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Dec. 15, 2004 Issue of CIO Magazine | In this section....

SECURITY

What It's Like To....
Send People into Danger

BY ANDRE SPATZ | cio of unicef



What It's Like To...
Introduction
Achieve 100% Uptime
Send People into Danger
Survive Charley
Take Your Application Source Code Out of Escrow
Bear Witness To IT History
Walk In Your Customers' Shoes
Move a Company to Open Source
Work For A 24/7 Entrepreneur
Be The Last Man Standing
Bond On Mt. Fuji
Be An Early Adopter
Lose Your Job
Save Four Lives
Pull The Plug On A Multimillion-Dollar Project
Brief The President
Testify Before Congress
Be The First CIO Of The U.S. Senate
Walk Into An IT Disaster
Get The Job
Not Get The Job
Build The World's Most Powerful Supercomputer
Be The Fall Guy
Live In A Two-CIO Family
Move To A New Industry
Survive The Pentagon Attack
Take A Real Vacation
Be Treated Like A Rock Star
Be An American Abroad
Catch A Killer
Be Different
Work In Iraq
Be A Man In A Woman's World
Be Hired By The FBI
Start Your Own Company
Save $55,000
Fire Half Your Staff
Downshift Your Life
Go From CIO To CEO

 
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My travels as CIO are hairier than the typical CIO's. In Colombia on the eve of elections, I had soldiers outside my hotel room. I also had to have armed guards when I traveled to Ivory Coast. And these weren't soldiers protecting me; these were just men with guns.

Of course, as the CIO of Unicef, I am not normally on the front line, but I am responsible for the people who are.

Unicef rotates its international staff around the globe. We only keep people in crisis situations for a maximum of two years at a time. In most places, someone might stay for five years; but in places where you can't have your family because it's too dangerous, we ask people to stay for much shorter times.

We train them. They do everything from working at the help desk to learning security skills for dangerous situations.

We ask a lot of our staff. IT has become such a critical enabler of everything we do that our IT group, which is also responsible for telecom and other technical support, is among the first group of people to go in. For example, in the summer of 2003 when Unicef helped negotiate a cease-fire in Liberia so that we could go in and give immunizations against the measles, the IT guys were on the first flight in so that they could set up the satellite equipment we needed. When we met with our Iraq staff shortly after Baghdad fell, they showed us photos of them setting up satellite links on rooftops. You could see the Black Hawk helicopters in the sky behind them.

—As told to Ben Worthen


 Survive Charley




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CIO  - managing alignment between corporate objectives and IT strategy



In the Dec. 15, 2004 Issue of CIO:

http://www.cio.com/CIO

CIO Magazine - December 15, 2004
© 2004 CXO Media Inc.


http://www.cio.com/archive/121504/cio_danger.html




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