Intelligent CIO Europe Issue 22 | Page 44

FEATURE: STATE OF THE CIO ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// THE SURVEY SHOWS THAT NEARLY TWO-THIRDS (63%) OF CIOS BELIEVE BUSINESS AND LEADERSHIP SKILLS ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN TECHNOLOGY ACUMEN. concept around the prevention of breaches has become a board level issue tailored with CEOs tending to be the ones driving the digital agenda because obviously, it’s an organisation-wide transformation that needs to happen. But the CIO owns many of the platforms, the systems and the capabilities, whether they’re on-premise in their data centre, or they’re using a cloud-based service, like ServiceNow. Because of that capability, they can deliver more quickly and therefore, their voice has been heard. What advice would you give to CIOs who wish to position themselves as business visionaries? For years, there’s always been this thing around the idea that IT must align itself with the business, which almost became a 44 INTELLIGENTCIO cliché. I think it’s now at the point where CIOs actually talk in terms of value or outcomes – where they have to understand the customer journey or the employee journey and what they are actually trying to achieve. Technology is obviously a major enabler of that. But unlike the way IT departments once were, being able to own everything, manage everything and monitor everything with public cloud capability and platforms is no longer the case. You might be using something from Microsoft or AWS and it’s really around proving that you can deliver value quickly, easily and autonomously at times. Gone are the days of not being on time or over budget. Because we have seen many instances where a business has said, ‘if you can’t deliver it to me, then I’m going to go around you and do my own thing.’ So, I think for the CIO, it’s about alignment and delivering value, but also truly understanding the outcome that the business is trying to reach. And in some cases, helping to support this and in other cases, getting out of the way and saying: ‘A cloud-based platform like ServiceNow is the right way to go. Go and do it. We can’t do any better, so we’re going to get out of the way’. With other members of the C-suite unlikely to be IT experts, how can CIOs educate them on how IT is providing value for money for an organisation? I think it’s educating them on what it is they’re trying to achieve and how technology enables that. I actually think that the better CIOs who have done this well speak less about the technology and the gadgetry and say, ‘we know what you’re trying to achieve, we know www.intelligentcio.com