CIO Mind

Do you REALLY want to know what’s inside?

Across the fence

Posted by Felix Enescu on May 25th, 2007

I jumped the fence!

After 7 year, 7 very challenging years building the Rompetrol IT, I decided to return to the vendor side. This time, on my own.

Yes, I started my own consulting practice. I don’t want to use the blog for advertising, so I wont go into details. Enough said it is, of course, IT related.

Posted in Think vs. Do | 2 Comments »

CISCO Inside?

Posted by Felix Enescu on May 13th, 2007

Like always CISCO Expo was a great event. Congratulations to the event team!

Although the venue was clearly overwhelmed by the number of participants (around 700 according to Bogdan – CISCO Country Manager)

My presentation went smoothly. I even manage to get couple of questions! For a Romanian public this is quite an achievement. :-)

I wonder where CISCO is going. Their new tag line “Human Network”, all the communication centered on people …

May be they want to achieve something like:

CISCO Inside

Are they taking the same path Intel took a while ago? They want to become a retail brand? The network in every home to have “CISCO Inside”?

Posted in Vendors | No Comments »

Full day at CISCO Expo

Posted by Felix Enescu on May 8th, 2007

Tomorrow I will the whole day at CISCO Expo.

I have a presentation in the morning about Rompetrol voice network and I moderate together with CISCO country manager an afternoon session “Paths to Growth” reserved for IT Executives.

I will be back with some impressions.

Posted in CIO | No Comments »

CIO blogs

Posted by Felix Enescu on May 6th, 2007

Through some web “magic” I found two CIO blogs:

CIO Web Musings: http://petesiegel.blogspot.com/

and another one:

Keith Parnell :: Marketing CIO: http://keith.jaseblog.com/

Enjoy Reading

Posted in CIO | 1 Comment »

Executive CIO – part two

Posted by Felix Enescu on March 14th, 2007

I knew I shouldn’t believe journalists.

As Norman Mailer said :-) :

Once a newspaper touches a story, the facts are lost forever, even to the protagonists.

I my previous post I was quoting an article in Computer Weekly about the four types of CIOs.

Meanwhile after some emails exchanged with Brinley Platts, author of the Building Effective IT Executive Teams research and chairman of CIODevelopment.com I understand better the full picture:

Each of them will have strengths and weaknesses based solely on their career track and the experience it has given them, and smart CIOs (and CEOs) will take account of these in building and deploying their top executive teams.

The types are based on previous experience: technology versus other functions and current organization versus other organizations

CIO Role-Types Model

Every type has it place in an organization life-cycle and culture. The CIO Role-Types Model is also great to plot your career path.

Please go to CIO Development site and download the study. Worth reading it!

Posted in CIO | 1 Comment »

Vendors and analysts

Posted by Felix Enescu on March 12th, 2007

Today Prashanth from CIO Weblog send me an Information Week article: “Credibility Of Analysts“.

Forrester, Gartner, IDC, and others insist their output is squeaky clean, yet they also rake in millions providing services to the very same companies they monitor, heavyweights like Cisco, IBM, Microsoft, and Oracle. Which leads to a question that continues to dog the research firms: How much influence do technology vendors have over their work?

The article analyses in depth the relations between technology vendors and analysts. Worth reading:

Technology vendors often will sign up for analyst firm services when they feel their market is poised for growth. Cyveillance in January signed on with Gartner to help understand how its software fits with the growing demand for IT security and regulatory compliance. “I also wanted to understand how a product we’re rolling out should be priced,” Bransford says. So IDC helps seed the market, Gartner helps price it, and both get paid for doing so. Is everyone comfortable with that?

Posted in Vendors | 2 Comments »

Executive CIO

Posted by Felix Enescu on March 3rd, 2007

I always preach that IT is no different than any other business discipline: from project evaluation to people management the same good old ways applies. There is no “magic” in IT.

I am convinced that any good manager can run an IT organization.

I found today an intriguing article in Computer Weekly: The way to become a top CIO.

“Some organizations appoint the CIO from within, but not from within the IT department. These ‘executive CIOs’ are typically appointed when the chief executive has become so frustrated with IT that he gives it to a more experienced, proven executive.”

