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    <title>CIO Connect</title>
    
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    <id>tag:typepad.com,2003:weblog-1462672</id>
    <updated>2008-05-27T09:25:36Z</updated>
    <subtitle>Comment and opinion from IT leaders group CIO Connect</subtitle>
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        <title>It's good to talk</title>
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        <published>2008-05-27T10:25:36+01:00</published>
        <updated>2008-05-27T09:25:36Z</updated>
        <summary>As the imperative for business and IT to effectively merge under the same banner becomes ever more pressing, so does the need for business and IT to speak the same language. While some chief information officers (CIOs) believe the business...</summary>
        <author>
            <name>Computing blogs</name>
        </author>
        <category scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" term="skills" />
        
        
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>As the imperative for business and IT to effectively merge under the same 
banner becomes ever more pressing, so does the need for business and IT to speak 
the same language.</p>
<p>While some chief information officers (CIOs) believe the business has to work 
harder to understand IT, the vast majority recognise that most of the work has 
to come from the technology side.</p>
<p>CIOs ideally want business communications skills to pervade the IT 
organisation, but existing cultures sometimes mean the development of broader 
skills is not feasible in the short-term.</p>
<p>As a consequence, 73 per cent of <a target="_blank" href="http://www.cio-connect.com%20/">CIO Connect’s members</a> use relationship managers ­- skilled 
communicators who can understand what the business needs and explain how IT can 
help users.</p>
<p>But CIOs remain clear this is not the answer longer term. Many recognise that 
relationship managers are an unnecessary layer between business and development, 
and more-enlightened organisations should be moving to a tighter interaction in 
order to keep pace with user needs.</p>
<p>Such sentiments were also highlighted by a CIO Connect poll at the end of 
2007 on the need for a communications chief to manage the entirety of the IT 
function’s external communications.</p>
<p>The approach was rejected by 61 per cent of respondents, and there is a 
strong belief that communicating IT to the business is the responsibility of 
every IT professional. CIO Connect members were almost unanimous on the need for 
IT departments to have business communications skills.</p>
<p>CIOs should also devote time to integration. While communications expertise 
can be used to enhance messages, creating a separate role for communications 
places another layer between IT and the business.</p>
<p>One key challenge is putting in place the right measurements to ensure the 
systems and services CIOs manage are delivering what the business wants.</p>
<p>A majority of organisations clearly think they have some way to go, with 
<br />53 per cent of CIOs believing there is a discrepancy between how technology 
leaders and their organisations measure success.</p>
<p>There is a huge difference, however, between CIO responses and their senior 
team members, many of whom are aspiring IT leaders.</p>
<p>The vast majority (85 per cent) of senior team respondents believe there is a 
discrepancy between how CIOs and their organisations measure success.</p>
<p>This is a clear indication that the next generation of IT leaders believe 
they will have to approach performance measurement in a different way.</p>
<p>Other CIO Connect polls have also suggested that current metrics are often 
ineffective or inappropriate.</p>
<p>Almost three-quarters (73 per cent) of members do not believe they have the 
best key performance indicators (KPIs) in place.</p>
<p>And when it comes to IT metrics, CIO Connect members feel value-management 
frameworks should be used to educate stakeholders, rather than for 
cost-justification.</p>
<p>An increasing number of CIOs also think the marketing of IT needs to become 
slicker and more creative.</p>
<p>As an example, working with an external marketing consultancy to produce 
video and picture story boards that explain the business impact of technology 
deployments has already proven successful in at least one organisation 
undergoing major transformation.</p>
<p><em>Nick Kirkland is chief executive of technology leadership network CIO 
Connect</em></p></div>
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    <entry>
        <title>All change</title>
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        <published>2008-04-17T11:05:31+01:00</published>
        <updated>2008-04-17T10:05:31Z</updated>
        <summary>Business transformation is still high on the agenda for many chief information officers (CIOs), as they seek to rebuild their IT organisations along service-oriented lines, adapt to new technologies and deliver business agility. It can be difficult, particularly when many...</summary>
        <author>
            <name>Computing blogs</name>
        </author>
        <category scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" term="strategy" />
        
