Posts Tagged ‘change’

4 Ways That CIOs Can Start To Make Better Decisions

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011
Image Credit CIOs Need A Tool To Help Them Make Better Decisions

CIOs Need A Tool To Help Them Make Better Decisions

An important part of the job of being a CIO is the ability to make good decisions. Lots of good decisions. In fact, the ability to make more good decisions than bad decisions is arguably what allows a CIO to keep his / her job. Now the only problem is that it’s really, really hard to make good decisions all the time. To help you do a better job of this, I’m going to share with you four decision making tools that will help you every time you have to make a decision.

A New Way Of Making Decisions

CIOs need a new way to make correct decisions. Our ultimate goal should be to find ways to make the right decision more often than not. One way to do this is to adopt the “evidence based decision making” approach. This form of decision making rejects using gut feels and relying on past limited personal experience and instead is based on evidence and logic.

The problem that most CIOs run into when they try to apply evidence based decision making to their organizations is that it runs counter to the way that things are currently done. Every company has its share of stories about gutsy managers who just knew what the right thing to do was, and did it. What we forget are the stories about the managers who thought that they knew what to do and ended up doing the wrong thing.

Ask For Evidence

CIOs are always being presented with requests for something. More often than not it is for funding, but it can also be for resources or even simply for permission to proceed. You need to take a careful look at each of these requests.

When a CIO is using the evidence-based approach to making decisions, he or she needs to ask the people who are making the request for evidence. They are proposing doing something, they need to be able to prove to you that by taking the action that they want to take, good things will happen. If they can’t prove it, then you need to reject their request.

Look At Logic

When plans are presented to a CIO, they are often backed up with the results of surveys, charts and graphs of data, and lots of other impressive looking results. When presented with this type of information, CIOs need to be on the alert.

All too often in our very busy lives we tend to accept what is presented to us at face value. What we really need to be doing is taking a step back and looking more closely at the underlying data.

The question that you need to be asking yourself is if the results that have been drawn from the data really make sense. Are there any gaps or leaps in logic that really just don’t hold up? You’ll be amazed at how often you’ll find things that don’t support the conclusions that have been reached. When this happens, you need to send the team making the request back to the drawing board.

Experiment & Reward

Not every project is going to succeed. In fact, in the world of IT some projects fail in a spectacular fashion. Things really don’t have to be this way. If CIOs could become better decision-makers then a lot of this could be avoided.

One way to avoid big IT project failures is to encourage small IT project failures. That’s not as bad as it may sound. CIOs need to create an environment in which employees are encouraged to start pilot projects and to try out new ideas using trials before the CIO has to commit to a much larger project.

Many of these smaller projects will fail. This is a good thing – far better to have a small project fail and learn from it than have a much larger project fail and learn nothing. CIOs need to reward IT staff that work on projects that fail – everyone needs to see that there is much to be learned from each project no matter how it turns out.

Find Wisdom

Perhaps the simplest way for CIOs to make better decisions more of the time is for them to have one simple realization. If a CIO can understand that they don’t know it all, that there is still a lot that they need to learn, then they’ll be able to make better decisions.

Far too often CIOs assume that they know everything that they need to know in order to make the right decision. However, the reality is much different – there is no way that they know what they don’t know. Admitting that you don’t know it all is the first step in being open to collecting more information and becoming a CIO who makes better decisions.

What All Of This Means For You

All too often CIOs lose their job because they made bad decisions. It turns out that a big part of being the CIO is the ability to make a lot of good decisions. What is needed are tools that will help a CIO to do a better job of making the correct decision.

Four such tools exist and can be used by CIOs. The first is to demand evidence when a proposal is made. The next is to test the logic behind any proposal that is made. To ensure that the IT department can support the CIO in making good decisions, the CIO needs to allow trial programs to be run. These trials need to be allowed to fail and IT employees have to be rewarded for uncovering information before a bigger investment was made. Finally, CIOs need to teach their staff that they don’t know everything and everyone must respect the fact that there is much more for them to learn.

