your attention when something goes wrong.  I would argue that this is not enough due to the potential danger to the company, the department and the CIO.

 

I would recommend that you set up a regular meeting with your security staff to discuss some of the issues that are before them. The first major effect of this move is to tell the security professionals and your whole department that you consider this area to be very important. It will also give the security professionals a bit of status in your organization. Oftentimes they are mired in the depths of the department and seldom get any feeling that you think that they are doing a very critical job.

 

 

I would also consider raising the visibility of the security staff by having them reporting higher in the organization chart. Many large companies already have a VP of systems security.  I would also suggest that you spend some time trying to understand this new area of IT through seminars or reading. I would also recommend a dry run on a regular basis to be sure everyone knows their responsibilities should the worst occur.

 

I think it is very important that every CIO realize that this area is critical to your company’s future and it must become part of your lexicon and part of your responsibility. By doing this, you will understand the risks and feel better prepared to deal with them. This is the only way that security concerns will not keep you awake at night. Pleasant dreams.

9

I know this topic will be controversial and there will be a lot of CIO's who disagree.  However, just hear me out.  I realize that there are some companies that demand chargeout from their central CIO function.  One good example would be the diversified conglomerate who conducts many different businesses and each one has a complete and separate  P&L and they live or die based on bottom line results.  I would also include functions within a company that are completely discrete from other company functions such that they share very little centralized company functions.

 

I would argue that in most other cases, charging out IT costs make very little sense.  It would be no different than charging out the services of the central finance department.  I guess I would concede that if finance is charged out than it would be ok to charge out IT.

Here are my reasons for not charging out IT:

 

1.  It creates the image that IT is not part of the company strategy but rather a utility that can be contracted for by any department.  I believe that the IT resource needs to be tied directly to the strategic aims of the corporation.  It should not be tied to the whim of a department head.

 

2.  Most companies decide to chargeout because central management does not want to be in a position to decide what should be automated.  I would argue that that is the job of top management.  With IT costing from 2% to 10% of revenue, it must be managed.  This is the role of the IT steering committee. If a steering committee composed of the officers of a company manage the automation agenda, then there is no need to chargeout.

 

3.  Another reason to chargeout is to fully burden a particular department so that their expense line represents their actual cost.  This approach is very dangerous in a innovative environment where a new idea could have great potential but cannot get traction due to the great startup expense.  If each department must stand on its own, innovation could be stifled.  Again, management could control this situation.  However budget scrutiny oftentimes causes such ventures to be minimized.

 

4.  In a non-chargeout environment with a strong steering committee,  each project being proposed is measured against the strategic plan of the company and is discussed with a company view not a departmental view.  In this environment, I would argue that scarce IT resources are better utilized.

 

5.  In a chargeout environment,  all expenses must be carefully recorded so that precise charges per user can be determined.  In addition, some measure of usage must be developed to assess proper overhead expense.  As a result of this rather subjective process, each department gets assessed  a charge each month that can change based on many arcane factors within the IT department such as vendor cost increases, unanticipated maintenance costs, outages, etc.  As a result, there are oftentimes discussions with users each month when the charge is finalized especially if the charge will affect the departmental incentives.  These are difficult discussions with our users that we are trying to serve and prove the value of IT.  All in all, a very contentious environment.

 

6.  Since each department stands on its own, they can decide to keep the internal department honest and get an outside quote and compare the internal quote to the outside one.  This process can easily lead to rogue applications since outside vendors can easily reduce overhead expenses in order to get a new client.  This does not happen in a non-chargeout environment since costs are retained in IT.  And guess who users come to when rogue applications go bad: Internal IT!

 

7.  There are certainly downsides to a non-chargeout environment.  The biggest one is for IT.  Since all costs remain in IT, the CIO must defend IT's expenses each year especially when costs are going up.  IT can make the argument that its costs are going up because the steering committee has approved an increase in staff due to a major project commitment.  However, there is oftentimes a collective amnesia to these factors especially in tough times.

 

8.  On the other side, a non-chargeout environment enables management to easily see the total corporate expense for IT.  This expense line must be managed by top management since it is so significant.  IT can operate at any level and it must be controlled by the company to be sure that expenses are in line with corporate needs and capacity.

 

9.  Another downside can be that users in a non-chargeout environment can think IT is free and try to develop frivolous applications.  I would say that a strong IT steering committee composed of the company officers would eliminate that risk since the user officer must defend the project against all other requests.

 

I would love to know what you think.  It would be good to get a dialog going to flesh out this very important governance issue.  I'm sure that there are a lot of CIO's struggling with this decision that could use your wise counsel.

