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

CIO ROLE

What It's Like To....
Bear Witness To IT History

BY DARWIN A. JOHN | former cio for scott paper, the church of jesus christ of latter day saints and (briefly) the fbi, john is considered one of the first people ever to be called a cio.



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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It would be easy for me to trace the 38 years I've spent in the IT industry by talking about technology.

After all, it's been a remarkable four decades of innovation, filled with dozens of revolutions: from punch cards that stored bits of data per inch to 24/7 real-time computing capable of transmitting billions of bits in a second; from a computer that filled a room to an equally powerful one that fits in your shirt pocket; from accurately calculating sums to accurately modeling genes.

But to focus on that would be to admire the frieze that adorns a great room and forget about the room. Far more fascinating to me than the change in technology is the change in us.

We CIOs have evolved. Our job has always been to talk about what's possible. But once upon a time, it was a bottom-up phenomenon, driven by users asking how to use the technology we provided them. Today, that has flipped to a top-down job wherein we counsel the executives above us who need to know, What's possible with technology?

You could argue either that we pushed this change along or that we got dragged. Most of us, I think, were dragged. But we've learned. CIOs have started looking at data in context, and asking, What's the mission of the enterprise? What are the core processes? What's in place to do that mission? And what are the metrics to show I'm successful?

We are, in short, mostly aligned.

But I see another change coming. For a long time, we thought that more information was inherently better. But some of us have gone too far. We spend too much time in front of the screen. Because a spreadsheet allows us to model a budget a million times before we make a decision, we assume that we should do that.

This approach is flawed, and it will end. We are business executives now, not technologists.

When I look at my 38 years in technology, I think that most of my successes ultimately came from two lessons I learned growing up on a farm: One, you contribute to make a difference in the world; and two, you continually learn and grow. There's no such thing as a steady state with knowledge or with crops or humans. You are always either progressing or regressing.

And then I think about IT. There is no profession in the last 40 years that has provided more opportunity to make a difference. No discipline that would have allowed me to learn more.
It's been a real ride.

—As told to Scott Berinato


 Walk In Your Customers' Shoes




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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_role.html




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