Career Turning Point: CIOs Can't be Just One of the Guys
- 30 January, 2010 07:57
- Comments
All it took for Michael Whitmer to know that IT was the place he wanted to be was a visit to IBM (IBM) in eighth grade. Surrounded by green-screen terminals and row upon row of tapes, he was hooked. Being fortunate enough in 1978 to attend the only high school in his county to offer computer classes solidified the calling. "It's the immediate satisfaction that you get from technology," he says. "You know when you write a program whether it works or not, and that's a fundamental driving force." Through high school, he pushed and prodded to find opportunities, then majored in computer science in college and found a co-op opportunity with AT&T that enabled him to work in the field while still in school. But having that passion for technology didn't fully prepare him for being a CIO.
As vice president of information services at a large company, Whitmer was second in command at the headquarters for a large project with wide impact, and he and his IT team were working long days to meet aggressive deadlines. In an effort to make life easier any way he could, he encouraged casual dress for every day of the week and adopted it himself. However, his team was in a separate building from the rest of the company, and when Whitmer went across the street to meet with the executives, he didn't think to change clothes. While it was never commented on, when they named a new CIO, it wasn't him.
The lesson Whitmer walked away with isn't groundbreaking, but it is an easy one to overlook or dismiss. Anyone looking to be a CIO needs to weigh the benefits of staff camaraderie against the benefits of projecting authority. "I was trying to be supportive of my team," he says, "but what they really needed--and what I needed to be--was a leader." At the majority of companies, CIOs are not people who can or should act like they're just one of the group, and Whitmer has taken that to heart as he has moved up into the role of global CIO and left the day-to-day IT operations--and casual dress--behind.
Michael Whitmer is global CIO and North American executive VP of operations at Hudson Highland Group.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Monday Grok: Will Siri crack the walls of GOOG?
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Phones are distractions during catch-ups
-
Google's Sidewiki lets people post comments about Web pages
-
CISO Guide to Next Generation Threats - Combating Advanced Malware, Zero-Day and Targeted APT Attacks
Over 95% of businesses unknowingly host compromised endpoints, despite their use of firewalls, intrusion prevention systems (IPS), antivirus and Web gateways.1 Today’s attacks look new and unknown to signature-based tools because the attacks employ advanced malware and zero-day vulnerabilities. To regain the upper hand against next-generation attacks, enterprises must turn to true next-generation protection: signature-less, proactive and real time. Read on. -
A buyer’s guide to application lifecycle management (ALM) solutions
This buyer's guide describes the key criteria for application lifecycle management (ALM) solutions for today's high-performance teams. It includes key considerations for enhancing your single- or multi-vendor ALM environment. -
Print security and the mobile workforce
Where, when, and how we work is changing. Whether your employees are working on the road without a dedicated workstation or from a home office, they need a safe way to print. Driving this shift is the accelerating adoption of smartphones, tablets, and other mobile devices. But even with these devices, printing remains a key business function for virtually all employees, and many may already be using them to print. Read more.
-
Teach Yourself Visually Access 2010
-
Ilor Bible
-
Microsoft Office Excel 2007 International Student Edition (70-602) + Benson/ Information Systems
-
Joy of C
-
Cobol for the 21st Century 11E + Microfocus Netexpress Version 5.0
-
ActionScript 3.0 Bible, Second Edition
-
PC Magazine Windows XP Solutions, Second Edition
-
Computers and People
-
C# Complete








Comments
Post new comment