• “Ade McCormack sounds a much-needed clarion call for IT to "grow up" and become a mature business function.”

    Nicholas Carr, author of Does IT Matter? and The Big Switch. Former executive editor – Harvard Business Review

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CIOs

April 25, 2008

The CIO as an Acquisition Partner

In a recent post on Information Week, John Soat asks "Is the CIO an effective position to enlist in your company's mergers and acquisitions strategy?"

This post raises some interesting issues. The first is the role of the CIO in the acquisition (there are no mergers) due diligence process. The second is the issue of the actual need for technology due diligence.

I think the CIO has a major role to play, but that may be lost on the executive team who see IT as the stuff that gets tied up once the light turns green. What they fail to realise is that in an IT-centric world, IT due diligence needs to happen near the start of the process.

However if the tech vendors and to some extent the users have their way, we will all be moving to web services. There will be multiple stove pipe solutions in use in the organisations involved. There will thus be less of an integration issue as the infrastructural aspects of the IT will be the vendors' problem. This is both a simplistic perspective and an extreme one. However I believe that we need to give this scenario some consideration. As it will also herald the death of the end-user IT function. 

April 15, 2008

Top 10 Reasons to Fire the CIO

Ben Worthen's WSJ blog Top 10 Reasons to Fire the CIO provides a good list.

The underlying themes are that poor CIOs exhibit many of the tendencies of technologists. For example poor empathy, diplomacy and political skills. It is quite common for the CIO to be fired when the exec team bring in the change merchants to improve the IT-situation. Smart CIOs would beat them to it and get their corner of the business in shape before an exasperated board takes extreme measures.

Again many CIOs don't know the difference between being smart and being right. This almost autistic disposition (High IQ, low EQ) does not endear them to their more well rounded business counterparts.

I get into this in The IT Value Stack.