DNA is inherited from our parents, and impaired genes may limit our potential regardless of effort. In much the same way, a Chief Information Office’s (CIO) performance is influenced by organizational factors beyond their control.
Reporting structures, governance practices, and leadership ethics act as the corporate DNA of an organization. When these elements are healthy and aligned, CIOs can thrive. When they are flawed, even the most capable CIO may struggle to succeed.
There is much discussion about a CIO’s qualifications, experience, and track record, but far less about the conditions that influence job performance. Is there a myth behind why a hand-picked CIO, selected through an extensive search, fails to meet expectations?
Dismissing a CIO for reasons ranging from insufficient business and strategic insight to perceived technical or operational shortcomings may not be justified until there has been a close examination of the reporting hierarchy, corporate governance, and professional ethics—the organizational DNA that shapes CIO performance.
Misaligned Reporting
A CIO is doomed to fail when reporting into a siloed function with no mandate over business units. It is like a race car being given no fuel to power the engine.
Resistance to change is pervasive in many workplaces. Common causes include labor constraints, a lack of urgency, fear of failure, and, more often than not, the risk of opening a can of worms. Business units acknowledge that untangling and migrating a heavily customized Enterprise Resource Planning system to a new software suite can be as delicate as a heart transplant. Such initiatives may uncover years-old payment errors, misinterpreted HR policies, orphaned privileged accesses, and other irregular practices — potentially exposing the leadership responsible. Consequently, maintaining the status quo is often preferred, creating the impression that the CIO is making little progress.
Corporate politics frequently come into play. Mandatory business justifications for technology projects are portrayed as bureaucratic hurdles. Clunky interfaces, disconnected workflows, excessive approvals, and inconsistent reports are often disguised as technology problems. Important digital initiatives such as shared IT services, enterprise architecture, and the rationalization of shadow IT may be diluted or blocked by business units seeking to protect their own interests. Some business leaders choose to procrastinate, make excuses, and preserve the status quo, leaving legacy problems and technical debt in anticipation of leadership changes.
CIOs cannot operate solely by consensus because every stakeholder has blind spots. Decisions reached through consensus are not always in the best interests of the enterprise, particularly in non-profit organizations. A CIO without executive authority over business change is effectively handicapped. Without a mandate to drive process improvements, establish digital priorities, and enforce accountability, the foundations of business efficiency and growth are very much weakened.
Disengaged Governance
A CIO is reduced to a support role when IT is treated merely as a utility, where system uptime becomes the dominant key performance indicator. When coupled with the absence of a CIO’s voice in the boardroom, their strategic relevance is further diminished.
Operating largely in a defensive posture, CIOs are summoned to Board whenever necessary to defend cyber breaches, project failures and service disruptions. Over time, the discussion becomes dominated by bad news, creating bias and prompting questions about whether the right person is leading the technology function.
An increasing number of progressive organizations are establishing dedicated Board Technology Committees (BTCs). These committees function much like Audit Committees by providing independent oversight of governance, compliance, and technology risk matters.
A BTC provides the CIO with a politically safe forum to present emerging strategies, policies, and technology initiatives for candid discussion. It is not intended to bypass the CEO or CFO. Rather, it serves as an executive platform connecting independent directors and the CIO, helping to identify issues that warrant the full Board’s attention.
Unethical Leadership
Whether we succeed professionally often depends on our managers or reporting officers (ROs). Beyond conducting performance appraisals, exemplary ROs empower, support, and mentor their teams.
For CIOs, however, these qualities are less critical. As experienced senior executives, CIOs operate independently with minimal supervision or coaching. They are results-oriented and guided by Board-endorsed strategies. They engage their ROs at the appropriate moments to ensure alignment without burdening them with operational details.
“The biggest risk is not taking any risk,” famously said by Mark Zuckerberg. Technology, by its very nature, involves risk. Failing to embrace it may ultimately become the greatest threat to an organization’s survival. Significant risks include technology investments that generate poor returns, failures of mission-critical systems, and the accumulation of technical debt. CIOs should therefore be evaluated on the opportunities they identify, the risks they mitigate, and the digital advancements they deliver.
An RO who is evasive, ambiguous, and unwilling to address sensitive issues can be highly disruptive to a CIO, who depends on clarity and certainty to perform effectively. Misunderstandings can easily arise when critical decisions are communicated verbally rather than documented through email or meeting minutes.
Performance DNA
High-performing CIOs are forged through years of experience and practice. Nevertheless, some may succeed in one organization and struggle in another due to differences in culture and operating models.
CIOs cannot function solely on stakeholder consensus, as consensus may not always serve the best interests of the enterprise. An enabling environment is created through a clear business mandate, an engaged Board Technology Committee, authentic and risk-savvy leadership. Together, these elements form the corporate DNA that enables sustainable CIO performance across industries.
Copyedit: chatGPT