        
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>Business transformation is still high on the agenda for many chief 
information officers (CIOs), as they seek to rebuild their IT organisations 
along service-oriented lines, adapt to new technologies and deliver business 
agility.</p>
<p>It can be difficult, particularly when many experts believe the main keys to 
successful transformation are culture and processes, which the CIO is generally 
unable to change without the support of senior business management.</p>
<p>A concern I often hear from CIO Connect members is that IT people are in 
command of the technology but not all the other facets of a successful business. 
</p>
<p>As a result, the skills to effect full transformation are wider than the IT 
director’s remit. And in a recent <a href="https://member.cio-connect.com/">CIO 
Connect</a> poll on leadership, only 27 per cent of members thought their 
organisations had the culture and processes in place to encourage an agile 
business relationship.</p>
<p>But, are CIOs up to the job of leading business transformation? A majority 
(60 per cent) think they are.</p>
<p>CIOs in many large organisations have dealt with a massively altered 
technology landscape in the past 10 years and in my experience have better 
change management skills than many business leaders.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, the demands on a leader of change are high and most employees 
working for CIOs feel differently. The same poll showed 74 per cent of CIOs’ 
team members agreeing that most technology leaders lack the skills needed to 
transform the business.</p>
<p>Facets such as communication, distributed management, relationship 
management, creativity, financial know-how, innovation and agility in managing 
change are crucial to the role of a leader who wants to transform any business. 
</p>
<p>CIOs will need to take a fuller account of the impact of planned changes from 
different perspectives.</p>
<p>IT leaders need to understand the impact of change on others. To instil 
effective changes in behaviour calls for a range of skills.</p>
<p>CIOs must actively fortify their leadership skills ­ either through a 
training programme or simply by recruiting or seconding people into the IT 
leadership team with supplementary skill sets.</p>
<p>Softer, more social capabilities are called for, rather than the analytic and 
project management competencies for which IT is best known.</p>
<p>At CIO Connect, we believe there are several critical success factors for 
change projects and these help illustrate the types of skills needed by IT 
leaders if they are to drive change programmes:</p>
<p>* Manage perceptions and expectations ­ people do not necessarily share the 
same beliefs in a project<br />* Project leadership and accountability are 
vital<br />* Pay attention to team building and inter-team communication<br />* 
Fight organisational politics<br />* Spend more time on requirements and ensure 
that projects have effective business sponsorship</p>
<p>IT leaders can place themselves at the heart of the organisation by driving 
through change management programmes, but only if they recognise the need to 
develop their teams, and their own people-management skills.</p>
<p>CIOs will remain at the centre of change and those who have invested in their 
leadership skills will be heading cultural change projects.</p>
<p><em>Nick Kirkland is chief executive of IT leader network CIO Connect</em>. 
</p></div>
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    <entry>
        <title>The future is turning green</title>
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        <published>2008-01-11T11:16:04+00:00</published>
        <updated>2008-01-11T11:16:04Z</updated>
        <summary>The past 12 months have seen a host of leading firms take on the challenge of environmentalism. Businesses such as E.On, Britannia and BBC Worldwide are among the companies that have carried out year-long workplace programmes that help staff measure...</summary>
        <author>
            <name>Computing blogs</name>
        </author>
        <category scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" term="green" />
        
