Four personas of the next-generation CIO
- 03 March, 2011 01:44
- Comments
Three factors have added up to a huge shift in the CIO role during the past five years-and CIOs who ignore these put their careers in peril, says a new report by Constellation Research.
First, consumer technology has out-innovated enterprise technologies, reducing the management influence of the CIO. Second, legacy systems implemented during the Y2K investment rush are hindering system upgrades. Finally, the pace of technology advancements has outpaced the ability to adopt.
CIOs of the future will no longer oversee multimillion dollar IT projects and lead organizational change through technology adoption, says Constellation Research CEO and analyst Ray Wang. Instead, the CIO definition will be broader, demanding that CIOs deliver more business value, profitability and market differentiation.
[For CIO magazine's latest research on the evolving CIO Role, see 2011 State of the CIO: IT Departments Are Fueling Company Growth Through Strategic Technology Investments]
While next-gen CIOs will emerge from traditional technology backgrounds as well as business-leader backgrounds with technology expertise, the report says, current CIOs will need to master four emerging personas in order to compete in the new environment.
CIOs who fail to evolve into these new roles, Wang says, will lose their functions to business teams. "Line of business executives are already starting to play CIO roles in many of the companies we work with," he says.
The new CIO role will balance externally focused activities with internally focused ones, and embody equal parts technology savvy and business savvy. Some CIOs may bring to the table expertise in one persona, but top CIOs will strive to master all four, he says.
[ How CIOs Can Devise a Social Business Strategy]
Here are the four new personas of the new CIO and the skills you need to succeed, according to the report.
1. Chief "Infrastructure" Officer
Many CIOs are already familiar with this persona, according to Wang, and transitioning into it will be easy. These chief infrastructure officers focus on cost reduction, controlling 65 per cent to 70 per cent of the overall budget. Most projects prioritize keeping the lights on and managing legacy systems. These infrastructure officers tend to focus on the technology side and internal-facing activities, according to the report.
Wang says that the chief infrastructure officer persona is becoming a core competency, but less and less attention is being paid to it.
2. Chief "Integration" Officer
Also predicted to be an easy transition, this persona is used to managing just five per cent to 10 per cent of the overall budget and must bring together various business processes, data, systems, legacy systems and newer cloud-based approaches. Chief integration officers tend to focus on both the technology side and internally and externally facing activities.
3. Chief "Intelligence" Officer
Chief intelligence officers manage 10 per cent to 15 per cent of the overall budget and strive to improve business user access to information, the report says. This persona tends to focus on the business side and internally facing activities, and strives to appropriately connect the right data to the right person at the right time on the right interface.
"As many of the infrastructure functions are being outsourced or handled in cloud environments, the persona of the chief intelligence officer is growing into one of the most essential," Wang says.
4. Chief "Innovation" Officer
Investing five per cent to 10 per cent of the overall budget, chief innovation officers must drive innovation on a shoestring, according to the report. This persona typically has a business background and "moves fast, fails fast and moves on."
"The chief innovation officer is probably the toughest persona that CIOs will have difficulty adopting," Wang says. "This requires a good understanding of the business strategy as well as keeping up to date with a large amount of disruptive technology. Often times, these technologies are not covered in the market and require early adopter teams."
As for core skills, Wang notes that next-generation CIOs will need the ability to:
1. Quickly assess which disruptive technologies show promise for their organizations. Leading organizations will reinvest in research budgets and internal processes that inform, disseminate and prepare their organization for an increasing pace in technology adoption.
2. Design next-gen business models. IT leaders must identify where these technologies can create differentiation through new business models, grow profit and deliver money-saving market efficiencies.
3. Fund innovation through legacy optimization. IT budgets are expected to remain relatively flat through 2011. As a result, much of the disruptive technology and next-gen business models must be funded through optimizing existing investments.
Kristin Burnham covers Consumer Technology, SaaS, Social Networking and Web 2.0 for CIO.com. Follow Kristin on Twitter @kmburnham. Follow everything from CIO.com on Twitter @CIOonline and on Facebook. Email Kristin at kburnham@cio.com
Read more about business/management topics in CIO's Business/Management Topics 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
- Constellation Research
- 2011 State of the CIO: IT Departments Are Fueling Company Growth Through Strategic Technology Investments
- How CIOs Can Devise a Social Business Strategy
- Kristin Burnham
- @kmburnham
- @CIOonline
- Incompatible Browser : Facebook
- kburnham@cio.com
- Read more about business/management topics
- The mobile print enterprise - How IT consumerisaton is driving anytime, anywhere printing
- Learning To Compete: IT’s Next Transformation
- ALM Buyers Guide: A Practical Guide to Choosing the Right Agile Tools for your Team
- Gartner MarketScope for Application Life Cycle Management
- Strategy to Success Framework: Investigate to Invest
-
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
-
Gartner MarketScope for Application Life Cycle Management
Organisations adopting agile practices, utilising global and distributed teams, or exploiting complex processes and technologies are most likely to benefit from using ALM tools to plan, manage and report on their development activities. This MarketScope assesses the market offerings and their providers. -
Backup and Recovery as we Know it is Changing
Increasing complexity in the data centre, including the rapid deployment of virtual servers, ever-expanding compliance requirements, and increasing amounts of sensitive data on mobile devices has put more strain on backup and recovery. Read on. -
Enterprise Buyers Guide for Application Development Software
New software delivery models, leaner and faster development methodologies, emerging mobile apps and the impact of open source are all key trends changing the way software will be procured in the future. To help organisations understand this changing landscape and to provide a framework for procurement Computerworld has created an enterprise buyers guide which includes the top technology trends in applications, programming, architectures and methodologies. It profiles the software vendors to watch, addresses the security concerns caused by Web 2.0 and examines the impact of Open Source Software (OSS).
-
AutoCAD and AutoCAD LT Bible
-
Designing Effective Speech Interfaces
-
Common Design Patterns for Symbian OS - the Foundations of Smartphone Software
-
Office 2007 for Dummies
-
Yahoo! Sitebuilder for Dummies
-
Introduction to Programming and Object-oriented Design Using Java 2E Java 5.0 Version
-
Learning Maya 7
-
Java Concepts 5E for Java 5 and 6 WileyPlus Standalone Registration Card
-
WileyPlus High School Stand-alone to Accompany Microsoft Office Access 2007, Exam 77-605, with Student CD-ROM High School Edition








Comments
Post new comment