How an MBA can bring out the business leader in the CIO

Added 15th May 2009

Article Highlights

  • The importance of CIO development for organizations
  • How an MBA program can help
  • Why the CIO is a cross-functional role

After four days of potholing, moving barrels across imaginary ravines and trying to map-read their way around the Herefordshire countryside, the pressure on the group of trainees was beginning to tell.

“Some CIOs acknowledge that employers see personal development as a luxury. That is a mistake since there is always a balance to be struck between doing a job and learning how to do it better.”

The military-style program was designed to foster leadership skills and demonstrate the dynamics involved in group working. "Form, storm, reform, perform," the instructors explained. The group seemed to have got stuck in the storming stage, or that is how it seemed when one member, a local authority IT manager, tipped over a table in frustration during a particularly tense discussion and was led from the room by the course leader, an ex-SAS officer. Courses on leadership are more popular than ever as organizations seek to equip their IT bosses with the skills to cope in an increasingly complex environment. Personal development is about helping individuals become effective leaders able to set direction, persuade others to follow and deliver IT benefits to the business. But no matter how inventive the training courses on offer, many CIOs, like the unfortunate delegate in Herefordshire, are struggling to apply them to the practical problems of running an IT department. When IT management organization CIO Connect asked 28 of its blue-chip company members about the importance of training and development, they all said it was critical to have plans in place for both themselves and their teams. About two-thirds said that they had benefited from such programs.  But the survey went on to reveal an alarming gap  between these good intentions and the reality of training in these firms. Nearly half the CIOs polled did not think their existing plans were good, and 14 percent considered them inadequate. For CIO Connect members, the priorities for personal development were influencing boardroom colleagues and building commitment to IT across the organization, although, worryingly, respondents did not give their own needs a high priority. "Training is not a strength," of some economies agrees Alistair Russell, development director at CIO Connect. "It is an important lever to effect change but, unfortunately, it is not always accepted as a significant one. There is an opportunity for us to do more." Russell runs CIO Connect's program for training the CIOs of the future. "Personal development only has an impact if it changes the way an organization works," he says. "There is no use in building a CV with qualifications just for the sake of it." His program is a mixture of one-to-one coaching and group working on real problems. "Leadership is situational: You don't get to be there by being like someone you worked with," he says. "Different circumstances call for different kinds of people. Talking in the abstract is only partially helpful: You also need feedback in the heat of the moment." Russell thinks that around five percent of a CIO's time should be spent thinking about how he or she is doing their job. He himself spends around an hour each week going over issues in his own working life. "At a senior level you are very pushed for time so development is about making choices about how you spend what free time you have. "There is a difference between a one-shot course and development sustained over a period of time," he says. Chris White, CIO at international  corporate law firm Ashurst, agrees. He is putting his team leaders through a program called One Team, designed to foster better communication in his department. The program involves three or four residential sessions. "Often, people come back from a session enthused but then fall back into their old ways. One Team is a way of keeping the initiative going," he says. The program, which is driven by attendees, has paid off by breaking down communications barriers that had built up because the department is split between two sites. It also enabled the law firm to implement a document and e-mail system with far less hiccups than might otherwise have been the case.

  • Page 1 : How an MBA can bring out the business leader in the CIO
  • Page 2 : Out and About
  • Page 3 : Business-IT Bridge
  • Page 4 : The Power of Development

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