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Download Council Content and Develop Your External Leadership Skills
Check out our member contributed collection of essays on understanding and developing the external-facing leadership competencies of "customer focus," "commercial orientation" and "market knowledge." Contributions from Best Buy, Universal Orlando Resort, Direct Energy share how they have learned to anticipate customer needs, become market savvy, identify and enable commercial opportunities.
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 »June 01, 2003 — CIO —
Iowa’s mission to implement a formal approach to portfolio management has eliminated redundancies, justified projects without strong political constituencies, and provided active project and budget oversight. Contrary to some stereotypes, the private sector can learn a lot from state governments. Iowa deserves the National Association of State Chief Information Officers’ accolades.
However, I am skeptical that the scoring system is helping Iowa choose the best projects. Research over the years has shown that subjective scoring methods are not as effective as other valuation methods. The Enterprise Quality Assurance Office should consider methods that can assign dollar values to the criteria it uses to measure a project’s worthiness. While it does calculate financial impacts for such things as transaction savings, it could represent any other value this way as well. I routinely quantify the value of intangibles in IT organizations, including those in government agencies.
I don’t believe that scoring is an effective method for quantifying risk or the value of customer service. If the Quality Assurance Office officials were to replace the language of scores with the language of actuaries, CFOs and economists, I believe they would see yet another significant improvement in IT decision making.