Tuesday, April 7, 2020

How is the CIO role changing?



In today’s world, many CEOs forget they the must be CEOs (Chief Enabling Officers!) and act like CEOs (Chief Execution Officers!).  But that is not part of our topic now. We will save it for a rainy day.

We also see two important developments happening in the realm of CIO:
  1. Technology and business boundaries are getting blurred. Either of them cannot be stand alone!
  2. Business strategy is not decided independent of technology rather the latter is a critical component in formulating a plan.

In other words, the era of business-led / technology-enabled CIOs has ended; a new one technology-led / business enabled has begun!

What kind of battle is waged by the CIO? A three-pronged battle:
  1. Drive / Enable business strategy harnessing the power of technology in a secure way
  2. Battle with monolithic systems of records and data and inflexible, technical-debt ridden architecture
  3. Maximize value

Where does that leave the CIO? Here is how I see the role changing:

There will be a huge metamorphosis of the role possibly eliminating a dedicated CIO. Parts of the role may manifest in other areas. For example, the resources (including technology, required infrastructure, cloud, network, end user computing, devices) might be controlled by the COO. The enabling aspects of this would be owned by the line function leaders who are responsible to customers or business stakeholders.

The first view point is that the CIO role would disappear. Whilst this may take a while, things will become difficult for the CIO in the coming few years. Certain steep changes will be the order of the day.

#1. CIOs who are experts in technology – legacy or digital can expect to be pigeon-holed. Those who use to to bamboozle the rest of the organization with fancy architecture and buzz words will recede into the background. They need to invest in soft skills. They need to seamlessly align with the organization business strategy and business line function. Every project that originates from the CIO office will be relentlessly subject to CBA (Cost Benefit Analysis). Can the CIO stand up and articulate what, when and how he plans to stay relevant and important to business? Even this won’t do; they should be skilled at spotting new business opportunities and be able to influence their ideas. They have to become more human and partner with others in order to maximize their value to business. This partnership can be internal or external. Nurturing and harnessing a good eco-system will help.

#2. Continuous realignment of the organization, teams, skills and outlook will be required even to stay afloat. What do I mean by this? IT world is ransacked by new trends and terms like agile, DevOps, DevSecOps, Continuous integration/deployment. More trends and methodologies will start coming in. We are already talking about a low or no code IT that can be bought, scaled up or down and customized / enriched. The CIOs should reflect on how and what this means for the team? We used to have specialists in IT like SQLServer expert, Oracle DBAs and Network engineers. Whilst some roles will continue, they need recalibration as the IT world changes. Does it pay for a separate testing category to be developed? Perhaps an automation tester is required. A developer should also be a capable tester. To what extent soft skills and business skills are to be embedded within IT? 

A recalibration of the IT team that is not compartmentalized but can be assembled to deliver digital transformation of the business is the need of the hour. And the IT team members should be prepared to don different roles in different teams! Towards this, the CIOs should be prepared to and implement redefinition and rebaselining of skills, recalibration, training and enablement etc. And the team identification, deployment and delivery should, subsequently, follow these new ways.

#3. A CIO should transform into being a change agent of the organization. They will have to become value creators and for that they should transform into change instigators. Status quo is no longer an option. Even if a CIO continuously maintains the estate well and runs a tight-knit disciplined shop, that won’t be enough. Most of the normal health parameters have been pushed into the very bottom so much so that they don’t require special oversight nor reporting. Today’s tools / products come with self-healing and self-reporting properties. In order to transform a business operations and drive value, they have to remain restless (in a positive way!). I would go to the extent of saying a controlled panic will do a world of good now and then!

To conclude:
  • Tomorrow's CIOs will have to drive, innovate and execute with the first two as the dominating functions

  • They need to enable a high-performing environment, business-oriented and flexible teams with multiple skills.

  • The operational responsibilities will not go away but take up less and less time allowing them to act more as leaders, communicators and innovators.

  • Quite a few organizations are taken aback by the lack of clear definition of “Digital.” A few CIOs and their direct reports, I met, are constantly worried by the lack of uniform definition of "Digital." Why worry? Instead, the CIO (whether it is a digitally-born or digitally-aspiring organization) can take this to his/her advantage. This is because any digital transformation is less about a digital technology or strategy but more about a successful business in the digital world.


1 comment:

LMHSS 82 said...

Changing roles of CIO is a nice article from you. Current CIO /new CIO must realize the points shared in your article and implement it for the betterment of their organization.

Kudos to YOU.