
Fostering Innovation
Description
Alles über E-Books | Antworten auf Fragen rund um E-Books, Kopierschutz und Dateiformate finden Sie in unserem Info- & Hilfebereich.
In Fostering Innovation: How to Build an Amazing IT Team, accomplished technology strategist, executive, and leader Andrew Laudato delivers an eye-opening exploration of how to design, build, staff, and run a high-performing IT department. The book is filled with universally applicable strategies and techniques that can transform any IT team into an all-star cast perfectly aligned with your organization's objectives.
Incorporating proven and practical processes throughout the narrative, the book offers useful continuous improvement concepts the reader can apply to their team, company, and professional development. Readers will also find:
* Foolproof ways to put people before technology
* Detailed discussions of perennially important topics, like the importance of uptime, how to deploy redundancy, and creating the perfect organization chart
* Strategies for managing and motivating the wonderfully unique individuals we refer to as "technologists."
The perfect resource for newly minted Chief Information Officers and Chief Technology Officers, Fostering Innovation will also earn a place in the libraries of non-technical professionals who work closely with IT, and business leaders seeking a better understanding of how to lead an IT team.
More details
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
and technology. Learn more at andrewlaudato.com.
Content
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- About the Author
- About the Technical Proofreader
- Acknowledgments
- Contents at a Glance
- Contents
- Introduction
- Why Did I Write This Book?
- About This Book
- Reader Support for This Book
- Part I Become an Empathetic Leader
- Chapter 1 Hey, What Do You Know?
- Build Your Skillset
- Grow Through Listening
- A Proactive Mindset
- Chapter 2 An Amazing IT Department? What's That?
- Chapter 3 Conventional Wisdom Is Wrong
- A Tale of Two Projects
- The Downward Spiral of Micromanagement
- Part II Four Steps to Innovate
- Chapter 4 The Right Foundation
- Set Expectations
- Build Trust
- Share Your Values
- Chapter 5 The Laudato Hierarchy of IT Needs
- Chapter 6 Keep the Lights On (KTLO)
- Chapter 7 Lean and Efficient IT
- Chapter 8 Create Value
- Cost Reduction
- Increase Revenues and Enable Opportunities
- Reduce Risk
- Chapter 9 Let's Innovate
- Develop the Mindset
- Dedicate Resources
- Embrace Risk
- Idea Generation
- Rapid Prototyping
- Chapter 10 CIO Report Card
- Part III Develop a Winning Culture
- Chapter 11 Culture Eats Eggs and Strategy Eats Bacon, or Something to that Effect
- The Wrong Way to Develop Culture
- Building a Strong Culture
- How Can a CIO Influence Culture?
- The Blue Bloods
- Chapter 12 The Boxes, the Lines, and the Dashes
- Step 1: Identify Your Functions and Business Needs
- Step 2: Create an Org Chart
- Step 3: Run Use Cases
- Step 4: Identify Skills
- Step 5: Review Your Team
- Chapter 13 Org Design-Just Show Me the Answer
- Support
- Cyber-Security
- Portfolio Manager
- HR Partner
- Finance Partner
- Executive Assistant
- Chapter 14 Organizational Design and Culture
- Chapter 15 It's Not the Play, It's the Player
- Chapter 16 Take Care of Those Peeps
- Ask People What They Want from Their Career
- Spend the Most Time with Your Best People
- Provide Career Development Planning
- Always Support Your Team, Even When They're Wrong
- Be a Diode
- Have a Real Open-Door Policy
- Listen
- Only Make Changes that Are Necessary
- Provide Fair and Timely Feedback
- Be Kind Enough to Let Someone Go
- Chapter 17 Hire the Best
- Chapter 18 The Best Team Is a Diverse Team
- Chapter 19 Using Mercenaries-I Mean, Consultants
- Management Consultants
- Project-Based Consultants
- Offshore, Nearshore, Onshore
- Staff Augmentation
- Boutique Firms
- Chapter 20 The Power of Experts
- Chapter 21 Build that Network
- Formal CIO Networks
- Navigating a Cocktail Party
- Social Media
- Chapter 22 Good Advice Doesn't Come Cheap
- It's Free
- Part IV Deliver to Delight: a Collection of Usable Tips and Tools
- Chapter 23 The Written Word-a.k.a. IT Strategy
- Align Your Strategy
- Create Your Strategy
- Put Your Strategy into Action
- Chapter 24 It's the Uptime, Stupid
- Measuring Uptime
- Nuances of Measuring Uptime
- Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL)
- When You Have a Problem, Proclaim It Loudly
- Troubleshooting
- Let Them Eat Cake
- Change Management
- Daily Meeting
- Annual Readiness
- Chapter 25 If It's Important, You Better Get Two
- Redundancy and Probability Math
- The Only True Test
- Does Any of This Matter in the Cloud?
