Re-imagining IT

By Sharm Manwani

11 Apr 2011

Comments: 2

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I liked the title of Gartner’s report on the 2011 CIO Agenda and have borrowed it with pride for this blog. What was equally notable was the message that CIOs need to create a new success cycle, one that puts benefits realisation and skills at the heart of their agenda.

This message resonates with my own experiences, initially as a CIO and later working with leading organisations at Henley Business School. It is why I developed with BCS the Business Change Lifecycle that ends not with delivery of a system but with the fuzzy world of benefits realisation. That is not to say that benefits are usually soft, it is more that they require a focus as much on stakeholders as they do on process. Further, they do not arrive in neat gift boxes when you expect them to. It is hard work realising benefits and CIOs need to be at the forefront.

Of course that brings in the importance of building the right skills. It is tempting to bring in consultants to achieve early success. However, without the right balance of internal skills, there is minimal transfer of capability. Achieving that means having business-focused IT people in the group who have the confidence and the credibility to drive benefits. This may sound theoretical but I am delighted with the practical benefits of the professional development programme we have created for Deutsche Telekom. Most importantly the CIO believes he is gaining the results he wants.

One of the big challenges we all face in developing skills is defining the scope of what we do. It is something I have struggled with both as a CIO and as an academic. When I was promoted recently to a professorial position at Henley, I debated what was the most appropriate title. There are arguments for Business Systems, IT Enabled Business Change, Information Management and many others. In the end, I decided IT Leadership most closely aligned to what the CIO needs to provide. I have a very broad definition of IT, one that encompasses strategy, processes, information, systems, technology and people.

That takes me back to the title. I believe we have to re-imagine IT and our leadership of it to remain relevant in tomorrow’s world. With our core skill of systems thinking, we are best placed in the organisation to understand how to integrate the different elements of business change. The challenge will be to explain and to execute it.

If you have done this, I would be very happy to hear your stories directed to sharm.manwani@henley.com.

Reader comments

What is in a title?

I liked the thoughts behind the comment from Chris Puttick and reviewed the first paragraph of the bio below.

'Chris joined Oxford Archaeology in the newly created position of CIO in January 2006. Previously he had worked for an IT solutions company as an IT Consultant and Project Manager and before that managed IT for a group of educational institutions in Manchester.'

It seems that we cannot easily escape the IT label.

On a related note, my research with CIOs suggest that very few consider that they have full accountability for the middle letter of their title. This seems to be an opportunity area. Look forward to any comments on this.

Posted by: Sharm Manwani  15 Apr 2011

At risk of repeating myself ad nauseum

Drop IT. Specifically the "T". Technology doesn't need leading and the use of the term for the management function is misleading and reinforces existing prejudices. In particular it associates the function leader with the IT Support team, tending to lead to subordinate thinking on both sides of the senior management table - but CIOs et al should be leaders, reporting only to the CEO, with a peer relationship with other senior managers.

The collective is and always should have been IS, Information Systems.

Posted by: Chris Puttick  15 Apr 2011

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