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Chapter 4. The Role of the CIO. CIO. Title came about in the 1980 Influences Executive attitudes Applications portfolio Dominant suppliers. History. Mainframe era Primarily operational manager Distributed era Need for more specialized knowledge workers
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Chapter 4 The Role of the CIO
CIO • Title came about in the 1980 • Influences • Executive attitudes • Applications portfolio • Dominant suppliers
History • Mainframe era • Primarily operational manager • Distributed era • Need for more specialized knowledge workers • However – over-commitment by IT led to declining reliability • Outsourcing emerged
History continued • Four major roles of CIO • Organizational designer • Strategic partner • Technology architect • Informed buyer • Web-based (pervasive) era • Current era – more external interfaces with suppliers and customers
Skills • Visionary leader • Relationship manager • Marketer • Open systems-oriented • 20 years in management jobs • French, German, Japanese • Master’s, Harvard Business
Turnover • Nearly 2/3s of organizations have had a CIO turnover in the last 2 years • Under extraordinary pressure to perform, and to perform quickly
Concerns of CIO (top 8) • 94% enhancing customer satisfaction • 92% security • 89% technology evaluation • 87% budgeting • 83% staffing • 66% ROI analysis (return on investment) • 64% building new applications • 45% outsourcing hosting
Education & Career Plan background • 64% come from IT based background & education • 36% from non IT backgrounds & education • 64% come from IT careers • 14% come from Sales & marketing careers • 22% come from operations careers
CEO attributes • General management and/or marketing • Change-oriented leadership • Attended IT “awareness” seminars • Experience IT project success • Perceives IT as critical to business • Positions IT as agent of business transformation
CIO attributes • Analyst background and orientation • Promotes IT as agent of business transformation • Contributes beyond IT function • Accurate perception of CEO views on business & IT • Integrates IT with business planning • Profile stresses consultative leadership & creativity
Asset or Liability • Are we getting value for the money • How important is IT • How do we plan for IT • Is the IS function doing a god job • What is the IT strategy • What is the CEO’s vision for the role of IT • What do we expect of the CIO
Strategic Alignment • The primary responsibility for IT management does not have to be performed by the CIO personally – oversight • CIO should manage use of technology and not the technology itself
Structure • Reporting structure • 55% of CIOs report to CFO • 21% of CIOs report to CEO • 11% of CIOs report to COO • 13% of CIOs report to other managers • Internal boards • 49% sit on the board • 51% do not sit on the board
CEO and IT • CEO’s role is to believe in the importance of IT to the business • Creating context – CEO must create a context of change in the organization that supports the need for successful exploitation of technology • Setting priorities – CEO needs to establish a core group of business priorities that drive the need for continuous enhancement of the technology infrastruction
CEO and IT continued • Signaling continuously and positively – the CEO’s belief in IT must be a public matter – need to send this information to the organization • Spending quality time – “Believer” CEOs spend time focusing on IT issues in a proactive manner – well read in IT issues • Relating with the CIO – have a two-way relationship with CEO and CIO
Additional behaviors for CEO • Scanning & understanding new technologies • Working on a vision of the future • Sponsoring internal & external architectures • Embedding information management processes • Challenging Its supply side
Effective CIO attributes • Delegation of operational tasks • Seize expenditure authority • Avoid adversarial positions • Initiate contacts outside the information technology unit • Use language carefully
Effective CIO characteristics • Honesty, integrity, sincerity, openness • Business perspective, motivation, language • Communicator, educator, motivator, leader, politician, relationship builder • Continuously informed on developments in IT, able to interpret their significance to the business • Change-oriented team player, catalyst
Requirements of CIO position • Leadership • Expertise in aligning & leveraging technology for the advantage of the enterprise • Business savvy • Relationship skills • Management skills • Communication skills
Requirements continued • Ability to create and manage change • knowledge of, and experience in, a specific industry • International or global experience • Ability to hire, develop, and retain high quality IT professionals
Some nontechnical skills • Financial skills • Human resource skills • Relationship management skills • Legal skills • Governance skills • Marketing skills • Negotiating skills • Leadership skills
Leadership vs Management • 10 basic roles for a Manager • Information processing roles • Disseminator • Monitor • Spokesperson • Decision-making roles • Entrepreneur • Disturbance handler • Resource allocator
Decision-making continued • Negotiator • Interpersonal roles • Liaison • Figurehead • leader
Leadership characteristics • Broad business & organizational knowledge • Broad set of relationships in the firm & industry • Excellent reputation and strong track record in a broad set of activities • Keen mind and strong interpersonal skills • High integrity & personal values • High level of motivation (energy & drive)
“Laws” of leadership • A leader has willing followers • Leadership is a field of interaction-relationship between leaders and followers • Leadership occurs as an event • Leaders use influence beyond formal authority • Leaders operate outside the boundaries of organizationally defined procedures
“Laws” continued • Leadership involves risks and uncertainty • Not everyone will follow a leader’s initiative • Consciousness (information processing capacity) creates leadership • Leadership is a self-referral process
More on leadership • Leadership is concerned with direction, goal setting, support, and encouragement • Focus is for “getting things done”, NOT with “doing things”
Leaders & Managers comparison • Leaders define “WHAT” • Vision – sensible and appealing picture of the future • Strategies – a logic for how the vision can be achieved • Managers define “HOW” • Plans – specific steps & timetables to implement the strategies • Budgets – plans converted into financial projections and goals
Responsibilities • Danger is allocating too much responsibility to line managers • Have some loss of overall strategy • Technical knowledge is still needed by CIO
Management apportionment • Extent of the organization’s need for networking resources to exchange information among business units or external organizations • The firm-specific requirements to share date elements among business units or with external firms
Apportionment continued • The extent wo which applying common application systems across the firms is desirable • The requirements for specialized human resources related to IT
5 Critical Management processes • Setting strategic direction • Establishing infrastructure systems • Scanning technology • Transferring technology • Developing business systems
CIO Tips • Get a seat at the table • Regular one-to-one communications with the CEO • Create a partnership with peers • Study the corporate culture • Understand the business model • Define current commitments • Establish credibility first through small things
Tips continued • Build a personal board of directors • Listen and talk • Be accessible and responsive • Set realistic goals • Take inventory (people, appl, technology) • Assess your people • Understand the value & threat of outsourcing