- Chapter 26 Lock It Down
- Chapter 27 Lean and Efficient IT
- Software
- Legality
- Cloud Services
- Telcom
- Professional Services
- Capital Expenses Drive Operating Expenses
- The Small Stuff
- Reduction in Force
- Less Is More
- Chapter 28 What Should I Work on First?
- Chapter 29 Limit Your Work in Process (WIP)
- Chapter 30 One List to Rule Them All
- Create Your List
- Rank Your List
- Create a Standard Deviation Report
- Communicate Priorities
- Cumulative Total
- Operationally Required Projects
- Be Ready for Line Jumpers
- Moving Forward
- Chapter 31 Portfolio/Program/Project Management
- Consistency Creates Speed
- Ranked Project List
- A Unified Calendar
- Big Room Planning
- Project Charter
- A Project Schedule Is Not a Project Plan
- Kanban
- Agile Mindset
- Keep Teams Intact
- Part V Develop Key Business Proficiency for Maximum IT Efficiency
- Chapter 32 Love Your HR Department, Just Don't "Love" Your HR Department
- Compensation
- Employee Relations
- Learning and Development
- Payroll and Benefits
- Organizational Design
- Talent Acquisition
- Chapter 33 If I Wanted to Be a Lawyer, I Would Have Gone to Law School
- Licensing Models
- The Cloud
- Indemnification
- Limitation of Liability
- Breach/Litigation
- Force Majeure
- Accounting Considerations
- Data Ownership and Preservation
- Cyber-Security
- Unsavory Practices
- End-User License Agreement (EULA)
- Changing Terms on an Invoice
- Virtualization
- Hyperlinks
- Relationships over Contracts
- Software Audits
- Other Involvement with the Legal Department
- Chapter 34 Let's Make a Deal
- Chapter 35 Accounting, My Worst Subject
- Chargebacks
- Showbacks
- Remedial Accounting Starts Here
- General Ledger
- Accruals
- Balance Sheet
- Income Statement
- Statement of Cash Flows
- Capital Expenses (CapEx) vs. Operating Expenses (OpEx)
- Capitalized Internal Labor
- Depreciation
- Write-Off
- EBITDA
- Return on Investment (ROI)
- Lookback ROI
- Chapter 36 Learn Your Business, Inside and Out
- Part VI Straighten Up and Fly Right
- Chapter 37 What You Should Have Learned in Kindergarten
- Chapter 38 Professionalism Isn't Just Wearing a Suit
- Complain the Right Way
- Don't Allow Gossip
- Make Your Word Gold
- Keep a Secret
- Don't Yell, Curse, or Pound the Table
- Assume Everything Will Get Out
- Remove Stress from Your Boss
- Just a Little Bit Better
- Chapter 39 What You Do Matters-You're Always on the Clock
- Chapter 40 Vendors and Frendors
- Chapter 41 A Word to the Vendors
- Chapter 42 Be a Cool Customer
- Chapter 43 Get Your Butt in Shape
- Sleep
- Weight Management
- Nutrition
- Exercise
- Part VII Final Tips and Advice
- Chapter 44 When Something Goes Wrong
- Step 1: Leap into Action
- Step 2: Assess Things
- Step 3: Plan Your Response
- Step 4: Communicate
- Step 5: Monitor the Situation
- Step 6: Learn from It
- Chapter 45 When Others Come Knocking
- Chapter 46 What's Wrong with Outsourcing?
