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by Clint Boulton

8 ɫarchetypes: What kind of IT leader are you?

Feature
Sep 18, 20187 mins

From order taker to business leader, ɫresponsibilities vary widely. Learn what role you currently play and how to break that mold in service of improved business value and career growth.

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8 ɫarchetypes: What kind of IT leader are you?

Global business disruption is quickening the evolutionary timeline of the ɫrole. Market dynamics are forcing IT leaders to extend beyond taking orders and delivering sustainable IT systems to massaging digital strategies and driving business outcomes.

At least, that’s the level many CIOs are aspiring to reach. The reality is that 44 percent of CIOs are neither actively involved in developing nor executing their organization’s digital strategy, , which polled 1,116 CIOs and 321 CXOs.

Each enterprise has its own vision for the responsibilities of its IT leadership. Some companies value a ɫwho can maintain stable IT; others expect IT leaders to do that plus deliver a digital transformation.

But with technology touching all facets of the business, some CIOs wear multiple hats along the continuum. Leaning on research culled from Deloitte, KPMG, Gartner and others, CIO.com takes a look at the most common ɫarchetypes.

What kind ɫare you and to what role do you aspire to help your enterprise achieve the business outcomes it desires? In the digital era, you’d better figure that out or another ɫ(or CDO) will figure it out for you.

Trusted operator

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If you are focusing on IT efficiency, reliability, and cost containment, you are part of the 55 percent of CIOs who are considered “trusted operators,” according to Deloitte. This is your classic, keep-the-lights-on role. IDG’s 2016 State of the ɫstudy defined operators as “functional” CIOs who spend time managing expenses, security and IT crises, and improving IT operations. Forbes But here’s the bad news for all you smooth, functional operators: Deloitte says this role will become obsolete as its duties become table stakes for IT leadership. If you find yourself getting further cornered into this role, it may be time to initiate projects geared toward innovation or business growth. For tips, see “6 secrets of highly innovative CIOs” and “6 secrets of revenue-generating CIOs.”

Business co-creator

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If you are driving and enabling growth through the execution of business strategy, then you are among the 36 percent of CIOs that Deloitte has defined “business co-creators.” Those are the CIOs who always talk about the importance of “partnering with the business to drive value”? These folks are likely co-creators bent on aligning themselves with the business needs. A good spot to be in, but beware: The rules of IT-business alignment are shifting.

Broker

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Broker CIOs are co-creators who effectively engage the business to shape demand and outcomes. But they also leverage emerging technologies o drive innovation, including promoting and managing a solutions portfolio, , who views brokers as key cogs in an new IT operating model. Such CIOs, who help sales, HR and other departments select and negotiate software-as-a-service (SaaS) solutions, also explore new positions and skills required in the IT function and how some current IT positions need to evolve, reduce or even be eliminated. For more on succeeding in the broker role, see “Modernizing IT: How to thrive as a ɫ‘value broker.’ĝ

Integrator

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CIOs who spend a lot of their time weaving together platforms often joke that they are really “chief integration officers.” These integrators implement new, open architecture, leveraging a center of excellence. The reason? “Sustainable competitive advantage and business value come when the front, middle, and back offices work together for a truly digital enterprise,” Berry wrote.

Orchestrator

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If you are building and managing user services, managing vendor relationships, protecting the enterprise and monitoring service delivery, you are likely fulfilling a ɫorchestrator role. The orchestration performed in this role is done ideally to provide optimal value to the business, KPMG says. But the role can be complex, as orchestrators tend to juggle a lot of balls in a lot of domains to provide that business value.

Change instigator

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This ɫtakes the lead on tech-enabled business transformation, according to Deloitte. Instigators, which account for only 9 percent of CIOs, also focus on emerging technologies and supporting business strategy. In its annual ɫreport, IDG views such CIOs as “transformational” IT leaders. For tips on thriving in this role, see “ɫchange agents: The art of the IT turnaround” and “7 habits of highly effective digital leaders.”

ɫplus

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Well before CIOs became change instigators they evolved to become “ɫpluses,” a term coined by George Westerman and Richard Hunter in their 2009 book, The Real Business of IT: How CIOs Create and Communicate Value. The ɫplus is , which could include other roles. CIOs who tacked on responsibilities such as chief innovation officer, CTO or product development and logistics are among those identified as pluses.

As digital becomes increasingly woven into the fabric of the business, more ɫpluses are adding chief digital officer to their title. Akash Khurana, ɫand CDO of construction firm McDermott International, said his role has shifted from stabilizing the IT function to being a “digital transformer,” enabling him to open new channels for the company.

“As a technology team, we’re having discussions with customers that we’ve never had before — strategic, valued discussions rather than solely focusing on the stabilization and optimization of our function,” Khurana told Gartner for its 2018 ɫAgenda report.

Vanguard

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The ɫplus and change instigators give way to the digital vanguard CIO, which Deloitte says both masters digital and is perceived by the rest of the business as a market leader in driving emerging digital technologies. The vanguard CIO, who juggles back-office and front-office technology to facilitate digital transformation, are ahead of most CIOs on emerging technologies and innovation, and serve as beacons for what the future of business may hold. Deloitte pegs vanguards at 10 percent of current CIOs. For more on making this transition, see “How to break the ɫmold — and become a business leader.”

More on the ɫrole today:

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