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Mon, Jan 1, 2007 9:16 EST

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Posted by: Susan Cramm in Best Practices Topic: Personal ManagementBlog: Executive Coach
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Inexperience, old habits and fear can lead to unnecessary risk taking by the CIO. Avoid this trap by following these simple rules for safe and effective IT leadership.
IT leadership is never easy, but some people make it harder than it has to be. This point was brought home to me after I witnessed a recent car accident. As if driving isn't dangerous enough, a young man used speed to navigate a turn and ended up hitting another car. Clearly in the wrong, he became belligerent and tried to blame the other driver. Unfortunately for him, the other driver was a firefighter with close ties to the local police. Once the police arrived at the scene, they conducted a field sobriety test and arrested the young man for driving under the influence.
Clearly, the decision to drink and drive led the young man to a series of bad choices. IT leadership has its own versions of DUI that can result in near misses, accidents and fatalities. These events are often dissected in the trade press and discussed at conferences by CIOs who, even as they say, "How could they be so stupid?" are also thinking, "There but for the grace of God go I."
Sadly, I see IT leaders take unnecessary risks all the time. Many are leading under the undue influence of inexperience, hubris, fear, old habits, technology hype, vendor pressure and organizational politics. It's ironic that as a profession, we have enough collective experience to identify behaviors that ensure the success of our organizations and our careers. However, these rules are rarely written down so that IT organizations and those who lead them can align their behaviors accordingly.
To help you do so, let us review some of my favorite rules for safe and effective IT leadership.
Build and lead a strong, credible IT organization. Don't be the leader who has 22 direct reports and no viable successors. Spend half of your strategic planning effort to get the right people in the right roles working together the right way. Select people with integrity who can work with others, are motivated more by making a difference than making a name, are your professional peers and who complement your capabilities. Organize IT similarly to the business. Expect more from your staff and delegate freely, but check carefully and be there to make sure their failures aren't fatal. Never