Thursday 17th May 2012

Top Blunders Most CIOs Make

14 February 2012
By Ravi Sahi


CIOs spend much of their time identifying the right strategies for IT implementations, which invariably morph into projects and programmes.

A company’s ability to implement or execute these efforts, which are often large and quite visible, is what distinguishes success from failure. CIOs too frequently get off track while attempting to keep their fingers on the pulse of these mission-critical projects.

Failure to connect the dots for project managers

Many CIOs do not communicate the connection of IT projects to the overall business strategy. Furthermore, they forget to articulate the value of an IT project on the company vision. 
Tip: Answer the questions: why are we undertaking this initiative? What are the expected changes?

Improper change management strategies

CIOs need to recognise that projects are change initiatives. It is not about redesigning the screens in a call centre, for instance, but rather the change in individuals’ daily work habits that will impact the success or failure of a new initiative. IT managers need to understand why something new has been created, especially if the ‘old way’ worked fine. 
Tip: Get your project managers excited about change by explaining the greater context and recognise that change takes a bit of time.

Lack of time for planning, but insistence on a comprehensive plan

IT executives often demand a time schedule or a budget that is based on project-irrelevant data points. This is the cat-and-mouse game that project leaders and IT executives play – doubling the number because you know “they” will cut any number you give by 30%. 
Tip: Allow planning time and create realistic expectations for your manager… and for yourself!

Demanding “one number” for time and cost

The savvy IT executive demands a “range” approach for time and cost. A well-planned project allows for the best and worst case scenarios from a realistic viewpoint. Your plan should reflect the top 10 risks and the associated additional cost for each potential risk. In short, risk management is key for decision-making. 
Tip: Ask for an estimate that considers the risks first.

Selective memory

While many CIOs have a risk assessment plan, they are often surprised when they have to pay additional costs. 
Tip: Follow through on your commitments. If a project leader presents his or her top risk that has a price tag of an addition $1m, and it occurs, fund it.

Trying to stay on top of everything

IT executives have moved up the ranks for a reason. They have technological know-how. But a CIO needs other skills, too. He or she needs to know how to delegate and ask the right questions of the right project and program managers. 
Tip: Cultivate your PM talent so you can tap into their knowledge pool as needed.

Hope is not a strategy

Project managers tend to assume the best case scenario over reality. Ask the next 10 project managers you run into about their projects. You will find that, aside from some issues here or there, “the team will pull together and get it done”. 
Tip: Demand regular updates and an actionable status report that identifies issues and challenges as early as possible.

Print article or create pdf version:
  • Print
  • PDF
  • Share/Bookmark

One Response to “ Top Blunders Most CIOs Make ”

  1. Mohsin Iqbal on 22 February 2012 at 5:22 am

    Hi Ravi,

    What I liked is blunder and tip number 4 i.e. asking for ranges instead of one number on schedule and cost.

    Regards,
    Mohsin

Leave a Reply