Offering regional and national programs, CIO (and CSO) events bring together some of the most respected names and thought leaders in information technology and security. Presented by CIOs and other senior level executives, these invitation-only programs offer timely topics and strong networking. Learn More »
Webcast: In the Google Apps Cloud: How to Achieve Your Business Objectives
Dec 3rd, '09, 1 - 2 pm US/Eastern (GMT-5)
Join Council member Brent Hoag, Director, Global IT, at JohnsonDiversey, as he discusses the adoption of Google Apps which has helped meet four corporate goals; sustainability, simplification, increased employee productivity and global collaboration.
Webcast: Collaboration Initiatives: Benchmarks & Best Practices
Dec 15th, '09, 4 - 5 pm US/Eastern (GMT-5)
Join Council members Ruth Thorpe, VP & CIO at the U.S. Pharmaceutical Operations of Sanofi-Aventis, and Gary Kuyper, CIO at Bethany Christian Services, as they speak about their collaboration initiatives and experiences in how and why they chose the social networking and collaboration tools they are using and their business goals for collaboration, and facing culture change challenges.
Data Overview: Collaboration Initiatives Field Guide: Benchmarks & Best Practices
This appendix to the Council Field Guide provides an analysis which discusses benchmarks for collaboration IT implementation costs, adoption rates and payoffs. The overview identifies top IT and business goals and satisfaction rates for collaboration initiatives as well as best practices and lessons learned for implementing collaboration IT.
Learn more about the CIO Executive Council »December 10, 2007 — CIO —
For some CIOs, there's no separation between IT and business.
For others, a gulf, wide and deep, undercuts their ability to do, or even define, their jobs.
In our seventh annual "State of the CIO" survey, you told us about the problems you face in this turbulent world of new technologies and tight budgets, a world in which the role of the CIO is reconsidered, reevaluated and reimagined almost on a daily basis.
Some of our 558 respondents, all heads of IT in their enterprises, are faring quite well. They're bringing creativity and new revenues to their businesses, and they're being rewarded with new responsibilities in operations, for example, or customer service.
Others are finding this new world difficult to navigate.
But before we can talk about challenge and change—constants, it seems, in the CIO's universe—and about what forms they've taken this year and will take in the year ahead, we first have to cut through some static.
The language often used to frame the CIO experience does little to reveal the nature of the CIO's work. Today's IT lexicon—which bandies terms such as "innovation" and "alignment" and "ROI"—disguises the reality of being a CIO and hides the obstacles and opportunities that await the practitioners of the IT art and discipline.
"Henderson, we need to innovate right now to achieve alignment."
"That's right, Bartow. And after that, we'll generate a positive ROI for our stakeholders."
Hold on. Nobody talks like that and that's not what you do all day.
Metaphors, which breed buzzwords, attempt to explain one idea by substituting another; for example, "innovation" replaces "make money." But these substitutions frequently obfuscate. And CIOs don't have time for that. CIOs excel at thinking about what's possible. And doable.
So let's talk about what's real.
We can't imagine a CIO who doesn't know that technology must support the business's processes and goals. If you don't understand that, nothing in this survey will help you. In our 2008 "State of the CIO" survey, 82 percent of respondents said that aligning IT and business was their number-one activity. Of course it was. Does a therapist listen? Does a general command?
It's clear, however, that CIOs who worry about alignment conceive of themselves, their function and their department as a thing apart. Whether that's a problem of their own making or a dysfunction generated by their executive peers and their enterprise's culture, these CIOs have already lost. As Roger Parks, VP of information technology and CIO at J.R. Simplot , a $4.2 billion agribusiness, puts it, "If other senior executives don't see you as one of them, you usually can't change their minds. You have to realize that."