September 07, 2010, 3:52 PM — IT in the modern enterprise has evolved from a back-office component to a core operational constituent that can improve business performance and increase shareholder value. CIOs now have an opportunity to demonstrate a truly executive level leadership role in defining their enterprises.
By implementing an agile development approach, for example, IT can improve time to market for products, thereby realizing business value earlier than traditional approaches. IT also plays a central role in data management and the delivery of advanced analytics, both of which enhance competitive advantage and profitability. IT can also improve customer service excellence by implementing solutions that improve the ease of doing business. And centralizing functions such as infrastructure or procurement to optimize economies of scale not only enables more effective expense management, but frees up senior management to focus on surpassing the competition.
Today, IT is as important a discipline to the enterprise as finance, marketing and sales. In fact, IT is central to an organization's success by providing critical day-to-day operational support and enabling enterprisewide business change.
The role of the CIO, however, has not evolved to the same level in the organization. This was noted recently in The Wall Street Journal by Peter S. DeLisi, Dennis Moberg and Ronald Danielson in their article titled "Why CIOs Are Last Among Equals." The article discusses CIO shortcomings and how they can be overcome.
To truly gain peer status in the C-suite and maximize IT value, CIOs need to establish themselves as legitimate business executives. CIOs must focus on three areas to accomplish this:
1. Demonstrate executive-level leadership by taking a business-first approach to managing the technology function.
2. Balance strategic thinking and long-term planning with sound operational execution.
3. Run IT as a business within a business, taking a service-oriented approach that empowers business associates to drive their own IT agenda.
Executive-level leadership
Just as a firm's CFO uses financial expertise to drive enterprise strategy, the CIO can leverage technical expertise. A CIO who leads from a business perspective gains credibility from C-suite peers and from the CEO. A CIO who leads from a technology perspective is relegated to the secondary role of the "T guy."


















