娇色导航

Examining the National Bank of Canada CIO鈥檚 approach to tech and teams

Feature
Aug 9, 20237 mins
Business ContinuityCIOWomen in IT

CIO.com Canada editor Lee Rennick recently sat with Julie Levesque, EVP, technology and operations, and 娇色导航at National Bank of Canada to discuss her approach to technology鈥檚 role in leading teams, and ensuring that the leadership roadmap is inclusive, supportive and founded in mentorship.

Julie Levesque
Credit: National Bank of Canada

Being accountable for the execution of the technology strategy for National Bank of Canada, delivery of all projects and initiatives, and running daily operations and back offices functions, Julie Levesque has a lot on her plate as EVP of technology and operations, and CIO. In the role now for three years, she鈥檚 applied the skills and methods learned throughout her career in tech and financial services that speak of her commitment to building strong, capable teams, and taking risks rather than encourage complacency鈥攁n enduring adversity for women in the industry despite improvements.

鈥淚 was once asked to apply for an executive position, which I didn鈥檛 consider,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is something some women usually look at: the criteria for the job. And for this executive role, I thought I only had half the criteria, so I shouldn鈥檛 apply. But my boss said I needed to go through the process. In the end I got the position and I was able to develop in my first executive position at the bank.鈥

Pushing boundaries, however uncomfortable, is always a valuable practice. The same mindset also applies when working with different points of view since the opportunity to learn from varied opinions usually proves to be more valuable long term than finding solutions with only those in lockstep with one strategy.

鈥淲hat I learned is whatever work I use, it鈥檚 being interpreted or repeated in great magnitude,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not, 鈥楯ulie said this,鈥 or 鈥楯ulie said that,鈥 but you still have to make sure you understand the impact on the receiving end when you say something. To me it鈥檚 something really beneficial getting that connection with every level in the organization, making sure you have that rapport with them. You get that continuous loop and people feel there鈥檚 a purpose why they鈥檙e there. They鈥檙e not just coding lines. They also understand that what we do is serve customers.鈥

CIO.com Canada editor Lee Rennick recently spoke with Levesque about getting out of your comfort zones, the advantages of being bilingual in technology, and tackling calculated risks head on. Here are some edited excerpts of that conversation. Watch the full video below for more insights.

On establishing a foundation: I had a non-typical path that led me to the position I鈥檓 in. Technology was something I was always interest in, but I ended up in a software company by fluke and then really fell in love with technology. I worked there for a couple of years and it was difficult from a life balance point of view with two small children. I was traveling a lot and realized as much as I love my job, it was too much of a burden on my family. So I decided to take not a step back, but a lateral step and that鈥檚 how I ended up at National Bank as a dev lead and in a web development team. This was new to me. Then I fell in love with financial services and realized I was meant to work in both. I could learn so much around the different lines of business, and it鈥檚 motivated me throughout my career and still today. So I embraced that and realized when I鈥檓 passionate about something, results come in a timely matter, and you perform better because you鈥檙e motivated in what you do.

On understanding scope: In 2010, the 娇色导航at the time said he had an initiative for me, but it wasn鈥檛 clear what I鈥檇 be doing. It was something important for the bank and he said I needed to lead it. I trusted his judgment and it turned out to be a huge transformation project. Along the way, I remember being asked to manage a project, and having already managed projects, I felt this wasn鈥檛 where I was in my career. But my boss said to forget the label and look at what needs to be done, the scope of what needs to happen, and then let him know if I was interested. I think scope and breadth are much more important than a label. I thought I had passed the point of managing projects but this was the cornerstone of what led me to everything. After that, I was leading a huge team and it was a strategic initiative for the bank, which allowed me to learn a lot about complexity and managing stakeholders. It was a tough learning experience running that program but I also learned about myself, what I was good at, and how I could continue developing, which led me to different opportunities I didn鈥檛 think were in my path.

On diversifying: When I started my career, I felt like an imposter. That鈥檚 something I think a lot of us feel throughout a career at some point. The imposter syndrome never really left, though; it still shows up once in a while. But throughout my career I had mentorship and sponsorship, by identifying people along the way who complement things I needed to work on. I鈥檓 very driven and energetic so I usually gravitate to mentors or sponsors similar to me. But that just increases those aspects, so at some point I realized I needed to find people to develop other aspects of my leadership to balance it out. So I鈥檝e been lucky to have great managers and people I鈥檝e kept in touch with when they move to other organizations. This is something I found, that balancing is not on a day-to-day or weekly basis. It needs to even out over time. Otherwise you put too much pressure on yourself.

On building teams: The first thing I did as 娇色导航was work with my new team on the strategy for the organization. I felt that in order to rally people, we all needed to understand the objective and the north star, but they need to participate in the elaboration of that strategy. Sometimes I find leaders work strategy but they鈥檙e in their offices all by themselves. I involve my team, they participate, and they buy into that. I also go beyond just my direct reports and include people who have different perspectives to make sure we have full coverage and that everybody knows where we need to go. I find this is really the roadmap, which involves everyone. But we have to make sure it鈥檚 clear, crisp, and fits on one page since I have about 5,000 employees. It also needs to be repeated over and over again. We have a tendency to put PowerPoints together with lots of words to cover everything. It鈥檚 difficult to mobilize a big group of people when it doesn鈥檛 speak to everyone. I鈥檓 lucky to have a team that鈥檚 super mobilized.

On being bilingual: I always say that from a technology point of view, you need to be bilingual. You need to speak technology as well as business when you work. When you get into where this technology is heading to, it鈥檚 toward that more: technology supporting the business.

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