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Are you too Canadian to be CIO?

Are you too Canadian to be CIO?

By:  Vawn Himmelsbach  On: 04 Nov 2009 For: CIO Canada Creator

International experience, particularly in the U.S., is proving to be highly valuable to prospective employers and the recruiters who work for them. How local IT executives can stay competitive

Canadian CIOs have a lot to bring to the table, according to the recruiters. The cultural style of Canadian leaders tends to be more adaptable and collaborative, and that’s how they’re perceived in global firms, said David Boehmer, a partner with Heidrick & Struggles. But while there’s an appreciation for the potential of Canadian leadership, the one gap is that a lot of these individuals have been in one organization – typically domestic – most of their career. And global firms are looking for on-the-ground global experience.

That means if you’re a Canadian CIO, you’re not just competing with people in your own city or province anymore. Especially in large, complex organizations, the net is being cast wider for potential candidates. “If we aren’t getting [that global experience] in Canada, then we need to start casting our net wider in terms of managing our own careers, looking at getting experience with a multinational that has headquarters in the U.S. or maybe in Europe,” said Banks. That’s something he’s managed to do with his own career, while basing himself in Vancouver – a city that doesn’t have a huge CIO community.

Cooper believes what we’re seeing now is the result of a North American employment market. “We just hired a global chief technology officer,” he said. “We ended up hiring a Canadian, but our search took us to the U.S. where we interviewed people from New York and Chicago. Here at Manulife, because of our international footprint, it’s core to what we want to do.” Within IT he expects to see much more movement across divisions and geographies – in fact, this is becoming part of the firm’s formal talent management program, allowing employees to get that international experience. All recent hires of senior IT execs have had some degree of international experience. Other Canadian enterprises should consider doing the same thing.

“With the U.S. economy being 10 times larger than ours, we’ll start to see perhaps more U.S.-based CIOs placed in jobs in Canada, but it doesn’t mean that Canadians won’t be placed in the U.S.,” said Cooper.

Even if Canadians are being pitted against Americans for jobs, it’s a fundamentally different job market – they’re different cultures, with different service-delivery platforms. Ultimately, to stay competitive in this expanding talent pool, it may mean learning how to navigate both worlds.










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vawn himmelsbach Vawn Himmelsbach is a Toronto-based journalist and regular contributor to IT World Canada's publications. She also writes about travel and runs the Web site http://GlobalNomad.ca.

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