
As with just about any area, IT is a discipline subject to fads and memes, "received truths" that seem to arise in the press or the blogosphere and then ricochet around the echo chamber until they sound plausible even to skeptics. A number of these roll across my Twitter stream every day. But one such meme rises so high to the top that it has to be the sole focus here. And that is the much-repeated "death of the CIO" meme, coupled as it is currently with dreamy visions of the world brought to us by the consumerization of IT and the cloud. They're all linked, at least in many pundits' eyes.
Here's the gist of their argument: Users can go out and get their own technology now; they don't need IT to do it for them. End-users are now IT-savvy, and can fend for themselves. They'll bring their own devices (BYOD); they don't need or want IT to provide devices for them. They'll procure the services they need and want from the various SaaS offerings in the cloud or from outsourced vendors, and they'll handle it all themselves.
All this ultimately gets not only expressed as the question of who needs a CIO anymore, it goes even further: who needs an IT department at all anymore? Says one article, "If IT does not provide the end user with the infrastructure they need, the latter can rent it, by the hour or month from companies like Rackspace or Amazon... All you need is a credit card and no approval from IT."
Other CIO "thought leader" articles feature astonishing blanket statements like, "With the consumerization of IT, consumers can create value for themselves and the enterprise, using technology that costs the enterprise nothing." And people even take this so far as arguing that the CIO at this point should just leave technology up to the VARs.
Let me be clear once again: this frequent linking of cloud and IT consumerization to the looming demise of the CIO and IT is not just misguided, but actually gets it completely backwards. In fact, I argue that IT consumerization and the cloud will actually elevate the importance of IT within a company, as both a service and a strategic focus.
Let's list and then discuss some of the ways that combining these memes (IT consumerization, cloud, and the ensuing heralded death of the CIO) falls down when measured against common sense and reality:
▪ It fails to understand the full range of what a CIO (or IT) actually provides for modern-day companies.
▪ It fails to recognize the profound pitfalls of a decentralized and fragmented approach for company systems and technologies.
▪ It erroneously equates IT consumerization with the BYOD trend, missing the larger important picture that underscores the strategic need for IT.
▪ It misunderstands the interplay of commoditization and competitive strategic advantage.
What IT provides
People who see the CIO's role diminishing or IT even vanishing altogether don't seem to understand the full range of the CIO's responsibilities, and the importance of more, not less, technology stewardship as system access broadens. They somehow seem to view the CIO and IT predominantly as the folks who keep the servers running. If we have no in-house servers, they reason, why do we need IT? But, as someone recently and eloquently said that's like viewing the job of the parent as being the one who drops the kid off at school every day.
Face it: It's not technology alone, the bits and bytes and systems and wires, that's the hard part when it comes to leveraging technology itself to provide value to an enterprise. Rather, firms desperately need someone, at a suitably high level in the organization, to actively shepherd the business prioritization, integration, implementation, outsourcing, and articulation of value when it comes to complex, technology-based undertakings: that's the hard part. That part won't go away. That part will never go away.
What it means for IT to be a service organization
Yes, IT needs to be a service organization to the rest of the company. But, pundits complain, often it isn't a very good one, or it's too expensive, or often it focuses so much on being a service organization that it doesn't get perceived anymore as adding much value beyond that service. And as those services become readily and cheaply available elsewhere, and users more sophisticated in technology, it's easy to jump to the conclusion that IT is no longer necessary, and many do just that. But that leap reflects a kind of tunnel vision about IT's role.
Many IT pundits can't seem to recognize two simultaneous truths: IT needs to be a strategic value-add; and it needs to be a key service to the company when it comes to getting things done, reliably. When things don't work: people need help. It doesn't matter if we have cloud or BYOD or the upcoming Apple IT telepathy product; users will still need help. But realize that the day-to-day work of helping users is actually not the major role of IT in any non-trivial modern-day firm: even before the days of BYOD, administering desktops and laptops, while important, was one of the relatively minor services provided by IT. Even if that aspect of the work disappears entirely in this brave new cloud-driven world, we're left with everything else: the hard part of making things work together, support business changes, and so on. And tackling the hard part is actually the key IT service to the organization.
Because sure, maybe people can now administer their own devices and procure their own systems in the cloud. But then, often without having planned or anticipated it, it turns out they need those systems to talk to one another. Then they need to worry about changes and versions and backups and downtime. All the simple stuff about cloud and BYOD works just great, but only while it's still simple. As Marc J. Schiller puts it, tech-savvy business users "don't have the time or the inclination to work through all of the nitty-gritty details that are required to ensure that the systems they are putting in place do, in fact, collect and integrate data with other corporate resources. They don't have the time or the expertise to evaluate the information integration and interface requirements a particular system may create. And they certainly don't want to be on the hook for all of the data security and regulatory compliance issues that are growing by the day."