Although CIOs deal with technology, much of the their day-to-day job has to do with teaching. In order to make better decisions, they need to take the time to teach their IT department how to look at opportunities and how to use the information that is available to make the best decisions each and every time.

- Dr. Jim Anderson
Blue Elephant Consulting –
Your Source For Real World IT Department Leadership Skills™

Question For You: How do you think that a CIO should react to an IT trial program that failed?

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What We’ll Be Talking About Next Time

When you are CIO you will quickly come to dread (or maybe you already do) the annual strategic planning process for the IT department. Talk about choices: mobile devices, privacy issues, cloud computing – who can pack strategic planning for all of these issues into one short period at the beginning of the year – there’s got to be a better way

How CIOs Can Get Their Department To Change When They Don’t Want To

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010
Image Credit
Change Happens & We Need To Find Ways To Deal With It…

Change Happens & We Need To Find Ways To Deal With It…

When you become CIO, one of your main jobs will be to lead the IT department though changes. However, here is where you may run into a problem. Considering how many layoffs, cut backs, and canceled projects most IT departments have had, the last thing that your IT staff really wants is more change. What’s a CIO to do?

First Things First

If you want to have any hope of being able to convince your IT department to rally behind a significant change, then you’re going to have to do some work. The first thing that you are going to have to deal with has to do with what has gone on in the past.

In order to make things happen now, you’re going to have to find ways to help your staff let go of the past and find ways to move forward. You want them to be able to move forward as quickly as possible. Note that you need them to do both of these on two different levels: an emotional level as well as a workplace level.

How To Let Go Of The Past

If you want to have any hope of helping your staff to let go of the past, then you are going to have to let them get all of those feelings that they have inside out. Sorry technology lover – this is messy, human relations sort of stuff.

The key word here is “empathy”. Note that I didn’t say “sympathy”. The difference is a bit subtle, but it’s critical. A CIO who is sympathetic feels bad because you are felling bad. A CIO who is empathetic feels sad because of the thing that is making you feel sad. This latter emotion is a much, much more powerful way to connect with your staff.

What you are going to have to do is to acknowledge the feelings that the people in your department are having. Once you’ve done that, then you can start to use this understanding to go about building a workplace environment based on cooperation and trust.

Next Things Next

Once you’ve got the IT team to let go of the past, it’s time for the next step. This is where you get them to buy-in and support the new change that you are trying to implement.

In order to get everyone to commit to what needs to be done, you are going to have to be straight with them. This is not the time to be sugar-coating what you are telling your staff. If it’s going to be hard to implement the change that you want to do, now is the time to tell everyone that.

Practical Ways To Get Everyone Onboard

One of the key ways to get support from the IT department is to make sure that as the CIO you are providing a clear vision of where you want to go. This vision has to have enough detail associated with it so that your department can fully understand where you want to go and how you plan on getting there.

Additionally, CIOs can’t make their team implement a change. Rather you are going to have to allow them to do it themselves. To make this easier for them to do, a good idea is to let the team create their own procedures for rolling out the needed changes.

What All Of This Means For You

Change is never easy. For some reason, in the world of IT change is not only hard to do, but due to past failures most of a department’s IT staff often resists any attempt to implement a change.

CIOs need to realize that they need to take an active role in implementing IT changes. They need to work with the IT department and help them to let go of the past and all of the baggage that goes with it. Next, they need to discover how to get the team to buy-in and support the new change.

Implementing IT changes is something that will happen multiple times during your CIO career. Taking the time to do it correctly will help not only your IT department to become more valuable to the rest of the company, but will also end up making you more valuable at the same time.

- Dr. Jim Anderson
Blue Elephant Consulting –
Your Source For Real World IT Department Leadership Skills™

Question For You: How active of a role in implementing a big change in the IT department do you think that the CIO should play?