        
<content type="xhtml" xml:lang="en-GB" xml:base="http://cioconnect.computing.co.uk/">
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>The past 12 months have seen a host of leading firms take on the challenge of 
environmentalism.</p>
<p>Businesses such as <a target="_blank" href="http://www.eon.com/">E.On</a>, <a target="_blank" href="http://www.britannia.co.uk/">Britannia</a> and <a target="_blank" href="http://www.bbcworldwide.com/">BBC Worldwide</a> are among 
the companies that have carried out year-long workplace programmes that help 
staff measure and improve their firm’s green credentials, in terms of waste, 
energy, water and transport.</p>
<p>The initiatives are likely to tap into the broader corporate social 
responsibility agenda of an organisation.<br />In some cases, the projects are 
seen as helping to drive important standards, including ISO 14001 or BS 8555 
Environmental Management Systems accreditation. </p>
<p>In other cases, the plans help drive sustainability charters and the 
relationships being developed with<br />organisations such as the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.carbontrust.co.uk/default.ct">Carbon 
Trust</a>.</p>
<p>The approaches are invariably driven by the wider organisation, and typically 
the board, finance, human resources and compliance functions set overall policy. 
</p>
<p>But a consequence of the top-down approach is that few IT departments have 
their own specific green computing policy.</p>
<p>Just 28 per cent of technology leaders have a formal policy to ensure that IT 
systems become more environmentally friendly, according to a recent CIO Connect 
poll.</p>
<p>However, the research also found that a third of chief information officers 
(CIOs) are sufficiently concerned about green IT that they are starting to 
explore the use of energy and heat efficient servers in the datacentre.</p>
<p>Although organisations recognise the reputational value of being seen to be 
environmentally friendly, it is cost savings that should be adopted as a true 
driver for green IT activity.</p>
<p>The size of the corporate energy bill and the amount of power that can be 
saved with IT-led initiatives are measurable benefits.</p>
<p>IT-led policies covering recycling, on-demand resource use, duplex print 
management, thin client adoption, auto power-off of standby PCs, replacing CRT 
monitors with TFT screens, and server virtualisation are likely to lead 
to quantifiable energy savings.</p>
<p>So far these activities have been implemented without too much trouble, 
largely because their effect on users is moderate. However, planned activities 
such as the greening of the corporate datacentre will force the organisation to 
understand that some financial investment must be made to deliver longer-term, 
environmentally-friendly benefits.</p>
<p>HSBC is one company prepared to invest in a green future, having publicly 
stated its intention to<br />become the world’s first carbon-neutral bank.</p>
<p>One of the main ways the group is working to reduce its carbon footprint is 
through the use of technology to reduce unnecessary travel.</p>
<p>But HSBC is also looking at new ways of constructing datacentres in Mexico, 
Hong Kong, the UK and the US that will be much leaner, energy-efficient power 
houses for its global business.</p>
<p>Following on from such trailblazing activity, 2008 will be the year that 
every CIO makes green computing best practice a matter of course.</p>
<p><em>Nick Kirkland is managing director of CIO Connect, a leading forum for 
chief information officers and chief executives. </em> </p></div>
</content>


    </entry>
    <entry>
        <title>US rules will affect your data </title>
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        <id>tag:typepad.com,2003:post-40576142</id>
        <published>2007-09-27T13:24:00+01:00</published>
        <updated>2007-09-27T12:24:00Z</updated>
        <summary>Yet another aspect of compliance is about to loom large on the chief information officer (CIO) agenda. Recent changes to Federal rules of civil procedure governing lawsuits in the US will have big implications for UK CIOs who also operate...</summary>
        <author>
            <name>Computing blogs</name>
        </author>
        <category scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" term="security" />
        <category scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" term="software" />
        <category scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" term="strategy" />
        
        
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<p>Yet another aspect of compliance is about to loom large on the chief 
information officer (CIO) agenda.</p>
<p>Recent changes to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Rules_of_Civil_Procedure">Federal 
rules of civil procedure </a>governing lawsuits in the US will have big 
implications for UK CIOs who also operate Stateside.</p>
<p>The procedure raises questions about how an organisation handles electronic 
evidence and ­ alongside other legislation ­ requires companies to be able to 
locate relevant information wherever it is stored.</p>
<p>Software that is used to automate the so-called e-discovery process is 
starting to arrive on the market.</p>
<p>Eventually CIOs will be able to look to a single system capable of automating 
the whole spectrum of consolidated archiving, analytics and real-time policy 
management.</p>
<p>E-discovery software could best be described as being a linguistics engine 
with specialist tools that analyse words and the construction of phrases and 
sentences in stored, unstructured text files.</p>
<p>Such applications are fronted by a deliberately simple user interface, so 
that any business user could carry out searches in natural language. E-discovery 
software is ultimately capable of searching and discovering information held, 
not only in documents and applications, but in voice and video records as well. 
</p>
<p>Regulatory and judicial bodies recognise the area is enormously complex. The 
unique characteristics of electronic data, compared with paper records, present 
unprecedented challenges for the CIO.</p>
<p>But start to examine electronic information and records management from the 
three different perspectives of legal, records management and IT, and it quickly 
becomes clear that software tools are only part of the issue.</p>
<p>Obligations of the litigation process ­ such as the duty to preserve 
information that is, or may become, discoverable ­ differ greatly from the 
operational needs of data storage, where data deletion and destruction is a real 
and acceptable stage in the information lifecycle.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://www.thesedonaconference.org/dltForm?did=TSG9_05.pdf"><em>Sedona 
Guidelines, Best Practice and Commentary for Managing Information and Records in 
the Electronic Age</em></a>, is a good starting point for anyone wanting to 
familiarise themselves with the extent of the problem.</p>
<p>CIOs will require a practical, flexible and scalable approach to address the 
differences in an organisation’s business needs, its operations, the IT 
infrastructure and emerging regulatory and legal responsibilities.</p>
<p>For some, such an approach could favour a centralised function for 
compliance, while others may opt to delegate significant responsibilities to 
individual employees, before turning on automation to identify and maintain 
records.</p>
<p>But for now it is clear that no single standard or model will fully meet an 
organisation’s information and records management policies and procedures.</p>
<p><em>Nick Kirkland is managing director of <a href="http://www.cio-connect.com/">CIO Connect, a leading forum for chief 
information officers and chief executives</a></em></p></div></div>
</content>


