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Executive summary—Navigating legacy: Charting the course to business value

by Khalid Kark, Mark White, Bill Briggs, Anjali Shaikh
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    10 November 2016

    Executive summary—Navigating legacy: Charting the course to business value 2016–2017 global CIO survey

    11 November 2016
    • Khalid Kark United States
    • Mark White United States
    • Bill Briggs United States
    • Anjali Shaikh United States
    • Anjali Shaikh United States
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    • Nurture trumps nature: Personality is not a barrier to success
    • Alignment: Gaps exist between expectations and capabilities
    • Delivering value: Adapting requires shifting among patterns
    • Digital transformation: Chart your individual journey

    As they align technology strategy, capabilities, teams, and culture with evolving business needs, priorities, and expectations, CIOs are in a unique position to drive business transformation, harness digital disruption, and become a catalyst for monumental organization-wide change.

    Learn More

    Read the main report

    Explore the related infographic

    If you would like to determine your pattern type, take this assessment

    Deloitte’s 2016–2017 global survey of CIOs takes us a step forward in gaining a deeper understanding of how CIOs create legacy—the value and impact technology leaders deliver to their organizations. Through in-depth interviews and online surveys, we collected the opinions and insights of more than 1,200 CIOs across 23 industry segments in 48 countries.

    This year, we added three dimensions to our 2015 analysis:

    • First, we looked into whether personality and working style impact CIO legacy. We examined the influence of inherent personality traits on CIO legacy, looking at 20 traits and working-style attributes to determine whether they were a differentiator in delivering value.
    • Second, we investigated how IT capabilities and talent impact CIO legacy, and identified the critical leadership competencies required to build a lasting legacy. We explored whether CIOs are meeting business expectations by comparing IT capabilities and investments with business priorities.
    • Finally, we took a deeper look at the three legacy patterns we discovered last year. Using cluster analysis to segment the respondent population into three patterns, we explored the navigation between pattern types based on business need and specific triggers for change. Trusted operators, who ensure operational excellence, accounted for 55 percent of this year’s respondents; change instigators, who enable large business transformations, were at 11 percent; and business co-creators, who focus on delivering to business strategy, were 34 percent of those surveyed. Our analysis will allow CIOs to assess their current pattern and help them determine how to move among patterns as their business needs change today and in the future.

    Here are some highlights from the survey results.

    Nurture trumps nature: Personality is not a barrier to success

    This year, we aimed to discover how much control CIOs have in creating their legacies. We explored whether a leader’s success could be attributed to inherent skills and personality traits—what we call “nature”—or to the capabilities that they instill in their IT organizations and the leadership competencies they build on the job—“nurture.”

    We evaluated CIOs on 20 personal and working-style attributes to understand how “nature” impacted the CIO’s role and legacy patterns. To our surprise, we did not find significant differences in 18 of the 20 attributes. In fact, 75 percent of CIOs shared the same seven personality traits.

    We then evaluated 10 IT capabilities and 12 leadership competencies that are a direct result of “nurture,” or business environment. Here, we found significant differences and varying levels of maturity across these dimensions. We concluded that these IT capabilities and leadership competencies are a much bigger differentiator than personality traits in shaping a CIO’s legacy.

    This is great news for CIOs—it could mean that their legacies are not bound by personality or working style, that is, their nature. In fact, their legacies will likely be shaped by how well they respond to and anticipate the needs of the business, that is, nurture.

    Alignment: Gaps exist in the alignment of IT capabilities with business expectations

    To create value, CIOs must deliver IT capabilities that are aligned with key business priorities—CIOs told us their top five priorities are customers, growth, performance, cost, and innovation. In addition to business priorities, they should meet their businesses’ expectations of IT, such as improving business processes, reducing costs, maintaining IT systems, and managing cybersecurity.

    However, survey data show that business expectations of IT and IT capabilities are out of sync in several areas, including customer focus, technology-enabled business growth, and business innovation. For example, even though 57 percent of the CIOs surveyed said that customers were their organization’s top business priority, less than half were involved in delivering customer experience (45 percent) or working on customer acquisition, retention, and loyalty (44 percent).

    In addition, even though 78 percent of CIOs said that strategic alignment of IT activities with business strategy was critical to their success, only 5 percent said it was a leading-class capability in their IT organization. This presents CIOs with a huge opportunity to drive strategic alignment through IT capabilities. To keep up with changing business needs, CIOs should develop IT capabilities to drive business value, enhance their own personal competencies, develop relationships with other executives, and develop and nurture their talent and teams.

    Delivering value: Adapting to business needs requires shifting among CIO legacy patterns

    As business priorities and expectations evolve, CIOs must anticipate the pattern type that matches future business needs and proactively shift among patterns as required. CIOs’ ability to drive value to the enterprise by adopting one of the three pattern types is largely determined by the IT capabilities and leadership competencies they nurture in their IT organizations—not by their own personality or working style.

    Most savvy CIOs will evaluate current business priorities and expectations and forecast future business direction—and chart the course for a journey that involves navigating across patterns by adapting and driving change across IT capabilities, leadership competencies and influence, talent and culture, and technology solutions and investment. Our survey respondents are already thinking about positioning themselves for future success by switching pattern type: 44 percent told us they wanted to adopt a different pattern than their current one.

