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CIO Canada roundtable: Smart thinking for tough times

CIO Canada roundtable: Smart thinking for tough times

By:  David Carey  On: 31 May 2009 For: CIO Canada Creator

Senior IT executives from Proctor & Gamble, Loblaws, Bank of Montreal, the Ontario government and elsewhere discuss the impact of the economic downturn on chief information officers and technology management. Here are the highlights

DONIZ: Keep focused on your IT road map, on your business strategy and on excellence in delivery. Use this as an opportunity to drive your partnership ever further.

WOODS: Put yourself in a position of strength so that you can leap over the competition when the market turns around. There are opportunities out there, if you have the wherewithal to capitalize on them. And part of that means to continue to invest for the future. You need to carefully balance cost reductions, which are critically important, with the necessary spending that will move your business forward to achieve your strategic goals.

BETTON: Make sure that the staff are engaged, and that you communicate, communicate, communicate. Everybody has to understand that you all need to paddle the boat in the same direction and not allow it to get off course. Focus, engagement and communication are more important now than they have ever been. LINDSAY: Ensure that you have the right forum to have open discussion around prioritisation and alignment to business strategies, and have the key IT and Business leadership around the table to make those decisions collectively.

DILLANE: Be a realistic visionary. Continue to invest and move towards your strategic direction in a way that tactically helps achieve the necessary short-term results for the organisation. JOHNSTON: Together with the business, prioritise initiatives by criteria. At any given moment you should literally be able to stack, order, and rank them. Also, invest now to retain your people when things are on the rebound.

CUMMING: Understand the cost drivers within your organisation. IT needs to be able to respond very quickly, and to do that you need to understand how the strategic drivers behind the business strategies connect to your IT cost structure.










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David Carey David Carey is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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