- Chapter 47 Switching Jobs
- Should I Stay, or Should I Go?
- Make the Move
- On-Board Yourself
- Chapter 48 Technology Matters
- Chapter 49 Conclusion
- Notes
- Index
- EULA
3
Conventional Wisdom Is Wrong
If you're a sitting CIO right now, how are you doing? Use Table 3.1 to assess yourself. Answer honestly; nobody's looking. By the way, you can write in this book. You bought it.
Table 3.1: CIO Self-Assessment
Question Yes/No/Don't know Are your systems reliable, with 99.9% uptime? Do you score over 90% on an internal customer satisfaction survey? Does your board of directors (board) consider IT a competitive advantage? Does IT provide value, continually delivering new capabilities? Do the CEO and CFO brag about IT in public presentations? Are you providing cost-effective services? Are you invited to informal executive conversations because the CEO values your input? Do your company employees find it easy to use their tools to get work done? Are their files in the cloud and easily accessible? Do other department heads treat you as an equal? Is IT turnover lower than the company average? Is your team fully engaged? Do they over-deliver? If I asked everyone on your team to list the top three IT priorities, would they all give the same answers? If I asked all the VPs in your company to list the top three IT priorities, would they all give the same answers? Is IT leading the way on innovation in your company?If you answered yes to most of these questions, call me-I'd like to feature you in my next book. The rest of us have some work to do.
Compared to our executive peers, our profession is still in its infancy and only recently gaining respectability. Two of the first people to have the CIO title were Al Zipf of Bank of America, and Max Hopper of Bank of America and American Airlines. "Management's Newest Star: Meet the Chief Information Officer," declared Business Week magazine in a headline in 19862. Just 17 years later, The Harvard Business Review declared the profession dead, in the article "IT Doesn't Matter."3
Showing our worth has been a tough sell. We don't bring in revenue, mistakes can be extremely harmful, and what we do seems to take forever. Have you ever taken an introductory programming class, and the goal at the end is to get the words "Hello World" to pop up on the screen? The amount of effort necessary to make this happen is incomprehensible to our non-technical peers. One of the biggest challenges is that what we do is esoteric and more challenging than it looks.
A Tale of Two Projects
Imagine the case where a company is doing well, so it adds hundreds of people to its staff. The company's growth has created two problems: it needs a more robust people-management solution, and it needs additional parking. The decision is made to build a parking garage and implement new cloud-based human resources (HR) software. Both projects coincidentally cost around $3 million to complete.
The company performs a rigorous ROI process before software projects are approved. The chief people officer (CPO) is adamant that she needs tools for talent acquisition, compensation management, payroll, and employee development. As we know, it's hard to associate a revenue increase with this software. Costs will go up compared to their current business processes using spreadsheets and email as their primary tools. The parking garage doesn't go through the ROI process. Nobody likes to park a mile away and ride a shuttle bus back and forth. It's clearly needed.
The CFO wants estimates. The parking garage estimate is detailed and easy to understand. It includes tangible tasks such as excavation, framing, concrete, and painting. The HR project documentation is riddled with obscure jargon. The CIO is reluctant to give an estimate or a completion date for the HR project, stating that he doesn't even know what the requirements are yet.
The decision is made to complete both the parking garage and the HR software projects. Both projects complete on the same day.
There is a ribbon-cutting for the parking garage, and the employees are thrilled. No training is required since they all know how to park.
The new HR software is having a few problems. It's slow, and some users can't log in. Nobody knows how to use the software. As part of the project, HR implemented new policies for vacation and paid time off (PTO). These new policies frustrate the users, who blame the problems on the new system. The parking garage has a clear and immediate benefit. It will last for years. No doubt everyone thinks, "What a brilliant investment; we should build more of these." The new HR software generates negativity, and the CEO struggles to understand what she got for her investment.