In other words, we're left with the hard part, the messy part, the part that someone needs to figure out holistic, long-term answers to.
That won't go away. That will never go away.
The pitfalls of IT fragmentation
Stop for a moment and realize that the argument that the "cloud and IT consumerization will lead to the death of the CIO" pundits are making amounts to this: that in an IT world that is becoming staggeringly more complex, with ever more options and an accelerating rate of change, we somehow no longer need skilled IT management to manage that transition carefully. How can that make sense to anyone? As MIT's noted IT scholar Jeanne Ross pointed out recently, companies already tend, in terms of their systems, to "let everybody decide what's most important for their part of the business. The usual result is a tangled mess of IT system architecture."
The answer to this dilemma can't be dispensing altogether with IT-specific leadership and hoping for the best. Dell CIO Robin Johnson wrote a piece last fall that described the pitfall of balkanized decision-making amid burgeoning complexity: Dell wanted to add a new payment type to its web site, but had different systems in every region, 10 separate customer databases, etc. The estimate simply to add this one new type came in, staggeringly, at a year. Picture, then, pushing for a world where every line of business has made its own technology decisions, not just with no unifying presence of leadership, but with the avowed philosophy that IT leadership is actually no longer necessary at all. Scream with me, now.
Why the IT consumerization trend increases the need for skilled IT leadership
And the scale of such problems is increasing. Rather than IT consumerization consisting mostly of the identified BYOD dilemmas (which are important, of course), Bernard Golden points out, "Consumerization of IT isn't about employees using consumer devices; it's about consumers becoming the primary users of internal IT applications." The ensuing greater volume and variety of application access, as consumers tap into what used to be internal IT systems from every conceivable device and geography and time zone, has huge implications for companies, their organization, their architectures. As we face this very real trend, and the resulting even greater requirements for system cohesiveness and robustness, it is hardly the time to opine that IT leaders are now extraneous.
Finally, let's talk a bit about IT becoming a commodity. That's nothing new. A company that had a great custom financial system used to (perhaps) have a competitive advantage, until such systems were commoditized by the advent of ERP. Commoditization of a technology means that that it can no longer provide much of a competitive advantage, other than through superior execution. But every time something gets commoditized, we are able to "move up the stack" in abstraction: We can now focus on reaping value from other, higher-order things that can't (yet) be commoditized. If you're using technology that's available to everyone, off the rack, you have no differentiator, and no competitive advantage.
Pundits argue that since some key technologies are now a commodity, we no longer need a CIO to handle them. But I'd turn that argument around: that's precisely when you do need a CIO, to rise above the commodity level and figure out how to leverage technology for competitive advantage and business value. And the way to do that means using something other than technology that's available to everyone, just off the rack. You want a differentiator.
So, get rid of the CIO because some technologies have now become commodities? You might as well posit that since we now have drugstores, there's really no need for doctors anymore.
Or with a different spin, there's an old joke about a small child who observed brightly, "We don't need the farmers anymore; we just go to the grocery store instead!" That's a true-but-false statement if there ever was one. Ponder those two analogies, and consider how IT represents both the farmers and the doctors. And that the need won't go away.
Lagniappe:
• Christina Torode, "IT consumerization rules in the hands of the business", September 11, 2011. http://itknowledgeexchange.techtarget.com/total-cio/it-consumerization-rules-in-the-hands-of-the-business/
• Greg Chase, February 15, 2012. "Pondering at SAP Inside Track Palo Alto: Has Cloud Computing Made IT and the CIO Unnecessary? " http://blogs.sap.com/cloud/2012/02/15/pondering-at-sap-inside-track-palo-alto-has-cloud-computing-made-it-and-the-cio-unnecessary/
• Nick Heath, January 27, 2012. "Time to shut up about the death of the CIO". http://www.silicon.com/management/cio-insights/2012/01/27/time-to-shut-up-about-the-death-of-the-cio-39748428/
• Steve Romero, February 1, 2012. "Time to End the Claims of the 'End of the CIO'". http://www.itgevangelist.com/blog/2012/2/1/time-to-end-the-claims-of-the-end-of-the-cio.html
• Alan S. Cohen, February 4, 2012. "An Arab Spring for IT". http://techcrunch.com/2012/02/04/an-arab-spring-for-it/
• Bernard Golden, August 12, 2011. "Cloud CIO: What "Consumerization of IT" Really Means to CIOs". http://www.cio.com/article/687931/Cloud_CIO_What_Consumerization_of_IT_Really_Means_to_CIOs
• Marc J. Schiller, October 31, 2011. "The Role of the CIO: Why You Deserve to Be Demoted". http://www.cioinsight.com/index2.php?option=content&task=view&id=884844&pop=1&hide_ads=1&page=0&hide_js=1
Robin Johnson, November 2, 2011. "Why Today's CIO Must Foster IT Agility". http://www.cio.com/article/693052/Why_Today_s_CIO_Must_Foster_IT_Agility
This blog is published with prior permission from Peter Kretzman. Peter can be reached at peter.kretzman@gmail.com. For more blogs from the Author, visit: www.peterkretzman.com
In USA, getting a licensed gun is not so difficult- and in certain states like Texas, a large number of households have licensed gun. By Peter’s logic, Texas does not need a police department or government, as people can buy their own gun and defend themselves. That will lead to anarchy.
