Around 60 percent of Indian CIOs believe that cloud computing
has enabled them to spend more time on business strategy and
innovation, as per The Future Role of the CIO 2011 report released
by CA Technologies.
As per the report, CIOs who have adopted cloud computing are
more ambitious than non-cloud adopting CIOs. Demonstrating
the extent to which CIOs view their position as a route to more
general roles, almost all those (93 percent) who have adopted cloud
computing, see their position as an opportunity or stepping-stone
to other management roles compared to only 30 percent of non-cloud
adopting CIOs. Around 46 percent of cloud adopting CIOs versus 13
percent of non-cloud adopting CIOs saw their current job as a
stepping stone specifically to the CEO position. This illustrates
the extent to which cloud computing drives CIO ambition.
“We already know that cloud computing is
‘revolutionary’ in terms of what it can do for
business, but it is also breeding a new type of technology leader,
one that clearly understands what adopting cloud computing can do
for the organization, and one who believes that technology can
empower them to become the business leaders of tomorrow,”
Lionel Lim, President, Asia Pacific, CA Technologies.
More than half of the CIOs surveyed said they felt ideally
positioned to move to the CEO role because cloud computing allows
them to spend more time on innovation, business strategy and
driving business effectiveness. However, they face fierce
competition; 43 percent acknowledged that whilst they do have the
necessary skills to step up to the CEO role, other job roles have
greater experience of those skills. How do you marry this ambition
with the stark reality today where only ‘4 percent of current
CEOs have risen from the CIO ranks, 29 percent have risen from the
Chief Financial Officer position and a further 23 percent were
previously Chief Operating Officers?
The CIO role today is still viewed as a technical role,
according to 43 percent of CIOs and this is the reason why
relatively few CIOs have successfully made the transition to the
CEO role. A lack of ‘digital literacy’ in the boardroom
is compounding this problem with 40 percent of CIOs stating that
their board was ‘digitally illiterate’ and did not
understand the impact of new and emerging technologies. A further
42 percent of CIOs said that the board did not understand the
value that IT brings to the business causing a lack of
responsiveness to the market and missed business opportunities.
“Today, CIOs with an aptitude for visualizing the true
potential of IT on the bottom line, can continue evolving far
beyond the purely technical role profile still regularly associated
with the job. The fact is, many CIOs have a greater strategic
understanding of the challenges and opportunities their businesses
should address than they're given credit for. It really is a case
of information is knowledge, and knowledge is power,”
comments Sarah Greensmith, Managing Director – IT at Hudson,
the executive search specialists.
The ambitious CIO cloud adopters are not complacent either, with
93 percent saying they need new skills to remain effective compared
to 63 percent of ‘non-clouders’. Specifically, 48
percent of CIOs deemed skills in commercial procurement to be
vital. Cloud CIOs also prioritized service performance skills and
negotiation and sales skills compared to their non-cloud adopting
counterparts.
Perceptions are changing; since 54 percent of CIOs report that
the C-level management team sees the role of the CIO as becoming
increasingly important within the organization which suggests that
the board’s view of the CIO is already changing.
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