Join Roxane Heaton, CIO, Macmillan Cancer Support as she discussed digital inclusion, innovation and leadership.
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Welcome to 娇色导航Leadership Live UK.
I'm Lee Rennick Executive Director, 娇色导航Communities
and I'm very excited to introduce and welcome Dr.
Roxane Heaton, CIO, Macmillan Cancer Support.
Roxane, please introduce yourself.
And could you tell us a little bit about your current role?
Thanks so much, Lee, and lovely to be here today.
So as I've mentioned, my name is Roxane Heaton, the Chief Information Officer
of one of the UK's largest cancer charities, which is Macmillan Cancer Support.
And I'm responsible for technology and digital and data optimization.
We are 98% funded by fundraising and were are the size of 250.
So it's really important we spend our money wisely.
People living with cancer.
Well, thank you so much for sharing that
and I really appreciate you joining us here today.
Roxanne, we've created the series to support diversity in technology
and to listen to women working in the sector who are building and supporting DE&I.
This year the IWD theme was #embraceequity.
So the first question, can you please tell us a little bit
about your own career
path and provide some insights or tips on that road path. As a woman
especially, are there any lessons learned that you could share?
It's a very great question and I think it's applicable for any sector.
I went to an all girls boarding school and then straight into university doing engineering.
So when there were only seven females, our course, nearly 100.
So it was straight into a very different world.
And I remember what I've always learned. Especially someone who, I've got a stammer.
So I'm always aware of different superpowers and everyone's got superpowers
and it's about maximizing those because we're all very different.
So I've had a squigley career. Which I think
is hugely valuable, and especially in discussion with people. We're all different.
We will bring different perspectives to the table.
So I started my career in the Royal Navy after a quick stint in banking.
Actually, which got me really hungry for making sure
we did great things with money and the restrictions and things money.
But yeah, I spent 12 years in the Royal Navy,
which I think really is embedded my instinctive
ambitions and behaviors of
teamwork and being a team member first and a leader second.
But actually as a leader is it is everyone's responsibility.
I'm really lucky to jump from there to Morrisons, one of the UK's largest supermarkets.
Which is end to end retailer, so everything from farm to fork. So hughly interesting.
I hope I can touch with some some insight there later.
But everything I learned through all of the really again, just showed me
that whatever skill you bring, it can
you can bring a different view.
So finding different allies and different people, who could champion
you was, I think, hardest in my early, early time.
But actually it's been super interesting as I've gone on later in my career
to find people who I really learned from are those around my network.
And that's where I get my greatest learning.
But actually those are my greatest allies too.
And it probably took me a little while to realize that.
So building your relationships across networks, the best thing you can do?
Well, I really appreciate you sharing that.
And it's looks like and we're going to talk about this in just a minute.
and it segues really well into the next question.
So I was researching some data around women and technology in the UK,
and some new data reveals that the proportion of female employees
in the UK, in UK tech has declined for the first time in five years by over 2%.
Now, this is also happened in Canada, which is very interesting.
So it looks like it might be a bit of a worldwide global phenomenon.
This study actually revealed that under 15% of IT
directors are women in the sector in the UK.
So you are really a big supporter of diversity and equity.
And I was wondering if you could share
what you believe organizations could do to support diverse workforces.
Gosh, it's a really concerning stat isn't it. And it's something that after
so much work by a lot of people across across the globe to increase that.
So female leaders, female CEOs and definitely females in technology. It's
really concerning is why is it going to be something to really unpack?
But it's not only concerning for the workforce we have, it's
concerning the solutions that we're designing.
And that's why it's so important that we really address this.
So we must normalize the conversation.
A big thing that I try and do is talk in business outcomes.
Make sure it's really open to non tech techies as I try and call the people
add a huge or just as much amount of value, if not more value.
If you talk about the user, your technologist
because everybody uses technology and I would love to hear from everybody.
It's about getting in early as well and making it and making it relevant
for people back to normalizing.
Help people understand what value they can bring to the technology sector.
But it's not good enough.