    </entry>
    <entry>
        <title>IT autonomy will attract talent </title>
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        <id>tag:typepad.com,2003:post-40576218</id>
        <published>2007-09-20T13:25:00+01:00</published>
        <updated>2007-09-20T12:25:00Z</updated>
        <summary>The debate over whether or not IT departments should hand over more control to users seems to be a thorny issue for many technology leaders. While the rapid evolution of consumer and internet technologies is undoubtedly opening up new opportunities...</summary>
        <author>
            <name>Computing blogs</name>
        </author>
        <category scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" term="skills" />
        <category scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" term="strategy" />
        
        
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<p>The debate over whether or not IT departments should hand over more control 
to users seems to be a thorny issue for many technology leaders.</p>
<p>While the rapid evolution of consumer and internet technologies is 
undoubtedly opening up new opportunities for people to work more flexibly, 
productively and collaboratively, it is presenting IT departments with big 
challenges in terms of security and systems management.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, in most organisations the positive argument is winning the 
day.</p>
<p>In a recent <a href="http://www.cio-connect.com/">CIO Connect </a>members’ 
poll, almost seven out of 10 members agreed that IT departments should pass more 
control to users.</p>
<p>The word control, of course, could imply a number of things. It could mean 
that individual users are allowed to choose, own or manage the devices with 
which they connect to the corporate network, whether physically or virtually. 
</p>
<p>Control could mean users are able to use the software and online tools<br />of 
their choice, or it could mean they are given the ability to develop their own 
systems, services or processes, largely independent of the IT department. </p>
<p>Among businesses that rely on knowledge workers, IT should be doing all it 
can to provide staff with the flexibility to carry out their jobs as 
productively and efficiently as possible, without compromising security, 
performance or resilience.</p>
<p>The problem is that giving up entral control inevitably means accepting a 
higher level of risk for the organisation.</p>
<p>Of course, there are steps you can take to minimise that risk ­ such as 
having clearly defined security policies, effective training and good 
governance.</p>
<p>But, however you cut it, giving over more control to users means accepting 
you will have less control within the IT department.</p>
<p>CIO Connect members are fairly clear about the nature of the issues: 
“Retaining IT function control is too often a job creation scheme for the IT 
function and distracts from other uses of resource that add value to the 
organisation,” said one member.</p>
<p>Another commented: “Given the right level of training, the best systems and a 
culture of empowerment, it should be possible to give a high level of control 
back to users. What seems to happen, though, is that one of those variables is 
missing and the opportunity is lost.”</p>
<p>The biggest factor likely to exacerbate the debate over the next few years 
will be the influx into the workforce of a young, tech-literate and web-savvy 
generation who have grown up using consumer technologies.</p>
<p>If companies are to attract the most talented people in future, they will 
have to be able to demonstrate they understand this new world by giving those 
users the freedom to work effectively ­and collaboratively ­within it.</p>
<p><em>Nick Kirkland is managing director of CIO Connect, the leading forum for 
chief information officers and IT executives.</em></p></div></div>
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