The Angry CIO. Good For You
Anger is not misplaced in the workforce. But it is often mismanaged. Master it so that it doesn’t master you.
Read Article >Anger is not misplaced in the workforce. But it is often mismanaged. Master it so that it doesn’t master you.
CIOs who seek significant investments are outcome based. They understand the difference that will be made is the desire that the business seeks.
Entropy sets in over time. Our system of work degrades. The effective CIO sees what is happening and resets, reinvigorates and renews how their team functions. They focus on priority over priorities.
Generative AI can never replace your voice. Attempting to have it do so will betray you and feel like betrayal to others.
With all that the future of work entails, we have overlooked a treasured quality to value in employees. It’s not how long they stay; it’s who they bring with them.
Blended workforces are the new reality. Getting ahead of the wave requires meeting unique challenges with new priorities.
What your team needs most is the best of you seeing and saying the best of them.
CIOs and their teams suffer from fatigue and fight against natural drags of complacency. One overlooked dynamic is key to restoring the fire and the push you need.
Managers are your critical factor for success. They hold a unique position and yet an undervalued perception. Here is how to change that and to change them for the better.
Many CIOs have options in place to develop people, but they still aren’t seeing the results. Even if you are making cutbacks, you can invest more into your people while saving money and increasing revenue. You just need to brush up on your farming.
We have misused feedback, and in thinking we were being objective, we have actually been subjective. We don’t really give people a lot to work with. Constructive feedback is aware of the science behind how people learn, and the steps to take in light of that truth.
The basis for a solid, long-term business relationship is the same as for our adult relationships. And contrary to popular wording, it’s not something that technology leaders manage, but they definitely must lead in.
Career stall and role-rut are within your ability to move forward from. Tech-leaders who keep growing are intentional to develop personal, relational, positional and vocational areas that make them better professionals, better leaders, better executives and better experts.
CIOs and their team must have creative moments to be productive. Too often, those creative opportunities are crowded out. Three key practices will restore and increase productivity.
IT staff are frustrated in five common areas. The CIO and IT leader needs to understand what is wearing on their staff, and how to respond in two substantial ways.
Problems surround the CIO. Solving for the wrong problem wastes time, energy and money. Five shifts help the CIO determine real problems from presenting issues.
Stakeholders know the value of the CIO. The last thing they want is for their CIO to be led down a wrong path, distracted by the agenda of others, and misdirected by trends that lure them into waste.
People are quitting their jobs in record numbers. Whether it is due to fatigue or a need for change, offering to “recharge” their batteries isn’t enough. They need to learn how to change their lives. They need an advocate.
Burnout is an overused term for a lethal threat. Unless the CIO understands its origin, (s)he can never properly address it and prevent it.
Vendor contracts often place the CIO in the squeeze between contract fulfillment and stakeholder expectations. Three carefully crafted practices will keep you in the lead and in favor.
Most sources of outside input end up as waste. The CIO is more valuable than that; your velocity and capacity of growth depend on the source of influence. A well-led peer advisory group will give you the results you need in the time you need it.
Anger is healthy for the workplace. CIOs need to master it as a leadership skill for the sake of their team, their work and their selves.
Leaders deal with email on a daily basis. Four little shifts and the email you send will be opened and more effective.
Feeling that you can’t get through to the CEO can be demoralizing. Fortunately, a simple recognition of how they are oriented can lead to overnight change with just a couple of adjustments on your part.
The CEO and CIO want things from each other. Four areas are critical needs that often are overlooked: what each wants as it regards risk, networks, business exchange and team mastery.
The CIO is here to stay. They are the bridge for customer experience, business priority and technology solution. Most of all, they teach everyone how to think differently, not just to know more.
Dealing well with difficult employees is the difference between well-deserved victory and an unforeseen upset. How do you know when to give up on an employee?