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IT Leadership for a new decade: CIOs on innovation

IT Leadership for a new decade: CIOs on innovation

By:  Shane Schick  On: 06 Jul 2010 For: CIO Canada Creator

The final installment of our annual CIO Canada reader roundtable delves into the process of moving from ideas to execution. How you can be a change agent in your organization

This is the second installment in our three-part series from our annual CIO Canada roundtable. Click here for part one and here for part two.  

CIO Canada: We talked earlier how the CIO is the support function and also how to manage all those ideas that get thrown over the wall. I also want to talk a little bit about innovation as a CIO and how in various ways you can either create or contribute to the efforts around that. I’m going to start with Ambles and Omri, given that one of you is at a startup and other working in an industry that is going through a lot of turmoil right now. How do you see yourself contributing to innovations in your organization?

Ambles Kwok, CTO, SPRINGBOARD RETAIL NETWORKS: I would love to help show that one size doesn’t fit all, especially in the IT world. Creativity comes with individuality as well as diversity. With all the companies I worked with, they do have a base of what most people should use as laptop images but we allowed room for selections, meaning if you’re in a certain row, you should be using certain equipment. Maybe it’s different in other industries, you need to use whatever equipment that enables you to excel in that area. That’s what our take is. I do encourage people to use different hardware. It brings different perspectives on what you’re using and you’ll see other ideas come just from how people use it. Right now, I need to push the mobile agenda, so we encourage BlackBerries, iPhones, Androids, HPCs so you name it. Just do whatever to come up with the ideas. That’s the angle. Yes, I admit that it creates a nightmare for IT to support it and to ensure all the security policy around it, but we are not nannies, we are coaches. We just need them to know why the security has to be in place. Just in case we get audited, you have to be in this baseline. Just don’t cross that line but within that line, do whatever.

Omri Tintpulver, CIO, BRUNICO COMMUNICATIONS: I try very hard to spend as little time as possible on keeping the lights on and meeting with business heads to explore new products, new concepts. The business model in publishing has changed. It’s outside of our control so we need to innovate just to stay alive. It’s gotten to the point where I’m not just meeting with business heads, I’m meeting with clients. I’m going to trade shows. I’m having conversations with a filter that you bring when you’re a CIO into those meetings and trying to come up with new products, totally new businesses. I think fundamentally we’re trying to get closer to the transactions that happen for our clients so the more value we can give them through new products, typically they’re on-line products, database products, whatever it is, then we’ll survive so innovation is number one.


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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