Click here to get automatic updates when The Accidental Successful CIO Blog is updated.
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What We’ll Be Talking About Next Time

How many times do you have to tell your IT department: it’s time to start innovating again? The global recession is over, if your company is going to start to grow and be successful, then the IT department is going to have to be out in front and leading the charge. Since budgets are still constrained, it’s going to take a great deal of innovation to find ways to do more with what you currently have. Why isn’t anyone doing this?

5 Things That CIOs Need To Stop Doing

Monday, June 15th, 2009

CIOs Need To Stop Doing Things That Hold The Company Back

CIOs Need To Stop Doing Things That Hold The Company Back

I firmly believe that the reason that any firm has a CIO is so that they have someone who can drive the company’s IT department to provide services and support that will enable the rest of the business to grow faster. It really is that simple – if you can leverage your IT department to support what the business is trying to do, then you’ll be more successful. Of course, this only works if the CIO is doing his / her job

First You Need Respect

Bob Evans (no, not the breakfast sausage Bob Evans) over at InformationWeek has been thinking about why, of all of a company’s senior leadership, CIOs seem to be the ones who get the least amount of respect.

His conclusions are that the world at large believes that CIOs lack the business skills that are needed in order to have a seat at a company’s strategy steering table. It doesn’t help that all too often CIOs tend to talk using technology terms that seem to go right over the heads of the rest of the business.

If CIOs are to take the reins of the IT department and turn it into the engine that allows the rest of the company to move faster, then there are 5 things that they need to STOP doing.

#1: Stop Avoiding Customers

In order to provide the firm with the tools and services that it needs to meet the needs of its current and potential customers, CIOs need to be spending time meeting with customers. It’s all too easy to become focused on internal issues, cost cutting, and staffing challenges. Get out and talk to customers in order to find out what you REALLY need to be doing to support the company.

#2: Stop Avoiding Change

It is all too easy for an incoming CIO to adopt the “if it’s not broke, don’t fix it” mentality. However, even as you read this the world is being changed by the arrival of Twitter, the long rumored Apple tablet PC, etc. Changes of this magnitude mean that everything must be constantly reconsidered by the CIO in order to find ways to allow the company to move faster and perform better.

#3: Stop Doing Projects Based On “Gut Feel”

Microsoft is getting ready to come out with a new operating system. Should the firm upgrade all of its PCs? Good question. The answer lies in another question: how would upgrading those PCs help the company achieve its business goals? Could the money be spent on something else that would do a better job of achieving those goals? It’s the ability to justify projects based on solid business reasons and not “gut feel” that has been missing from the way that CIOs have been doing business.

#4: Stop Spending So Much On Support

We’re not just talking about money here, we’re also talking about time. Everyone seems to be hung up on the 80/20 rule when it comes to support / new business. Over at HP they’ve found a way to do it, so why can’t everyone else?

#5: Stop Supporting Stereotypes Of CIOs

Evans points out that both at the online version of CIO magazine as well as over at Fortune magazine, disparaging things have been said about the role that CIOs play in firms. CIOs need to stand up and push back – as long as reporters and press are allowed to push them around, they will. CIOs need to start to publicize the fact that their departments are powerful enablers that the firm desperately needs in order to stay ahead of the pack.

Final Thoughts

No senior leadership position is easy to perform these days. However, CIOs have the double burden of having to stay in front of a rapidly changing technological wave as well as being intimately connected to what’s going on in the firm’s business. This can be done; however, in order to be successful, CIOs need to stop doing things that produce more harm than good.

Questions For You

How often does your CIO meet with customers: once a week, once a month, or once in a blue moon? Does your CIO talk about change or does he/she actually cause it to happen? Does your CIO have the ability to turn off the technology talk and turn on the business talk? Leave me a comment and let me know what you are thinking.

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         The Accidental Successful CIO Blog is updated.

Coming Up Next Time

The role of a  CIO in any organization is to find ways to enable the company to be more successful. Underlying all of these different ways to assist the business there is one area that every CIO must master first: providing great internal communications. An opportunity to radically transform how a firm’s employees communicate has arrived and it’s time for CIOs to step up and lead the charge…