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I made a room full of CIOs do this exercise (and they loved it!)

CIO innovation workshop

“Thirty minutes should be enough time for anyone to innovate,” I said. The CIOs around me laughed, but maybe only because that’s about how much they actually feel they can allocate to anything other than maintaining legacy infrastructure in their organizations.

Amid the panel discussions and keynote speeches at our recent CIO Innovation Summit last week, I decided to run a workshop where our guests could work together on their approach to using big data and analytics. One of the benefits of these sorts of gatherings is that you have CIOs from a wide variety of sectors, and I think there’s some benefit to working on a problem in an industry you don’t know like the back of your hand.

Here’s how it worked: The room was made up of tables with about four to six CIOs each. I gave each of them a scenario about an individual who was dealing with a particular problem. This was deliberate: Rather than focus on an organizational goal, I decided that most initiatives in many firms start with a specific user’s needs. I admitted that they would not have enough information about the company, its revenue, market position or existing technology investments. I argued that they would never have all the information they need to innovate.

These were the instructions they had to follow, which I kept up on the screen throughout:

Next came the scenarios. We had about six tables in the room, and I gave out three different scenarios. This was also deliberate: I thought it would be interesting to see how different tables would tackle the same issue. Here are the situations they were presented with:

Retail

Government

Education

After half an hour of debating these scenarios, the CIOs came up with a wide range of ideas. Some had pilot projects that involved further information gathering. Some outlined possible changes to the governance of data. Maybe some of their ideas can be applied to their own organizations’ issues, or maybe it will just get the thinking process going for further reflection. Overall, the feedback was great, so I’m offering it here for other CIOs to test out among their teams and stakeholders. If you use it, let us know in the comments below!
photo credit: BCcampus_News via photopin cc

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