It may be a crude analogy, but the fact is that the “so called IT consumerization” if allowed without proper governance, policies and processes, can lead to anarchy. Also, device management is hardly the key responsibility of CIO - many CIOs have outsourced this activity, by creating a proper governance mechanism. So I don’t see IT consumerism has any role to play in diminishing CIO’s value to organisation.
The cloud is not a threat to the CIO. The CIO has to be a nimble navigator in the world of business and technology and the cloud is just one more commodity in that world.
The most successful CIO’s solve business problems and are not simply order takers for the next technical project. Businesses are so dependent on technology that as time advances, the CIO must become more and more business-centric while still keeping the lights on.
I feel no technology advancement or outsourcing will cause death for the CIOs. This is because a CIO will be required to play crucial and strategic role in deciding on enterprise architect, kind of applications which are useful and beneficial to the organization, vendor management, compliance related requirements and also general management functions required to keep IT services with proper IT governance.
Hence the CIO’s role will continue to remain more strategic in nature, even if we believe that cloud services will be able to deliver all the requirements of the business through standard applications, which itself is hard to achieve due to varied business requirements, customized software developments going on around standard ERP applications due to several reasons.
The role of the CIO needs to undergo change with IT consumerization and the cloud. CIOs will continue with new avatar, giving more emphasis on security with all those BYODs, cloud computing, customized software will continue. Secondly, business groups are still far away from understanding IT.
When we say ‘consumerisation’, clearly, there is a consumer and a service provider. There will be a range of applications which can be sourced by the ‘consumer’ directly. I know a company in advertising, which due to the prevailing organisational culture, allows the use of Facebook within the organisation - for collaboration. Further, employees host their applications on Google Apps. As Sreeram mentions, the IT manager’s role becomes one of governance.
Larger companies understand the need for exclusivity, and the elements comprising outsourcing - managed IT services, telecom network, hosted primary and secondary data centres, customised application development and support.
Further, mature performance measurement, governance standards, service levels across these services are low. While this makes a case to continue with internal sourcing, most organisations perceive IT as a cost centre. The ‘Cloud’ appears attractive from a cost, on-demand, ‘pay-per-use’ perspective given unpredictable business scenarios.
With the increased adoption of the Cloud and Shared Services, I believe the continued business value and positioning of IT as an internal function in the organisation is likely to be examined. As organisations resort to a more cautious approach in the light of increased economic uncertainty, those with mature IT functions and the agility to undergo organisational change will see the maximum impact and benefit.
Most CIOs agree they can increase the business value of their IT functions by moving to Remote Shared Services and adopting the Cloud concept. However, many IT functions have traditionally been weak on policy, governance and business leadership.
The CIO needs to be able to create the technology differentiators for the organisation and relate the same to strategic business objectives. This involves a strong degree of collaboration and communication with key CXO peers. CIOs would do well to develop and propagate thought leadership required to influence mindset change.
No, it won’t cause death of CIO. Though many experts believe with democratization of IT and power shifting to end users, do we need an IT? In my view, this will never be the situation where we do not need an IT or a CIO. The rules of engagement and traditional sourcing methodologies will change to new ones and new expertise will be needed. CIOs may become demand managers for business.
We also have to look back towards cloud and what will be the impact of it. Going by the winds sometimes does not help. Organisations does not think everything from technology but finance perspective also. Converting everything into opex may not be good idea and data center is a strategic appreciating asset from land and building perspective.
Also price of hardware will reduce over a period of time and as datacenters are redifining, getting into a arrangement of public cloud needs to be looked out from TCO perspective over a several years. If we talk about private cloud, you need an IT and CIO to create and manage. I believe that democratization and consumerization will create new challenges for technology and CIOs needs to be prepared.