So we've worked really hard in terms of making new routes,
sideways routes through retraining and also realizing not everyone's a unicorn.
So as long as we can talk about clear development plans
and that's for everyone, not not, not not just females,
we can support everyone to grow.
So we've now currently got 40% female in our organization, which is fantastic, in technology, and
50% female in my leadership team. We've gone from from
from almost one one out of 12 to 50%, which is fantastic.
But we must keep pushing that and having those role models.
There's that, there's an old phrase that you can't be what you can't see.
So we need more diversity of lots of different demographics
at all different spaces in people's careers and understanding
what are the traps that the as you mentioned, that 2% let's work out why.
So yeah, it's really important.
Yeah, I think it is.
And given that you said you started your career in engineering,
I mean, I think there's that ability to look at how younger women
are looking at STEAM versus STEM and bringing the arts
and you talked about the soft skills like making sure that people have you know,
we recognized people's skills outside of technology
that seems to be trending a lot in these conversations I'm having.
Like we want people to bring in skills and then a lot of the,
you know, male allies I've been speaking to
in the tech industry have been saying, you know, look,
we know that women don't apply for jobs if they only have 50 or 60%
of their skills based, they don't think they should, whereas men will.
And so, you know,
just the male allies that are encouraging and looking at those applications
that come in, encouraging women to apply, I think that's such an important part.
So and just as you mentioned right now, having this dialog is so impactful for me.
Every time I speak to a woman who's working in the sector
to talk about their career when they've come,
I gain some insights myself, so I really appreciate you sharing that very much.
You mentioned in the beginning that you've had a career in various sectors,
and a lot of CIOs I speak with talk about knowledge gained by working across
sectors, you know, and the key learnings in their career through that. You've worked
both in private and public sector and now you're in the charitable sector.
So could you please provide some insights on how you utilize your learnings
between sectors and perhaps why cross-sector learning is really important?
So when I think about this question, I think about this question, I think about
our user doesn't care.
I only work in the charitable sector or the public sector or the private sector.
They don't just experience one sector.
They bounce across each sector and they expect
the same sort of level of service.
Not everyone expects the Amazon experience if one on one to shop at Amazon,
but absolutely it's about keeping up with Joneses.
So it's not good enough to just think that because I'm a I'm a charity, I'm it's
okay that I offer a less good experience doing the experience in those other sectors.
So I think it's always keeping punchy is really important
because otherwise the users will go elsewhere.
And they'll get the service from elsewhere and donate their money elsewhere. From my perspective.
That's why I mentioned that networking is so important and huge learnings
with peers and we're all hungry for the same thing.
There's not enough money to go around to reinvent the wheel
and the wheel doesn't need to be reinvented
in a lot places. We can learn from each other as we're going on
in each each journey into different use of technologies
and soft, skills and sharing that diversity. So what I've learned,
either packing boxes of boxes in a warehouse
or understanding the fish canning line at Grimsby,
for example to look at to look inside fishes, make sure that they are good
enough, the quality or even the very high tech potato sorter on the manufacturing site,
just to give a few examples of the supermarket
you see behind the sort of the shop front, I always think about how technology,
the user, the journey, the efficiency for people are so valuable.
And so often when I'm talking to different stakeholders and users,
when I think about different experiences I've had across those different sectors,
I try and I always think there's different way to solve a problem
and that there are always sort of certain friction and always I find an analysis
I can do from a sector that I've been in
to finding new ways to solve problems. I think.
So
the charity sector is no different to another sector.
Even more so with the same stakeholder pressures.
We've all got shareholders, daily profit and loss targets,
it's just different things we're looking at over
revenue implications or even when there's revenue implications.
But we can again keep up with the Joneses we can really push ahead
and look outside the global trends as well,
because someone could have done it out out there, and so why not?
So if my my only advice is always think differently, always keep hungry
and so you can stay ahead of the game. And that's absolutely fine.
Looking across sector, across. The world, I love that.
And you know, when you talk about across the world
and in the charitable sector, you know, a few years back the UK
introduced the tap to pay at a lot of events. Right?
