DigiTech Magazine - UK Summer 2017 | Page 6

THE CHANGING ROLE OF THE CIO INTERVIEW ON THE FUTURE ROLE OF THE CIO WITH MARK SCHWARTZ North Highland’s Ben Grinnell connected with Mark Schwartz, CIO and leading author, for on-the- ground insights into the changing role of the CIO. Mark Schwartz is an iconoclastic CIO and a playful crafter of ideas, an inveterate purveyor of lucubratory prose. He has been an IT leader in organisations small and large, public, private, and nonprofit. He is pretty sure that when he was the CIO of Intrax Cultural Exchange, he was the first person ever to use business intelligence and supply chain analytics to place au pairs with the right host families. Mark speaks frequently on innovation, bureaucratic implications of DevOps, and Agile processes in low-trust environments. With a computer science degree from Yale and an MBA from Wharton, Mark is either an expert on the business value of IT or just confused and much poorer. BEN GRINNELL: Do you see the future role of the CIO as one of bringing together communities of practice across the organisation or as leading a larger function, as many CIOs do today? If the former, what change of skills do you think the role will require? MARK SCHWARTZ: I see the role as one of driving business value for the organisation through the use of technology – perhaps more akin to what you call “bringing together communities of practice.” We have to escape from the idea of IT as a “function,” presided over by a CIO. Pens and pencils are not a function, nor are telephones; they are tools. IT is also a tool. It’s curious to me that IT is often so opposed to “shadow IT.” I understand why, and certainly it has led to many problems in the past, but in principle it makes no difference who gives the organisation its technological capabilities. If the CIO truly had a seat at the table, he or she would care little about who is meeting the organisation’s IT needs and more about whether those needs are being met. There is an interesting flipside to this: I think the CIO needs a more technical background than we have traditionally thought. If the CIO is at the table to add value by being an IT expert, then he or she should truly be an expert. Everyone else in the organisation is becoming more and more sophisticated in their technology use, so why would you have a CIO who isn’t vastly more sophisticated in technology than everyone else? When we thought of technology departments as a function, as a provider of technical support services and executor of projects, then it made sense for the CIO to be a generic manager. But if the CIOs role is to be the expert on deriving business value from technology, then the CIO must be extremely technology savvy. BG: In many organisations, IT is still a cost centre and IT directors/CIOs do not have primary seats at the board table. Does this need to change? If so, what does the organisation need to do? What can CIOs do? MS: This is an easy one. We can all see that technology is delivering revenue, competitive advantage and mission accomplishment. Any organisation that views it just as a cost is clearly missing something. I think many organisations fall into this trap just because cost is easy to measure, while the rest of these benefits are not. Perhaps CEOs who treat IT as a cost centre just lack the courage or confidence to accept that the link between the technology and the benefits is harder to quantify and justify. But IT is an area where one invests and reaps benefit—though interestingly, with the cloud, today, more of our IT costs are expensed rather than capitalised. It seems like many organisations are accepting that technology really can drive revenue and competitive advantage, but they are putting those initiatives into a separate area they call “digital services,” with a separate budget and a separate leader. That still amounts to an acceptance that IT is more than a cost centre. The question then becomes whether it is more efficient and effective to run them separately. As a general rule, it seems more efficient to operate digital services within the CIO’s realm, but many organisatio