Skip navigation
Twitter   Follow us  •   Share   Share    Become a member

Professional Development

2 Posts tagged with the ipad tag
0

 

Executive coach Dina Lichtman speaks with online media expert, Elizabeth Osder

 

As an executive coach who works with CTOs and CIOs in all kinds of companies, I often run across leaders who fail to embrace the newest, cutting-edge technology. It might be out of fear or lack of knowledge, but the outcome is the same … lost opportunities with their internal users and external customers.

 

The fact is, businesses have forever changed, and a world of more nimble, cost-effective tools, coupled with new consumer behavior, means that there is no turning back. As many have stated and current research indicates, CIOs face a unique challenge in dealing with these massive disruptions.

 

In light of these trends, I recently spoke to Elizabeth Osder, President of The Osder Group — an e-commerce and marketing consultancy — about the latest technology trends and cloud applications. In particular, I wanted her view of what impact the cloud will have on CIOs. Here are some excerpts from that conversation.

 

 

“Old World” Thinking

Elizabeth says that CIOs have traditionally viewed the world in an “Old World” way: “The priority and framework for a good CIO had been to innovate information sharing in ways that cut costs and increased productivity. CIOs tended to ask questions such as these:

 

  • What computer networking system do I need?
  • What's the best telephone solution?
  • Where do I store my data; how do I keep it secure?
  • How do I manage a large IT staff and run a support desk?
  • Do I buy, build or partner?”

 

 

“New World” Approaches

By contrast, Elizabeth says, CIOs who understand the current environment understand the following “New World” approaches: “The digital world is making it increasingly easy to partner and borrow services that are low cost, and sometimes free. Old-world, big-business goals that required huge budgets can be achieved in a variety of new-world ways. Often, IT is now about solving new problems - moving from project management to product development.” As a result, she adds, “new products may emerge, and there is no clear set of instructions. Good digital product development is agile and nimble, and innovation results from testing and learning in the market.”

 

It’s not a matter of throwing out everything that came before, she says: “IT still needs to carry out some of the traditional goals along with the new. Above all, [IT executives] need to operate more nimble and experimental organizations.”

 

As an example, Elizabeth notes that in the media industry, “early digital efforts were often owned and defined by IT. Currently, the technology teams that support new product development are often separate, more nimble, and unencumbered by traditional IT. The difficult question is: can a CIO play in both worlds or are they wedded to Old World IT practices?”

 

Elizabeth asks “how CIOs-- who are used to buying and building to clearly defined specifications-- will approach new challenges in the consumption of information.” For instance, how will they adapt to and invent solutions using wireless devices, iPads as sales tools, and real-time alerts? Will they be ready for these rapidly moving innovations?”

 

Implementing Change

Based on her research and experience, Elizabeth explains why it's hard to implement change: “CIOs have big staffs that deal with technology they have purchased or built. What do you do with these staffers as consumerization takes hold? Is this a time for massive layoffs or for retraining? How do you innovate with cloud-based systems when many middle management jobs rely on running large infrastructure systems?” How do you secure new technologies?

 

Among the examples of Old World vs. New World options, she cites are: Microsoft Office vs. Google Docs; shared servers vs. Dropbox; telephone systems vs. Skype; FaceTime and iChat; email vs. real-time chat; cloud computing vs. infrastructure. They must ask themselves: “Do I rent space that flexes with my need, or do I build and maintain a castle?

 

Moving to the Cloud Painlessly 

Osder Group offers solutions and says that those who experiment, test and design using various solutions can learn and explore new ways. It may also help if an organization creates an independent innovation group and freeing members from the hierarchy of the old organization.

 

A final bit of advice is for CIOs to talk to their internal and external customers, see how behavior is changing, and develop products to make work more efficient.

0

peter_hinssen.gif

 

There are many new organizational pressures that CIOs have to address.

 

One is from the top level of the organization where CEOs often have only a basic understanding of IT — much like the ABCs: in this case, Apple, Bangalore and Cloud. In other words, CEOs want everything from IT to be as simple and intuitive as the stuff that Apple builds. Then, if there’s a problem or budgets are getting tighter, the solution is to “ship it all out to Bangalore; let’s get rid of this.” And lastly, since even airline magazines are writing about cloud computing, the CEO now knows that the business can not only outsource to India, but to the cloud as well.


Consumerization also is having a devastating effect on the IT department. Previously, IT was the place that dispensed the cool technology to people when they started work at a company: a notebook PC, a cell phone or some video capability. Nowadays, when Generation Y employees begin work on their first day and are handed their tools, they pull a face and say, “You expect me to use this old stuff?” In many cases, people have better hardware and better Internet access at home than at the office. They expect the IT department to follow all the latest trends and to keep up with every new hardware fad. And that’s the dilemma.


CIOs are clearly caught in the middle: Much as they want to meet these demands, they cannot always cater to everyone.


Recently, for example, I talked to the CIO of a temporary employment agency. The company boasts of a modern image and a CEO who requested that all employees in the company be provided with an iPad to show how cutting-edge the company was. “Oh, and while you’re at it, make sure they have iPhones, too,” the CEO reportedly said. Was that the same CEO who kept asking for budget cuts, the CIO wondered?


The CIO was unsure of what to do. On the one hand, he would have been glad to provide everyone with the latest technology. But the CIO had doubts over both the manageability and the security of the iPad in a corporate environment. And most of all, he was absolutely not sure the enterprise applications that he had spent so much time building were going to work properly on this platform. Same for the iPhone.


Should he give in to the demands from his users and the CEO? Or should he use his role as an IT leader to adhere to the strict standards he had set out for the company to ensure compliance on different levels?


I believe that it’s useless resisting the pull of emerging technology. Consumerization means employees will bring their iPads and iPhones to work whether the devices are sanctioned or not. And if they’re not able to use corporate applications on these devices, employees will grab some collaboration tools from the “cloud” and move massive amounts of corporate data onto these cloud-hosted applications.


It seems to me that the CIO really has no choice but to follow these whims from users and management and embrace new technologies as they emerge. At the same time, IT has to be prepared to stretch the current constraints on security and compliance to support the greater goals of the organization and its auditors. And that’s not as easy as ABC.


How do you cope with conflicting demands from internal and external stakeholders? Let me know here on Smart Enterprise Exchange.



We encourage your feedback. Reach out via the "Contact the Editor" and "Contact the Concierge" services for any needs, questions or comments. We look forward to serving you!

Paula Klein, Smart Enterprise Exchange Editor
e-mail

Ellen Lalier, Smart Enterprise Exchange Concierge
e-mail
phone 516-562-5727; fax 516-562-5466