And so instead of having to put your ?5 in or whatever into the donation box,
you could just tap your card.
Well, that hadn't come out in Canada, but it was learning through charities here
that's happening over there. I went, Oh my God, this is amazing.
And so, like the banking industry did a whole innovation around
that in the UK, which again, you talk about global learning.
So I really appreciate you bringing that up
because that is such an important part of it.
And obviously, again, your background working at Morrisons,
having that opportunity to look at, you know, how food is processed
and probably looking at blockchain and other things just, just again
enhances your role that you're in now
because you're having those outside learnings.
A 娇色导航at a roundtable said to me once, or we were at a roundtable
talking about cloud and all sorts of things
and but the one 娇色导航said, you know, people do expect the end user
does expect that Amazon experience your order one day and get it the next.
Worthy We talked about the Ocado experience of food delivery
or whatever, so I appreciate you sharing that with us.
And I wanted to really talk about tech for good.
It really seems to be
with a lot of the CIOs, especially in the UK, talking about this
and really being intentional about looking at that.
And the last time we spoke, you spoke about your passion for tech
for good, really to support inclusion of underrepresented.
communities in accessing technology.
And you made a really interesting point to me around,
you know, building data models that can really help inform that.
So really being intentional and working with data to understand
where you can, you know, support underrepresented communities.
So could you please discuss this and perhaps some of the ways
you believe leaders and organizations can support this?
This is a huge question and again, it's super exciting.
I probably think your last comment actually about different sectors
and globally as well, because I think about Blockbuster,
which is a UK film hiring company. I always say
you don't want to turn into a Blockbuster, so the need was that change
but it happened a little bit too late. And I think that's really interesting
about the global thing as well and about doing doing tech for good.
The nations who are really performing are actually some of those
who are furthest behind in terms of digital inclusion, and that's why
I think it's really important to not be not be complacent.
There were some really some really groundbreaking activities
in different areas of the world who were leapfrogging us in tap to pay
yu've mentioned because they need too. That need is so critical.
And so when I think about looking at different data models, I've got
some different viewpoints on joining up different data models
from different styles of data, for example,
and the power of that, because we we actually only look at the boundaries
that we set in or the datasets that we currently see.
And so by thinking differently, by looking into this into space,
as one of my peers would say,
and just searching for new stars, you can find insight.
And so when I think about the charity
sector that I work in, I currently serve a certain portion of people in living with cancer
that's not good enough.
And so whereas when I was going to when I think how I can solve that,
I think what could help joining that up.
So this experience from when I worked in central government at the height of COVID,
when we we formulated the discussions
to join up different datasets from across government departments.
And what the power of that show is that through aggregated data sets
that were anonymized and had a kind of a nationwide view, but localized impact.
You could see the different impact of different datasets being joined up.
So for example, water data or people the number of people on the road,
you can see the see the transmissions, for example, either increase or decrease.
And I think the same thing can happen in different examples is using open
datasets or datasets from other other other organizations
that can be shared. It's for example linked to social care. So what
at what point in a social ecosystem can you apply a certain lever
and the individual will not go back to social care like a rubber band.
And so it's understanding those datasets and understanding well
actually if you provide that lever over and over again, you can move that child
and that dependance from social care and break and break the trend.
And I think that's so important because obviously
the data is out there, but we in society aren't using it.
We're trying to hold on to it so closely.
But actually we all know it's there
and different people are using it, different activities.
I mean, we've been acutually using it, even offline.
So as a retailer for example, someone would look out, see it's raining
or see a film being loaned to another cinema and adjust their offering.
People have naturally done it for years. But actually
what can we do if we actually harness the power of data sitting in systems,
making sure it's safe and controlled in the people's trust
and can people control of that data is really clear,
but actually showing the benefits really with real life applications,
then if we look at different societies, have achieved this really, really well through COVID.
They democratized the trust
and they democratised data, control input in discussions and it really increase
people's engagement with activity and the trust in the entire system. And therefore onwards
they could understand the motivators and detractors from using digital tools.