Is a parking garage more valuable to a company than advanced software to manage people? Of course not. What went wrong? In this example, the HR project was on time and within budget, but it was still considered a failure to some.
The Downward Spiral of Micromanagement
When things go wrong in IT, leaders tighten the screws and micromanage. Table 3.2 provides a list of IT problems and the corresponding unfortunate responses that often follow.
Table 3.2: Common Unfortunate Responses to IT Problems
Problem Unfortunate response Project delivered on time and budget but missed the mark on functionality CIO implements a detailed requirement process that includes user sign-off before work begins. Project value fails to materialize CFO implements a strict capital approval process. CFO questions cost overruns CIO implements strict time-tracking, so every minute of work is captured and mapped to a project. Security incident CIO locks down systems, email, and files. Requires onerous processes for working remotely. Third-party consultant brought in to analyze IT CIO overreacts and completely restructures. Pressure from board to stay competitive CIO agrees to take on multiple large projects at the same time. Findings on Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX)4 audit External consultants are permitted to create oppressive controls. CEO demands more innovation CIO ignores technical debt (e.g. legacy systems) and builds new capabilities on a weak foundation.During the first week of a new job, we had a planned fire drill. While in the stairwell, I overheard two of my new developers discussing the proper way to record the time spent in the fire drill. When I inquired, it turned out that the team was required to account for every minute of their time. When I asked why, several answers were given: (1) it is necessary for Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX); (2) it's required for accounting; and (3) it's necessary for resource planning. None of these answers are accurate, and all of them are frustrating. There are no SOX rules that say you need to document the time salaried employees spend on a fire drill. There are no accounting rules that say you need to document the time salaried employees spend in a fire drill. Micromanaging time is the surest way to destroy productivity. Yes, you must track the time internal employees spend on capital projects. But time tracking should not be extended to lunch breaks, social activities, and fire drills.
As the rules become stricter, the team slows down, and morale dwindles. When a team is not empowered, discretionary effort is gone. The mentality becomes, "If you treat us like babies, we'll act like babies."
When morale drops, people will leave. In any economy, top IT talent is highly sought after, and they can find jobs outside of your company. When morale is low, top talent departs, and the downward spiral continues. As IT delivers less and less, more pressure is put on the CIO, and the screws are tightened another turn.
In an act of desperation, the CIO will cut corners. Usually, the first thing to go is quality assurance testing (QA). Testing is the last thing that stands between development and launching a solution that will be accessed by its users to do their jobs. Cutting corners on QA appears to save time and money, and by squeezing testing, you're merely hoping to still ship a quality solution on time.
This is not a suspenseful story; we all know what comes next. The release is buggy, the users are frustrated by these defects, and the new features create havoc for the customers. Now IT is not just a burden on the bottom line-it is negatively affecting the top line. Fixing these bugs must become the CIO's full-time job, and the dream of being a strategic partner will have to be postponed. Top talent is redeployed to...
System requirements
File format: ePUB
Copy protection: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
System requirements:
- Computer (Windows; MacOS X; Linux): Install the free reader Adobe Digital Editions prior to download (see eBook Help).
- Tablet/smartphone (Android; iOS): Install the free app Adobe Digital Editions or the app PocketBook before downloading (see eBook Help).
- E-reader: Bookeen, Kobo, Pocketbook, Sony, Tolino and many more (not Kindle).
The file format ePub works well for novels and non-fiction books – i.e., „flowing” text without complex layout. On an e-reader or smartphone, line and page breaks automatically adjust to fit the small displays.
This eBook uses Adobe-DRM, a „hard” copy protection. If the necessary requirements are not met, unfortunately you will not be able to open the eBook. You will therefore need to prepare your reading hardware before downloading.
Please note: We strongly recommend that you authorise using your personal Adobe ID after installation of any reading software.
For more information, see our ebook Help page.