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What it takes to become 'the extended CIO'

What it takes to become 'the extended CIO'

By:  Richard Hunter and George Westerman  On: 24 Nov 2009 For: CIO Canada Creator

In an excerpt from their new book, a Gartner vice-president and a research scientist at MIT discuss the concept of senior IT executives who move beyond their traditional role in technology

The role gave him plenty of opportunities to talk about enterprisewide business change with executives throughout the organization. For example, he launched an initiative called Operational Leverage to dramatically improve operational efficiencies in traditional overhead areas such as IT infrastructure, telephony, and call center footprint.

In 2008 Sacchi was asked to serve as acting COO of one of CompuCredit’s IT-intensive new businesses, a mobile phone venture that has a large credit component. In his words, "I’m fortunate enough to have been offered the opportunity to try my hand at a C-level business role with P&L responsibility. It’s definitely of interest to me . . . I’ll try it and see if I can be successful at it. I’ve been a CIO here for almost six years, and it’s probably time to let someone else grow into that role. We have a great team and a clear succession plan, and it’s time to give someone else a chance." Sacchi’s move to the CEO role at Moneta Corporation shows that there are indeed multiple options for the CIO-plus.

Reprinted by permission of Harvard Business Press. Excerpted from The Real Business of IT: How CIOs Create and Communicate Value. Copyright (c) 2009 Gartner, Inc. and George Westerman; All Rights Reserved.










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