Intelligent CIO Europe Issue 19 | Page 61

PROFILE diversity encompasses the more measurable aspects such as gender and ethnicity but also includes less visible aspects such as neurodiversity and emotional intelligence. I am also currently a mentor to five or six early/mid-career people, doing my best to help them avoid or at least learn from the many mistakes that I have made. expect this to be the case in the future more than it has been in the past where the typical route would be from a CFO or COO. Certainly, many CIOs will have a firm grasp on the realities of P&Ls and balance sheets and will be accomplished at leading and managing people, partnerships and so on. As per my advice to aspiring CIOs, technology is increasingly the part of the organisation that can spot threats and opportunities in the market driven by technology as well as the most accurate estimates of how achievable execution will be. CIOs are also typically mature in terms of dealing with complexity and uncertainty in the operating environment; something that appears to be more common in all business. So yes, why not. n The most important career lesson The most important career lesson I’ve learned is probably to temper the arrogance of certainty about anything in the future. Any prediction of something that hasn’t happened yet can only be an opinion and therefore it is important to both recognise that and to think about the quality and provenance of that opinion and how wrong it might be. Others would call this better at managing risk, however, it is equally about the realisation of opportunity. This helps me understand when uncertainty about the future is such that I should maintain a few threads of activity akin to backing more than one horse in a race. There are other times where I may feel confidence is so high that I should simply back a single horse. Too many times, business and investment cases and projections are made to look like fact when of course they are not, regardless of how well the management accountants have done their jobs and whether the numbers look compelling. Advice for aspiring CIOs It is important to understand the line of sight to the senior team or board. Personally, I will not work for an organisation that does not have a technology role on the executive board as I think this says something about that organisation in terms of its perception of technology. The opportunities to exploit technology and/or the threat from technology-driven disruption are now relevant to all organisations and data, and information is the lifeblood of all companies. So, my advice is be prepared to be flexible about how the organisation has chosen to think about technology. Should CIOs seek to become CEOs? The answer to this is all about context in terms of the skills and experience of the individual and the nature of the company. That said, I think it’s fair to say that I would www.intelligentcio.com MANY ‘TRADITIONAL’ ORGANISATIONS ARE MOVING TO CLOUD-BASED CAPABILITIES BUT IN DOING SO ARE NOT RECOGNISING THE IMPORTANCE OF CHANGING THE SECURITY APPROACH. INTELLIGENTCIO 61