Think of Yourself as the Chief Process Person

Think of Yourself as the Chief Process Person

“Sadin on Digital” episodes explore the fast-changing and high-stakes world of digital business. Wayne Sadin and I focus in particular on what CEOs and boards must do to lead their companies successfully into the Digital Age. Today, we dive deeper into a
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vor 6 Jahren

“Sadin on Digital” episodes explore the fast-changing and
high-stakes world of digital business. Wayne Sadin and I focus in
particular on what CEOs and boards must do to lead their
companies successfully into the Digital Age. Today, we dive
deeper into a topic we’ve touched on a couple times before:
“technical debt.” Through some evocative metaphors, Wayne
explains why it matters—and how to avoid it building up.


Episode 9


In this episode, Wayne and I talk about the CIO. He says the CEO
gets the CIO they settled for. If the CIO can’t hit your
strategic agenda, and help you become a partner, and move the
business forward, you’re setting your sights to low. Don’t
settle, he says, for a mediocre CIO.


He says the CIO needs to get on the truck if you deliver things.
Get in the warehouse if you store things. Get on the factory
floor if you make things. Go on a sales call and see what happens
when your salespeople get tossed out on their ear.


He then goes on to say that most executives work in vertical
silos – as in, I’m in charge of department A or B or C. But he
says the CIOs who are effective get out of that way of thinking,
and start thinking of themselves as the Chief Process Person.


He tells the story of how he asked a CIO, “What do you think is
your biggest accomplishment.” And the CIO said, “Oh, it’s really
simple. My IT budget was 0.91% of sales, and I was able to keep
it to 0.88% of sales.” Wayne says that’s just nuts – what if they
had given him 0.03% of sales to focus on top line innovation, or
process improvement, or customer satisfaction?


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