Intelligent CIO Europe Issue 19 | Page 60

PROFILE INVENTION AND INNOVATION IN ENGINEERING AND SCIENTIFIC EXCELLENCE ARE IN GOOD SHAPE WITH EUROPE LEADING THE WAY IN MANY IMPORTANT AREAS. physical estate in Europe, none of them are European organisations and I lament the lack of balance in that. As has always been the case, invention and innovation in engineering and scientific excellence are in good shape with Europe leading the way in many important areas, but a lot of that innovation is acquired or naturally migrates to the hyperscale public cloud companies. need to be considered up-front and demand new skills such as security architects. All too often, organisations take existing threat and vulnerability models and approaches to mitigate them ‘as is’ to the cloud and this is often ineffective. Changes companies/CIOs should be making to improve the current technology threats across the region My personal driver for my career is to ‘make a difference’. This is why I work at the Met Office where the mission and purpose is so important despite earnings potential not being what it would be in the private sector. Another way that I can make a difference is to help develop and encourage talent and I try to do that in a variety of ways. I am a long-term and active STEM ambassador where I spend time encouraging young people to learn to enjoy and maintain STEM subjects. I am an industrial adviser to schools which is about helping to ensure that in On the threat front, my view is that most organisations need to put significantly more focus and investment in cyber and information security. Many ‘traditional’ organisations are moving to cloud-based capabilities but in doing so are not recognising the importance of changing the security approach. Cloud offers new ways to ‘design in’ security and resilience that really 60 INTELLIGENTCIO Developing the skills of others and putting this into practice addition to meeting attainment targets and league tables, young people are equipped for the workplace and have a realistic understanding of the kinds of skills that the present and future employer requires. I am the executive sponsor for apprenticeships and industrial placements and I work hard to ensure that there are a variety of ‘ways in’ to the rewarding and purposeful STEM roles that we have at the Met Office. Perhaps surprisingly as a middle-aged white male, I am also a strong advocate of the diversity agenda. My career has taught me that adopting a blinkered and constrained view of getting the ‘best’ people to undertake challenging work is fraught with danger. Experience suggests that while of course you need people with requisite base skills, a diverse team looking at a challenging problem will always out-perform a single perspective group of ‘experts’, at least in terms of value generation. This view of www.intelligentcio.com