The CEO’s assumption is that IT will now be in safe, familiar hands, run by someone whose capability is known, and who is “one of us” so far as the business executives of the company are concerned.

This makes perfect sense to me.

But all too often the appointment proves temporary or a mistake – certainly for the CIO in question. On average, the executive CIO lasts two years in the CIO role, whereas the internal IT professional CIO lasts seven years, says Platts.

This comes as a big surprise to me. Unless Platts get his figures wrong this is very disturbing evidence.

Their problems stem from the fact that they will inevitably discover that they are between a rock and a hard place, says Platts. With neither competence in nor experience of IT, they will fail to engage the confidence of their own team.

Worse, if the CEO has placed them in charge of an IT function riddled with problems, they will swiftly realize that one of the key problems is the lack of trust in IT by senior business management and the poor relationship it has with IT in the first place.

Although it may be expected that the best relationships between IT and business should be where an executive CIO runs IT from general management, once they are CIO, the executive CIO’s relationship with their CEO can deteriorate very quickly.

“The CEO will say, ‘I have worked 20 years successfully with him and in six weeks in IT he has gone native’.” In general, no executive CIO should accept the job if offered – it is a no-win situation, says Platts.

Very disturbing. I’ll dig for some more facts.

Posted in CIO | 2 Comments »

Business language

Posted by Felix Enescu on March 2nd, 2007

I rediscovered today in Guy’s blog a great essay about writing by George Orwell (the original article is here).

I have to read (and write) almost daily a lot of English language documents: business cases, project initiations, reports, meeting minutes, etc.

Quote from George Orwell:

Here is a well-known verse from Ecclesiastes:

I returned and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all.

Here it is in modern English:

Objective considerations of contemporary phenomena compel the conclusion that success or failure in competitive activities exhibits no tendency to be commensurate with innate capacity, but that a considerable element of the unpredictable must invariably be taken into account.

All the current business documents are written using this “modern English” language or even worst.

Who is not tired of: “Time to Market”, “on the same page”, “at the end of the day”, “in a nutshell”, “total cost of ownership”, “business value” and so on.

Pages and pages of words voided of almost all the meaning. And we write like we speak. And we wander why staff is playing bullshit bingo in the meetings.

Dilbert Buzzword

Even a business case must be written in good English. So, this is a letter to all writers:

Dear All,
Please read the great essay of George Orwell. Before starting to write anything, please read it again. After you finish writing read it again and correct you work.

Thank you,
Your Reader.

PS: And I don’t even mentioned vendor marketing materials. Another fine example of “business language”!

Posted in CIO, Corporations | No Comments »

How about trust?

Posted by Felix Enescu on February 9th, 2007

Garr Reynolds has an article about trust on his Presentation Zen blog.

Very good read especially now when each and every vendor want to be “your trusted partner”.

Posted in Vendors | 2 Comments »

The hen that laid an asteroid

Posted by Felix Enescu on January 23rd, 2007

…many vendors today say it is IT that makes the difference to enabling business innovation. Mark Twain’s response to such a claim would likely have been to repeat another of his famous remarks: “Often a hen who has merely laid an egg cackles as if she has laid an asteroid.”

Dan McLean of Globe and Mail analyze in his recent article one of the usual claims made by IT vendors. Today: IT driven innovation.

In their pursuit of selling another bottle of “snake-oil” SAP turn around a survey of “Canada’s leading IT executives” to show the link between IT an innovation.

Dan digs a little in the survey read it correctly:

The telling point may be what respondents ranked as the top benefit of IT. Operational efficiency was voted No. 1 by 36 per cent and business productivity came out on top in the minds of 26 per cent.

By comparison, business innovation ranked No. 1 with only 6 per cent of respondents — behind the IT benefit of mobilizing work forces, which was cited by 8 per cent. And yet, SAP’s press release announced the survey results under the headline: “Canada’s Road to Business Growth and Innovation Runs Through the IT Department.”

IT can do a lot for any organization, but many times it collapses under the pressure created by vendor hype. If you read the marketing materials you’ll think that every vendor has laid out an asteroid. :-)

IT is a tool, a very powerful tool, a very smart tool, but only a tool. A tool cannot be smarter than the one using it.

Thanks Dan for the head up and people, go read the original article!

Posted in IT Value | 6 Comments »