CIO dream team: Who’s in and why?

Procurement in a Virtual Business World

By G C Network | May 8, 2018

Today, companies are undergoing a dramatic change in their environment and processes.  Many groups these changes together as “Digital Transformation,” but that industry buzzword fails to describe the essential details…

Taking the Canadian Insurance Industry Digital

By G C Network | May 6, 2018

“Digital disruption isn’t just for hip start-ups. Incumbents can not only compete but actually lead radical industry change if they pay attention to the way their business model is shifting…

#DigitalTransformation Means Hybrid IT and Multipath

By G C Network | April 24, 2018

The cloud is ubiquitous in today’s business world. This operational model is changing both data center operations and application development processes across multiple domains. As the manager of data centers…

Wasabi Hot Innovations Tour: How “Hot Cloud Storage” Changes Everything!

By G C Network | April 8, 2018

Digital storage requirements are growing exponentially. Budgets simply can’t keep up and existing Federal Data Center Consolidation Initiative (FDCCI), “Cloud First” Policy, Federal IT Acquisition Reform Act (FITARA) and Modernizing…

(Lack of) Patch Management Highlighted in US Congress

By G C Network | March 9, 2018

According to the former Equifax CEO’s testimony to Congress, one of the primary causes of this now infamous data breach was the company’s failure to patch a critical vulnerability in…

Experience “The Big Pivot”

By G C Network | February 21, 2018

Graeme Thompson, SVP/CIO Informatica The Big Pivot Podcast explores Digital transformation and its effect on every business in every industry. In exploring the business benefits of data-driven transformation, it is…

Innovation At The Seams

By G C Network | February 19, 2018

by Kevin L. Jackson & Dez Blanchfield Today’s real business innovation is happening at the seams of industries. Moreover, after listening to this podcast between Sanjay Rishi, GM Global Cloud…

Digital Transformation & Intelligent Automation

By G C Network | January 31, 2018

  By Kevin Jackson & Dez Blanchfield   Digital Transformation often needs Intelligent Automation. This type of change is the focus of a recent “Pioneers of Possible” podcast.  In discussion…

The Ascent of Object Storage

By G C Network | January 23, 2018

Over the past few years, the data storage market has changed radically. The traditional hierarchy of directories, sub-directories, and files referred to as file storage has given way to object…

The Deer Hunters: An Information Technology Lesson

By G C Network | January 14, 2018

by Kevin Jackson & Dez Blanchfield   In episode four of the “Pioneers Of Possible” podcast series, Dez Blanchfield caught up with  Max Michaels, General Manager, IBM Network Services in…

Today’s CIO navigates the twin challenges of enabling new business models and managing rapid technological change. Cloud computing strategies are now table stakes.

CIOs must make complex decisions about using public and private clouds, on-premises enterprise systems, Internet of Things, edge computing, and many other user experience outlets. Cloud-enabled digital transformation can’t happen without the right team in place.

Whom do you draft to build the dream team who can pull all this off?

Here are my picks:

Draft pick 1: Chief Executive Officer

This is your team captain. The buck stops at the CEO when it comes to operational and financial targets. The CEO’s job is to set the tone and build consensus.

They’ll need an unwavering dedication to business transformation and the will and drive to make it a priority across business functions. They’ve got to mandate cooperation and coordination among the various stakeholders within the enterprise.

And because no single cloud service provider (CSP) can ever meet all digital business needs, the CEO will need to help choose what multicloud strategy — and which CSPs — to greenlight.

Draft pick 2: Chief Technology Officer

This is the CEO’s right arm. The CTO builds collaborative support across the IT team. They see the whole field and can lead professional re-education efforts for all your players.

The CTO’s role is to secure containers for continuous integration/continuous delivery, DevOps automation tools and immutable infrastructures. They’ve got to coach infrastructure and operations specialty teams to adapt existing processes to manage, secure and orchestrate containers at scale.

Players at the top of their game will select a tiered CSP system built around relevancy to varying core requirements such as:

  • Transparency and ease of assessment and evaluation
  • Security and reliability
  • Business stability
  • Merger and acquisition potential
  • Acceptability to managers, executives, auditors, regulators and other stakeholders
  • Size of the ecosystem of compatible and integrated components and services

Draft pick 3: Chief Information Security Officer

The CISO is the bad cop to the CTO’s good cop. They establish, monitor and enforce data and information classification policies. Security is their goal and they’ve got to select, deploy and operate controls across the enterprise.

It falls on them to train, educate and lead your business owners in how to manage changing data protection and privacy laws and regulations.

Draft pick 4: Chief Financial Officer

The CFO validates organizational business cases — and often decides what gets funded. This player manages the balancing act between meeting financial targets and managing the cost and risk aspects of cloud-inspired innovations.

Funding for hybrid cloud architecture must meet the needs of on-premises application modernization and strategic integration. That requires the CFO to build support across the executive team. They’ll take the lead on updating accounting practices to support cloud-native subscription models.

Draft pick 5: Business owner

These are often your cloud’s heavy users. If the cloud is going to meet enterprise workloads, your business owners will demand a high cloud quality of service.

They’ll also need to face the fact that status quo won’t stand in a digitally transformed, cloud-first world. And yet your business owners will bear the brunt of the effects of transformation on operational metrics, cost and contractual service levels.

Business owners likely will need coaching to recognize that a simple “lift and shift†migration won’t deliver expected cloud benefits and will likely incur additional costs and risks. Computing has become a hybrid effort of cloud innovation, on-premises application modernization and strategic integration — all of which are increasingly cloud-based or cloud-inspired.

Draft pick 6: Acquisition and procurement executive

This specialty player takes the lead in incorporating tier models into your CSP vendor evaluation process.

Complex risk scenarios that come with enterprise cloud strategies mean that CSP vendor assessment and monitoring should be concentrated in the growing group of midsize CSPs. Some will be strategically important to specific departmental missions.

Acquisition and procurement players shouldn’t spend their time assessing and monitoring the very largest or the very smallest CSPs. And they must be trained to understand the difference between procuring information technology and acquiring information technology services.

Draft pick 7: Legal/contract executive

Legal is your backstop across all other roles. They understand all aspects of organizational requirements and can collaboratively balance the operational and financial trades associated with contractual risks.

Gartner predicts that by 2021, “75% of enterprise customers seeking cloud-managed IaaS and PaaS solutions will require multicloud capabilities.â€1 This makes gathering and training your dream team now an absolute imperative.

So start now:

  • Teach them how to stay abreast with information, technology and business innovation by investing in modern technologies and practices.
  • Avoid exclusive commitments to any single provider by embracing multi-platform operations and hybrid integration strategies to retain greater flexibility of choice and innovation.
  • Help business leaders recognize strategic cloud-centric business opportunities by creating IT-business liaison teams.
  • Invest in continuous cross-organization education and process innovation so that your enterprise is cloud-ready.

Post sponsored by IBM Services

Posted in

G C Network