17

It seems like every time I read a computer magazine or peruse a computer blog I am told that there is a new role for the CIO. I read about the new requirement that the CIO must become business savvy or the CIO can no longer be technical or that the CIO must be more aggressive in defining the automation agenda for the company. Others say that the CIO job will soon be obsolete and will be disbursed throughout the corporation. On the pages of the Center for CIO Leadership we read about “The Essential CIO” and CIO 2.0.

 

I really think that a lot of this clamor for the CIO’s to grow up is due to the great difference that we find in CIO’s across the corporate playing field. In large, sophisticated companies the CIO role has been defined as a business role for a long time. In many of these companies the CIO is a true officer of the company and is a member of the executive team and is involved in all aspects of the business. These individuals usually report to the CEO, understand the business of the company and use IT technology to advance the needs of the business.

 

It is important to understand that these people usually do not act as technology czars but rather as consensus builders who help to establish the automation agenda along with their IT Steering Committee. This is the same process that any officer uses to move his/her agenda.  The advertising V.P. usually presents the new advertising program to the executive staff for comment and approval.  The Distribution V.P. seeks consensus from Sales and Marketing for the new D.C. The Sales and Marketing V.P. seeks approval for the new marketing plan. The CFO works with everyone to finalize the annual expense budget. Everyone tries to work together to achieve corporate goals and objectives.

 

In other companies, the CIO is not really an Officer but rather the top technology person. This individual is not a true officer, does not sit at the table, probably doesn’t report to the CEO and has to fight for his/her share of corporate attention. These are the individuals that need to take the next step and become a business leader. The problem could be that this person, because of his/her skill set, will never be able to fill this expanded role. Or it could be that the company CEO and executive staff just doesn’t understand the need for IT to attain this level in the company.

 

The bottom line is that the pundits are right that a more business savvy CIO is necessary in today’s complex corporations. If companies do not have this, then they must let their current IT person rise to this level or they must hire someone who can operate at this level. This is not a new problem. It is something IT has been dealing with for a long time. Please no more “New roles for the CIO.” Lets push for more CEO awareness of how to properly utilize the role we already have.

0

A recently released study demonstrates how the CIO role has continued to evolve and reinforces the strategic role CIOs play within their enterprise. The 2011 CIO Study: the Essential CIO, from our founding sponsor IBM, draws upon interviews of over 3,000 CIO’s from 71 countries and 18 industries worldwide. I have highlighted three areas that I believe are meaningful for our community.

 

CIOs and CEOs  are thinking more alike than ever before...

 

The most compelling finding of the study for me is the significantly increased harmonization of the CIO and CEO agendas.   The study provides tangible evidence that IT is not simply an enabler of the business, but a critical component that drives sustainable and scalable business growth.   Asked where they would focus IT to help their organizations’ strategy in the foreseeable future, CIOs and CEOs shared three top priorities: insight and intelligence, client intimacy and people skills. These areas are a significant part of the raison d'être for the Center for CIO Leadership and you can find our most up to date thinking on skills and competencies throughout our website.  Here are some highlights from the study.

 

CIOs emerging as leaders...

 

Business analytics and intelligence were identified as the most important technologies for CIOs looking to increase the competitiveness of their organization in the next 3-5 years.   As CEOs are increasingly relying on CIOs to turn data into usable information, information into intelligence and intelligence into actionable insights, the role of the CIO has become much more visible throughout the C-Suite.           

 

The CIO Mandates...

 

The study discusses four distinct approaches to IT leadership based on defined characteristics that line up with an organization’s strategies and goals (mandates). Each of the mandates is articulated along with recommendations to help CIOs excel within each area.

 

I invite you to download ”The Essential CIO”, reflect upon how your path as CIO has evolved, and upon what areas you are focused on for the future. I look forward to hearing your thoughts about the study and to continuing our conversation…

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

I read an article today in the Wall Street Journal by Michael Totty titled The View From the CIO's Office: Three chief information officers on the challenges—and opportunities—they face. I found the article, and the CIOs’ insights – to be useful and thought provoking to share with the Center community.

 

The article captures a roundtable discussion with three leading CIOs: Norm Fjeldheim, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer for Qualcomm Inc., a wireless-technology company in San Diego; Filippo Passerini, President of Global Business Services and CIO at Procter & Gamble, Co., a global consumer-products company based in Cincinnati; and Frank Wander, Senior Vice President and CIO at Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America, New York.

