They might be behind, but they're not giving up. Here are three ways CIOs set project priorities. 1. Get Business-Side Buy-In Stephen Rood, CIO of Strategic Technology, gives business managers a financial stake in determining which enhancements to ongoing projects they really need. Every year, each department gets a pool of developers’ time for system enhancements. If the head of manufacturing has five projects, Rood calculates the hours for each and may report that he only has the resources for two of them.”If they want to do a third one, I don’t say no,” says Rood, but the department has to pay for a contractor. “That gives them a certain degree of ownership,” he says.2. Be the Voice of ReasonCIOs must-gently and tactfully-deflate user enthusiasm for spanking-new systems, or the backlog can get out of control. Ken Kudla, CIO and VP of IT with The Queen’s Medical Center in Honolulu, explains to his senior management peers why the time might not be right for a project from a cost perspective or a technological perspective. “Then we sit down as VPs together and talk about [the idea’s] merits and whether we agree or don’t agree,” Kudla says. “Then it’s not just one voice [making the decision].”3. Don’t Bend the RulesEvery business manager has a project that just has to get done yesterday. Although CIOs tend to want to show that they’re helpful, it isn’t necessarily a good idea to bump new requests to the front of the queue. “If a project doesn’t meet the criteria of a high-priority project, I’m not going to reprioritize all of the IT resources [for it],” says Bob Holstein, CIO of National Public Radio. He also doesn’t make casual assurances to anyone about their IT projects. “A promise is not a promise until I assign a date and a project manager,” he says. Also see The Number-One Problem of CIOs: The Project Backlog. Related content brandpost The steep cost of a poor data management strategy Without a data management strategy, organizations stall digital progress, often putting their business trajectory at risk. Here’s how to move forward. By Jay Limbasiya, Global AI, Analytics, & Data Management Business Development, Unstructured Data Solutions, Dell Technologies Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Management feature How Capital One delivers data governance at scale With hundreds of petabytes of data in operation, the bank has adopted a hybrid model and a ‘sloped governance’ framework to ensure its lines of business get the data they need in real-time. By Thor Olavsrud Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Governance Data Management feature Assessing the business risk of AI bias The lengths to which AI can be biased are still being understood. The potential damage is, therefore, a big priority as companies increasingly use various AI tools for decision-making. By Karin Lindstrom Jun 09, 2023 4 mins CIO Artificial Intelligence IT Leadership brandpost Rebalancing through Recalibration: CIOs Operationalizing Pandemic-era Innovation By Kamal Nath, CEO, Sify Technologies Jun 08, 2023 6 mins CIO Digital Transformation Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe