SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Information Architecture >> Messaging and Collaboration

ITXPO: To improve IT, consider ditching e-mail

ITXPO: To improve IT, consider ditching e-mail

By:  Patrick Thibodeau  On: 09 Oct 2007 For: Computerworld Creator

It may be thought of as mission-critical software, but technology executives at an industry conference hosted by research firm Gartner Inc. say messaging tools don't improve business alignment

ORLANDO - If you want to get the crowd at Gartner ITexpo's to laugh, just tell them why e-mail is awful.

That's what Leslie Brennan, CIO of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, did when she described the method she has set for her staff to improve communication. Her answer? Meet face to face.

Improving communication "is really talking to the business, not e-mailing the business," said Brennan, a panelist on CIO performance issues, whose remark elicited laughter from this Blackberry-carrying audience.

"It's more than just getting up and talking business -- it's talking to each other," said Brennan. Moreover, encouraging face-to-face interaction "teaches them to behave a little bit more professionally -- a little more businesslike."

The need for CIOs to improve the alignment of technology with the business is well-known. But what some IT managers are saying is that business-oriented thinking has to encompass the entire IT organization -- and it's the CIO's job to make that happen.

When someone from the technical group approaches Patricia Graham about a technical change, she doesn't want a purely IT discussion.

"I'd like it to be articulated in terms of what it means for the business," said Graham, the CIO at CenterPoint Energy Inc. in Houston, who was also a panelist.

"You are only as good as your staff," said Michael Goodwin, the senior vice president of IT at Hallmark Cards Inc. in Kansas City. Goodwin said the staff needs to learn the business and spend time with sales or operations organizations "so they can better understand the challenges and issues that they are facing and bring those back with solutions and capabilities that add value."

Brennan also suggested another method she uses for training staff. Every Monday, she attends an executive-level meeting at her agency to discuss "everything that's going on." One step she takes after the meeting is to type up her notes and distribute them to the entire staff.

That is knowledge that helps the staff "become more attached to the mission of the organization instead of thinking they are in the IT shop," Brennan said.

While IT managers are doing more to help their staffs understand the business, the role of the CIO within an organization is unfinished, said Leo Genders, CIO of the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation.

"The CIO's role is, essentially, still defining itself. They are not teaching how to be a CIO in college," Genders said. Pointing at the conference audience from his seat on the stage, Genders said there are IT leaders who come from the technology side and have experience "pulling cable," while there are others who have a business, rather than a technical, background. The role is still in its infancy and "we have actually a chance to shape it."


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 575   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Patrick Thibodeau Patrick Thibodeau covers SaaS and enterprise applications, outsourcing, government IT policies, data centers and IT workforce issues for Computerworld. Follow Patrick on Twitter at @DCgov , or subscribe to Pa... more

Related Content

CIOs need to get up close and personal
CIOs need to get up close and personalEncouraging face-to-face interaction teaches IT professionals to behave a little bit more professionally, and a little more businesslike
Integrating IT for collaboration - Application platform helps connect disparate data
Integrating IT for collaboration - Application platform helps connect disparate dataSolving the challenge of connecting systems, people and information requires a fundamental change in the way businesses design their IT infrastructure. By optimizing their application infrastructure, organizations create an environment that fosters close alignment between business and IT, and ensure that the two work together to meet business goals.
Symantec to cut costs by CDN$235 million
Symantec to cut costs by CDN$235 millionWith sales of its storage software dropping, Symantec Corp. plans to lay off some staff as part of plans to cut CDN$235 million in expenses.
The slumdog millionaires in enterprise IT
we haven’t gotten out to see a lot of movies in the theatre since our son was born last summer, but my wife and i manage
Streamlining of Microsoft licensing programs is overdue
one of the under the radar happenings here at the microsoft worldwide partner conference in houston is the software giant streamlining its licensing models for several of its products.ever since microsoft adopted licensing people have hated it. partners, users, distributors, microsoft employees and, to a certain
blog comments powered by Disqus