Advice for CIOs: Beyond the obvious
- 04 November, 2010 03:00
- Comments
Everybody in our industry seems to love giving CIOs advice. How often have you heard those memorable bromides about understanding your business, thinking "more strategically" or connecting with customers?
Like most cliches, there is a core of commonsense truth beneath the obvious and the oversimplified surface. There actually is, as one CIO friend puts it, "a pony under that pile." The most successful CIOs are those who move past operational expertise and establish themselves as business strategists with the rest of the senior executive team.
Yet getting there is a far more complex undertaking than the clichés suggest. How do strategic CIOs really pull it off?
"It's about having the skills to go from aligning with the business to helping accelerate the business," says WellPoint's Executive Vice President of Enterprise Business Services Lori Beer, one of several executives we interviewed for our cover story (" What's Next for the CIO Role"). "We have to focus beyond doing the basics well, beyond streamlining and driving efficiency internally. To me, the next level is about how you help the company grow."
Our story, written by Diane Frank, editorial manager of our CIO Executive Council, lays out the practical details of the experiences of several CIOs who have both advanced their leadership roles and helped their companies grow. The moves they made required some skills that aren't necessarily built into the IT executive career ladder. They learned how to foster collaboration across business units, for example, and how to exert influence throughout the company hierarchy.
Of course, their first order of business was-not surprisingly-ensuring that IT operations ran extremely well. Having that vital tactical piece in place frees up time to devote to IT's strategic focus. "When I think about where I add the most value," says Kelli Crane, senior vice president and CIO of Thomson Reuters, "it's in change leadership and in thinking about where we can do things differently."
Also common ground for these CIOs is the way they think about IT in terms of the business goals it can achieve. They are all especially attentive to demonstrating value with IT that creates new opportunities.
"Put a general manager's hat on," recommends Savino DiPasquale, CIO and vice president of business development for GlaxoSmithKline Canada. "That's probably the best advice I've ever gotten."
Maryfran Johnson is the editor in chief of CIO Magazine & Events. E-mail her at mfjohnson@cio.com.
Read more about cio role in CIO's CIO Role Drilldown.
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
- Rapid achievement of employee productivity gains in a modern workforce
- The mobile print enterprise - How IT consumerisaton is driving anytime, anywhere printing
- Agile: Transforming small-team thinking into big business results
- Why performance management? A guide for the midsize organisation
- Sample: Individual Stand Alone Core Competency Report
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
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
-
Customer Case Study: Yarra Valley Water Turns to Enterprise Software to Improve Information Flow
“We don’t need to wait till month-end for management reports—they’re now available whenever we need them. We have much more efficient management, as everyone across the organization is looking at the same set of figures. Read on. -
A Governance Guide for Hybrid SharePoint Migrations
Cloud-based computing represents a powerful new option for managing enterprise content, offering increased flexibility, efficiency, and reduced cost for IT infrastructure, data storage, and applications. However, for a variety of business and technical reasons, most organisations will take a phased approach to adopting cloud-based services, which will require them to continue to maintain their on-premises SharePoint environments during the transition. This white paper, written by Chris Beckett from SharePoint Bits, discusses some of the benefits and risks of hybrid SharePoint deployments, and presents governance considerations that are essential for ensuring a successful migration. -
Look both ways - Protecting your data with content inspection
Today’s threat environment is as dynamic as the business world in which we operate. As the communications channels we use continue to proliferate and evolve, so too have the vulnerabilities. Finding the right balance between ensuring the security of sensitive data, enabling the free flow of information and making full use of the latest web-based technologies can be a challenge. Deep content inspection is a vital layer in any unified information security strategy, helping organisations to take control over their information assets while proactively protecting against malware and data leakage. Read on.
-
Professional Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Programming
-
Schneier on Security
-
Al Ward's Photoshop Productivity Toolkit
-
HTML Complete, Third Edition
-
Practical Risk Assessment for Project Management
-
Practical Model Management Using Case Tools
-
Creative Suite 4 Bible
-
Professional Iis 7 and ASP.NET Integrated Programming
-
Software Engineering Risk Management








Comments
Post new comment