So I think it's really, really powerful
as one element of tech figured.
And so there's so many foundations we put in place
before we get on to shiny new things such as, well not just AI, but elements
of AI or other things, because there's people need to want to trust the system.
So foundations are really important as part of it.
You're really inspiring me.
Thank you so much for saying that, because I'm thinking
we're going to our next question, which is going to be about innovation. And GenAI.
But, you know, I think what you're saying is
we have an app and what I'm hearing is almost we have this opportunity right now
with this new inflection point in tech and maybe quantum,
You know, I feel like Quantum is really coming in behind.
So there's that opportunity to potentially look at how we're connecting this data. Imagine that
at the speed of which we could do things quicker and faster and support individuals
and how we could share.
And if corporations were aligned to that, to making ensure there was, you know,
because I think of organizations that donate food to food banks
or other organizations, imagine if that was all connected, how
that would really change the world.
So, yeah, you're really it's very inspirational.
So thank you for sharing that.
And I did want to go through to our last question, which is I'm asking
everybody this question right now, and the theme is really around innovation.
and GenAI, so, you know, obviously, GenAI
and LLMs are very prevalent right now in discussions about innovation
and just in discussions about technology, really.
So could you share your views on that and perhaps some of the ways
you're looking at to deploy or what you're seeing in the market?
So if I think about this and I'm really a big fan of shiny toys,
but shiny toys that are bound with their limitations in the discussion.
There's definitely a place keeping up
and understanding what's out in the market and play and playing safely.
But at the same time, I think there were some foundations that we thought about.
If I use example, one of my wonderful medical team
I'm really privileged to work with because they work directly with the frontline.
Is that I think about we need to be contextualized.
We've got a really real critical, exciting point in a technological revolution
or evolution to think, to recontextualize, not just do as we've always done.
So arthritis, for example, to be treated the same way since the 1950s
and one dataset of white middle aged men in the north of Manchester in the UK.
Why do we still do that?
And so it becomes
pretty apparent that actually the medical treatments are very different now.
And so the same solution of fix is isn't working.
So in the same way, how can we use the opportunity
with AI and large language models and whatever is going to come next
in order to recontextualize?
I go back to the bones, what actually the user needing.
And how can we solve that problem?
Because no doubt it will create more discussions about dependencies
and also get rid of the waste effot. All those processes and also expose
second order effects of using AI and LLMs.
This is all done for if you make the hospital porter
group more efficient, of course it's going to open up more bed spaces.
Some of these some of the examples we just mapped them out and think a bit broader.
We can think about different, different implications.
So for me it's about exciting people, about the opportunities, data
to really talk to people about ethics and talking about biases and help
people understand what is that excitement to level thing to bring on on the journey.
Because at the end of day we're all looking to make the future better,
but it must be secure, resilient and joined up
and efficient because all of these things are really expensive as well.
So we all we I think some of us know some of the pricing models
with new AI systems through our hype vendors
are staff to trying to go live and it's extortionate frankly.
I as a charity can't keep up.
So how can we all get on this bus and be supporting the users in the same way,
including those those vendors. Obviously there will be people who will be left behind,
and I don't I don't mind if it's us, but I'm really
conscious of the person using the system because if we're being left behind
the user who needs the most services will absolutely be left behind.
And that that and that that the people I'm I'm worried about.
So how I answer questions in my mind about knowing what's what
what's out there absolutely making sure that the foundations
of data sharing data ethics and data management are in place
and a real hunger for people
to understand the opportunities and and to excite people with with that.
Because at the same time, that will open up those motivators
for others to get on a digital inclusion journey,
which will only help the health, wealth and ultimate well-being
in the community if if they are enabled and excited to make
best use of the exciting technologies that are out there. Dr.
Roxane, you're very, very inspiring and I really appreciate this conversation today.
It has been just phenomenal for me to listen to you and hear
give you points on technology.
And so thank you so much. Thank you.
Thank you very much. I really loveed talking to you. Thank you.
And if you're interested in learning more, please don't hesitate to visit us
at cio.com/uk Thanks again.
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