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This year, MIT is celebrating its 150th anniversary. That’s over a century and a half of knowledge-sharing that has lead to breakthroughs in science and engineering—innovations that have improved both social and economic welfare, year after year.

 

I am reposting here a version of an interview about our upcoming CIO Symposium that appears at: NEWS@MITSLOAN, Vol: XX Issue: 25 April 25, 2011

 

 

Graham Rong, SF ’06, has been the chair of the MIT CIO Symposium since 2009. Dean David Schmittlein noted that this event brings together MIT Sloan’s leading research and education with great CIOs, business leaders, and innovators from around the world. It is a platform to engage in problem-solving dialogue, gain strategic insights, and obtain solutions to improve diverse organizational and business issues for the present and well into the future.

Recently, Graham shared some of his thoughts regarding business trends, being a leader in innovation, and how his time at the MIT Sloan continues to shape his perspective.

 

Q. Reflecting on your experience at MIT Sloan and the CIO Symposium, what were the drivers for the past themes and topics? Were the ideas based on the economic climate or technology?

 

A. We have a different symposium theme every year. It is driven by industry trend-setters in global CIO leadership and corporate IT. But the common thread carried through the years is that it is always forward-looking in nature. A small group of us usually spends weeks drafting a theme based on research and reviews with thought leaders, both in academia and industry. Ideas for specific panel topics are based on the economy and tomorrow’s technologies.

 

For example, last year’s theme, “Top-Line Growth and Bottom-line Results,” reflected the initial stage of our economic recovery. Turning a corner means being aware of and ready for the best opportunity to glean top-line or optimal growth. A recovery period is a time of opportunities and options for fresh avenues, but one still needs to focus on the current (realistic) business operation.

 

Q. The subject of leadership has always been a recurring discussion topic at these symposiums. What leadership qualities did you learn through your MIT Sloan experience and what are the skills needed to lead innovation in business?

 

A. The academic research and entrepreneurial experience provided me with an excellent balance between technical aptitude and business acumen. At MIT Sloan, particularly in the Sloan Fellows Program in Innovation and Global Leadership, we worked side by side with a diverse group of global leaders, representing a very broad range of industries. It’s a great opportunity to discuss and share lessons learned on every possible business topic—technical, operational, and managerial. This enriched my background. It gave me an understanding that an important leadership quality is holistic thinking. This is another dimension to forward thinking, which is also a crucial attribute to being innovative. What I mean by holistic thinking is to be inclusive or comprehensive in acquiring actionable knowledge. That is, the collective intelligence I gather to make strategic decisions represents an entire body of information—insights not just from the consumers, but rather from key business influencers, including complementors, partners, buyers, suppliers, regulators, and special interest groups.

 

Q. As the MIT CIO Symposium is a link between academia and the global business world, how did you integrate the faculty in the development of this event?

 

A. We always work closely with MIT faculty. We have an academic keynote panel with five renowned MIT faculty members who share their latest research and inspire the business world. They give the business world a glimpse of pioneering efforts and future technologies. It’s a great way for the faculty to introduce peer-reviewed innovations to global executives. At the same time, the MIT faculty has an opportunity to dialogue with global CIOs and business leaders and get first-hand information on issues. Industry perspective and practices of the latest technology or business models can trigger new research ideas. As domain experts, MIT faculty members also participate in the review and judging of two of our highlights—the CIO Innovation Leadership Award and the Innovation Showcase. The showcase selects 10 outstanding companies representing cutting-edge B2B solutions that combine both value and innovation to Enterprise IT. It connects CIOs and senior IT executives with some of the most creative minds in enterprise IT. The relaxed atmosphere of this showcase allows everyone to stay in touch with the state-of-the-art thinking while networking with other IT executives. The second highlight is an award that honors CIOs who bring business value by orchestrating organizational change via the innovative use of IT and business processes. For the future, we are considering an advisory board of outstanding CIOs and business executives so that we continuously have a pulse on trends, insights, and challenges.

 

 

 

For more information, visit www.mitcio.com

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Enjoy your holidays with family and friends, but do take a short break to read these two excellent and highly relevant articles from the current McKinsey Quarterly. They may offer some inspiration for the new year.

 

 

 

The first is an interview with Shelley Leibowitz, former CIO at giant financial firms JP Morgan and Greenwich Capital [now part of Royal Bank of Scotland], who is now CIO at the World Bank.

 

 

She offers a thoughtful perspective about IT transformation, IT value, public versus private-sector responsibilities, and what she calls Information Management Technology—delivering IT throughout the organization.

 

 

There’s also a video capturing her thoughts about leading a truly global organization and getting in turn with the bank’s passion and mission.

 

 

The second provocative article, Reshaping IT Management for Turbulent Times, puts forth a new management model for IT that combines “factory-style productivity to keep costs down with a more nimble, innovation-focused approach to adapt to rapid change.” The approach is more than “relabeling functions,” the article contends. It challenges CIOs to adopt new leadership, governance and organizational changes to offer more effective IT services going forward.

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Here are some highlights and great quotes I want to share with you from yesterday's panel on Emerging Stronger from the Downturn:

 

--Bob Brennan, President and CEO of Iron Mountain: “Driving top-line growth is the only sustainable way to grow. Top-line growth doesn’t come from cost-savings. You can’t take out any more costs.”
--Sundar Subramaniam, chairman and founder Knome and Cambridge Technology Enterprises, on accountability and security: “If you are committed to change, you will figure out the rest…otherwise, you will never change.”
“Existing business has a high need for security; innovative business can take more chances.”
--Bob Burke, President, CEO and Director of ATG: “The CIO is a business facilitator…just as we are for our customers…they are a unifying force among all the silos.”
--Bob Brennan on CIO responsibilities: “Separate the I from the T; emphasis is on finding great people; don’t hunker down” and just focus on technology. Being a CIO is becoming a “ridiculously hard job; CIOs can’t play defense.” We look for so many qualities, it's like seeking a "purple squirrel."
--Chris Capossela, Senior VP, Microsoft: “CIOs want solutions, not products; they don’t want to be ‘sold to.”
--Sundar Subramaniam: CIOs who are mired in legacy have only three choices: migrate to something new, rearchitect what you have or “burn it and start over.”

 

Valauble advice or unrealistic in your everyday world?



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