    Digital transformation: Chart your individual journey

    Depending on business context, the definition of digital will vary; so will the CIO’s journey to digital transformation. Digital should be defined based on business need, not industry nomenclature. For example, to a health care organization, digital might mean using technology to achieve better patient outcomes, while a B2B company’s digital transformation might involve using technology in the supply chain to improve efficiency and decision making.

    Our data and interviews lead us to believe that some CIOs and business leaders view “digital” only as customer-facing, front-end tools and technologies—what we call the tip of the digital iceberg. Others view digital as a mind-set, where technology fundamentally transforms and shapes future business models and revenue streams and becomes the growth engine for their organizations. This requires embedding technology in every facet of the business, and demands a fundamentally different role for CIOs.

    Whatever your definition of digital, the digital shift often requires large transformations in back-end technologies, legacy IT systems, IT culture, skills, and capabilities. The digital big picture—the CIO’s area of expertise and control—lies unseen below the water line and can be the largest part of the digital iceberg. For this reason, we believe that CIOs are better positioned than any other occupant of the C-suite to drive digital across the entire organization.

    First, however, CIOs must develop and improve their digital capabilities and investments. More than a quarter (28 percent) ranked their IT organizations as below average in digital skill sets, especially customer and digital experience and analytics. Two out of five CIOs told us they were underinvesting in emerging technologies and analytics.

    Conclusion: CIOs can control digital direction—and their own legacies

    These pivotal times provide an opportunity for CIOs to sculpt a legacy not only for themselves, but also for their teams and businesses. As they align technology strategy, capabilities, teams, and culture with evolving business needs, priorities, and expectations, CIOs are in a unique position to drive business transformation, harness digital disruption, and become a catalyst for monumental organization-wide change.

    Here are five key takeaways for cementing CIO legacy:

    • Be adaptive. CIOs are not limited by personality traits or work styles. In fact, we have seen that they can control their careers—and their legacies—by nurturing required leadership competencies and IT capabilities and switching among the three legacy pattern types as their organizations evolve. By shifting among CIO pattern types based on organizational needs, CIOs can sculpt their legacies and make an indelible impact on their teams and businesses.
    • Invest in talent and capabilities to drive value. CIOs can’t build their legacies alone. The IT capabilities, teams, and talent that CIOs develop play an important role in their legacies. To succeed, CIOs need to engage, attract, invest in, and retain talent and skill sets.
    • Rethink digital. CIOs should collaborate with other leaders to define “digital” based on their business context. They should acknowledge their role as drivers of the organization’s digital transformation, demonstrate leadership, and exert influence over future business needs and strategy.
    • Cast a wider net of relationships and influence. To become and remain influential, CIOs should develop and maintain relationships with key stakeholders. They need to build alliances and partnerships inside and outside of the C-suite, their company, and their industry.
    • Step up or step aside. CIOs are at an inflection point. Irrespective of industry or competitive environment, technology will fundamentally transform their businesses. CIOs are best positioned to lead their organizations on this transformational journey, and if they don’t step up, other business leaders will.

    Navigating the
CIO journey

    Navigating
legacy

    Credits

    Written by: Khalid Kark, Mark White, Bill Briggs, Anjali Shaikh

    Cover image by: Maria Corte

    Topics in this article

    Leadership , Talent , Information Technology , Chief Information Officer

    Learn more about Deloitte's CIO Program

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    Mark White

    Mark White

    Global Consulting Technology CTO

    In his eight years at Deloitte, Mark has served clients in Federal, Financial Services, Real Estate, High Tech, Telecommunications, Transportation and other industries. His professional focus is architecting, developing and delivering critical business solutions for clients. His engagement focus areas include IT service management, IT service architectures, operations engineering, data center design and consolidation, and business intelligence system.

    • mawhite@deloitte.com
    Anjali Shaikh

    Anjali Shaikh

    Senior Manager – CIO Program | Deloitte Consulting

    Anjali Shaikh is a Senior Manager at Deloitte Consulting LLP and currently leads Executive Experiences for Deloitte’s CIO Program.  She is responsible for leading and delivering programs focused on strategically advising CIOs and technology leaders on managing rapid IT changes within organizations while providing perspectives on the evolution of their roles.  She spearheaded publications for Deloitte’s global CIO survey and CIO insider series and currently leads research focused on diversity & inclusion within IT organizations. She’s based in San Juan Capistrano, Ca.

    • anjalishaikh@deloitte.com
    • +1 714 436 7237
    Bill Briggs

    Bill Briggs

    Global CTO | Principal

    As chief technology officer, Bill Briggs helps clients anticipate the impact that emerging technologies may have on their business in the future and how to get there from the realities of today. He is responsible for research, eminence, and incubation of emerging technologies affecting clients’ businesses and shaping the future of Deloitte Consulting LLP’s technology-related services and offerings. Briggs also serves as executive sponsor of Deloitte’s CIO Program, offering CIOs and other technology executives insights and experiences to navigate the complex challenges they face in business and technology.

    • wbriggs@deloitte.com
    • +1 816 802 7350
    Khalid Kark

    Khalid Kark

    US CIO Program Research Leader

    Khalid is a director with Deloitte LLP where he leads the development of research and insights for the CIO Program. Khalid has served as a trusted advisor to large, multinational clients, and has decades of experience helping technology leaders anticipate and plan for the impacts of new technology. Previously, Khalid led the CIO Research practice at Forrester Research. His research has been widely featured in media outlets such as MSNBC, The Boston Globe, and CIO magazine.

    • kkark@deloitte.com
    • +1 214 840 7754

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