 

The article provides excellent insights into the ever-changing role of the CIO from 3 of the most notable IT executives in our industry today. They share some interesting observations for all CIOs and for C-suite executives in general:

 

  • Keeping the lights on and reducing costs is now only table-stakes (necessary but not sufficient) for a high performing IT organization;

 

  • Working with internal and external business partners to provide the right information at the right time based upon a clear understanding of their business needs and objectives is a critical success factor within the new normal - essentially business enabled by IT rather than the other way around;

 

  • Many of the innovative IT programs (we used to call them "discretionary") which are often the first to be cut when the budget gets tight (which is all of the time), can be funded out of the savings generated by driving operating efficiencies;

 

  • Managing the IT change agenda is not about changing IT, but rather it is about enabling business transformation.


It is also clear from these brief snapshots that the organizations in which these CIOs operate really get the strategic importance of what IT -- when properly leveraged -- can deliver in terms of competitive differentiation, market share, revenue, earnings and sustainable business growth.

 

There is definitely a chicken and egg dynamic at work here where the organization needs to be ready, willing and able to embrace the benefits of a well-run technology agenda while the CIO and their IT organization needs to develop the credibility and earn the trust that fosters and continues to nurture that readiness. The CIOs interviewed and their organizations have cracked that code. Now if we could just figure out how to enable more organizations and their CIOs to make better omelets...

 

What challenges and opportunities do you face in your organization? And how do you recommend that we enable more organizations to make better omelets?

4

I am frankly tired of the frequent hand wringing in the IT press about the questionable future of the IT organization and the CIOs who run them. Despite the fact that IT has revolutionized virtually all business activities (name a job in your company that hasn’t been changed by computerization in the last 20 years,) we continue to opine that the CIO is going to be eliminated or the CIO must become more business oriented, or the CIO must become more strategic. Name one C-Level executive that has had more impact on every job within the modern corporation than the modern CIO.

 

We hear stories about how companies have outsourced their entire IT departments. We talk about outsourcing, off-shoring and decentralizing the IT resource. However, we also see articles about the horror stories of some of those IT-outsourced companies and the struggles that they have when the costs go up, the changes become even more bureaucratic and the loss of very knowledgeable people has been devastating.

 

We hear the press and even some CIOs thinking that the future of IT is bleak. Some even discourage young people from pursuing the IT profession. That’s the wrong attitude. There are very few fields that haven’t suffered in the current times. Doctors are leaving their practices due to socialized medicine trends and outrageous insurance claims. Wall Street financiers have been vilified by Washington politicians. Politicians are accused of doing nothing. The insurance business has been ransacked after AIG and Enron. The oil business has been attacked by the public after the Gulf disaster. The press is considered to be biased. Lawyers do not have a great reputation. Businesspeople in general are shown as money grubbing amoral people in many Hollywood movies.  Facebook took a hit in the “Social Network.” Not even teachers are immune due to recent reports of generous retirement packages.

 

I teach a couple of sessions in a local MBA class that focus on IT Management to primarily non-IT students. Each semester I ask the students what they think of their IT department. Invariably I get the following comments:

 

            IT doesn’t get its projects done on time or on budget

            IT doesn’t understand the business

            IT is more loyal to IT than to our business

            IT has their own language - I don’t understand them

            Why does it take them so long to do anything?

            IT lacks a sense of urgency

 

I’ve been in IT for over 40 years and these issues continue to haunt us. Did I mention that over those 40 years, IT has changed almost every job in the modern corporation?  In my view, it is time for the IT community to begin to stand up for the profession. It’s time to point out that we have a major role to play in a corporation’s success. We are not narrowly focused practitioners who don’t know what’s going on in the company or are indifferent to corporate results. If we were really guilty of all of these stereotypes, would we have been able to change every job within the corporation?

 

It’s time for CIOs to take their rightful place in companies and become a powerful force and a reliable counsel in the use of the many emerging technologies that will continue to change the corporate landscape. If even half of the predictions of Ray Kurzweil, the author of  “The Singularity Is Near,” come true, the corporation of today will look as ancient in 20 years as the corporation of 20 years ago looks to us. No smart phones, no data warehouses, no internet, no desktops, nada, nada, nada. How did we even function?  Stay tuned. The pace of change is going to be even faster.

 

So instead of self-flagellating, we should be shouting from the rooftops about the great days that are ahead of us. Who is going to rein in these new technologies if it is not the central IT organization in every modern corporation? We need to work on training our users on how to best use and exploit the IT resource. We need to help our users to understand the new technologies and how they can help their sales and profits. This is a much better role than the paranoia that seems to be gripping many in the IT community.

 

What do you think? Is the central IT department in danger? Is the future of IT bleak?            

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