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June 17, 11:30 AM - 12:30 PM U.S./ET (GMT-4)
Larry Bonfante, CIO of the U.S. Tennis Association, will discuss the skills and approaches that your rising IT leaders must learn to be effective in an executive capacity.
How to Handle Your New CEO: Managing Turnover at the Top
June 18, 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM U.S./Eastern (GMT-4)
Turbulent times have increased turnover at the top. Find out what Council CIOs have done to "break in" new CEOs—build relationships, set expectations, educate on the role of IT.
Mid-Market CIO Panel: Tips and Techniques for Improving Vendor Relationships
July 15, 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM U.S./Eastern (GMT-4)
We'll highlight relationship priorities and best practices identified in a Council study, and we'll interact with a CIO panel on the approaches they've used to improve strategic vendor partnerships.
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March 15, 2003 — CIO —
CIOS had better be able to swiftly implement effective IT solutions for their companies’ customers. Fail at that and you’re fired. But strategically savvy CIOs recognize that future rewards will come from implementing effective solutions for their customers’ customers. Think of it as CCRM?customer’s customer relationship management.
That’s precisely the implementation challenge confronting Ticketmaster CIO Sean Moriarty. Los Angeles-based Ticketmaster is, of course, the world’s largest and most technologically intensive ticket vendor. It has two customer sets?the people who actually buy the tickets, and the stadiums, venues, teams, leagues, bands and acts that want to sell them. I was struck by a comment Moriarty made about what most worried him as CIO.
His real management problem, he says, isn’t the technical execution of innovative ideas but convincing Ticketmaster’s best customers to give him access to their best customers. Ticketmaster wants to serve both. For example, when Ticketmaster sells tickets to a Knicks game at Madison Square Garden, it would also like to book dinner for that customer at a restaurant near the Garden.
The catch is that there may be ticket-sellers that don’t want Ticketmaster to drive their businesses. While ticket buyers?the customer’s customer?might be quite happy to obtain discount dinner coupons along with pregame reservations at a nearby restaurant, such offers could cut into lucrative concession sales at the sporting event. And that would make the venue very unhappy. That creates a classic channel conflict. How should Ticketmaster strike a balance between investing in its customers and investing in its customers’ customers?
Moriarty’s CCRM conundrum transcends tickets. Virtually every company in every industry faces some facet of this conflict. Brokers might think twice about how much access a mutual fund should have to their clients. While the funds would love to market directly to the client, the brokers don’t want the competition.
Network technology makes it even easier for channel conflicts?and channel opportunities?to arise. Ticketmaster has decided that future growth depends on its ability to use technology as a medium to create value with and for its customers. That means Moriarty has no choice but to invest time in persuading his counterparts at key client companies to participate in pilots and prototypes. And if that means Ticketmaster bankrolls the bulk of the development, so be it.
Money is just one reason customers are reluctant to jointly pilot new initiatives; Moriarty acknowledges that some clients are also nervous about sharing customer access. "We think we can make it sufficiently cheap and easy to get our clients on board," he says. "But you have to make more of a business case than a technical case to get them to do it."