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JohnGillispie.jpg

 

The shared services model has been a fixture in corporations for about two decades. Today, shared services are becoming a similar fixture across many different types of government agencies. In fact, Accenture's 2005 study, Driving High Performance in Government: Maximizing the Value of Public Sector Shared Services, found that 85 percent of executives interviewed believed that shared services played a key role in supporting their organizations' goals. The study of more than 140 executives also found that the move to shared services enabled organizations to shift budgets from administrative activities to more constituent-facing areas, and thereby improving government services. The most common areas for shared services, according to the study, included IT, finance, and human resources.

John Gillispie, the chief operating officer for IT Enterprise for the State of Iowa's Department of Administrative Services, definitely believes in the merits of the shared services concept. Unlike many public-sector based shared services, the State of Iowa's shared services for IT doesn't have a mandate. Agencies can go outside the public sector and solicit the services of private sector third parties. According to the Accenture study, most government agencies use the services of their in-source shared services, going outside for expertise during planning cycles.

Enterpriseleadership.org recently said down with Gillispie
who talked about the challenges he faced when he became CIO for the State of Iowa. He is the past president of the National Association of State CIOs.

EL: Can you describe the IT organization?

JG: Our responsibilities are laid out in code. We essentially have a shared services function to provide IT services, but our potential customers have the choice of using our services or going outside use services by third parties.  This is a unique arrangement in a government environment. We're a shared services model without the mandate. It can be challenging during tough budget times. I have a staff of 140 people, and I report to a department director who is a governor appointee.

EL: Why don't you have a mandate and what percent of agencies are using your services?


JG: That's a difficult question is answer. The total approximate spend on IT from participating agencies is about $180 million.  Since we're a shared services, we provide about $32 million of those services.

EL: Why did the state decide to go this route?  Is it efficient?


JG: I'm not going to tell you it's efficient. I wasn't here when any of this was decided. The theory at the time was that agencies need the ability to make choices about how to deliver on their mission. Technology is one of the many supporting parts of the infrastructure necessary for an agency to do its business. Therefore, agencies should have the freedom to pick and to choose how they procure that technology. The consultants said putting the service provider in a position where they had to compete with the marketplace would force them to make decisions about the businesses they should be in, the businesses they should ignore, the areas where they could compete more effectively, and the areas they should avoid. They wanted to bring the tenets of entrepreneurship and business operations into a government environment. On the surface, it sounds like a really good idea.

EL: What is the reality of this arrangement?

JG: It's an interesting model. I don't know how well it will work over the long run. There are good things about this model. too.

EL: What have been some of the major projects you've worked on that have been important to the agencies you serve?

JG: The model offers some advantages. It allows the business to make decisions about investments that it believes will payoff. We made an investment in a billing service that the customers would've never supported and the legislature would've said just do it on a spreadsheet. Without this system, we wouldn't have been able to gain the efficiencies we needed in the billing cycle. We made substantial investments in upgrading our data center. We now have newer equipment and can do a better job of controlling energy and connectivity. Again, these things would've never been done had the legislature had something to say about it. The legislature wouldn't have seen this as a useful investment. On the other hand, these investments were business critical for our operations. Those were examples of some of the investments we made independent decisions on.

Because we don't have to go and convince the governor's office and the legislature that something is a good investment, our decision-making process is streamlined somewhat in this environment. It is our operating money, and we can make decisions like a business would.

EL: Can you look at business impact without political wrangling?

JG: There is also going to be some political wrangling in this environment. The opposite site of the coin is when you've had political wrangling in order to get some IT investment approved?

Historically, a few individuals had a heavy hand on the governance process here. It made the environment I walked into very difficult to get cooperation from others.  We've worked very hard to build a very cooperative model among the agencies that are making all of their own IT decisions. We've been able to convince the technology people in some agencies that it's better to work together than to work alone. If we do this, we have a better chance of getting the funding we need, instead of getting the winners and losers' syndrome you often end up with in a government setting for technology.

EL: What agencies work with you directly?

JG: We have 43 participating agencies in our shared services model. These agencies include human services, health, natural resources, and public safety.  The legislature has chosen to do its own thing. The judicial branch has a foot inside the door and buys a number of services from us, but it tends to make all of its decisions independently and doesn't put anything it would classify as business critical here.

El: What is your governance process?

JG: We've tried to build a unique model here. When I arrived here, I spent most of my time looking at what things we really needed to centralize and to govern versus what things we could eliminate. To drive common solutions and reduce expenses, we needed to focus our energy on applications development so that we could get rid of the duplication. Many of the agencies have similar functions. We established a technology governance board comprised of all business people. We have small, medium, and large representatives so that we get a breath of opinions on that board. Using a set of rules, they review all requests for proposals and authorize their issuance. This board also sets standards. Between the two of these functions, we have enough levers to drive common solutions. It meets once a month.

EL: How did the National Association of State CIOs help you to make the switch to the public sector?

JG: I'd say without someone there saying 'this is what's going to happen.' this job would've been more difficult to step back and to make decisions about how I wanted to approach the challenges I faced. I didn't get involved with the National Association of State CIOs until about six months after I had been on the job. When I was president of this organization, I urged new CIOs to read the transition guide because it contains much good information. You really need to be a key part of a professional organization if you want to help people take the most advantage of technology. It was a very worthwhile investment of my time and energy.

EL: Are you able to innovate within your shared services?

JG: We try very hard to be innovative, but the rules around federal funding make it very difficult to be innovative.

EL: What's happening in the State of Iowa because of the nationwide economy?

JG: The government announced a plan to save $76 million in the next year. That's just the beginning. The question is whether or not it will affect IT.

There are some things that aren't clear at this point.

EL: What methodology do you use to evaluate the effectiveness of the business impact for the investments in technology you make?

JG: ROI in a government environment is a very tough thing to do. Everyone has to count beans the same way. That makes it challenging actually to arrive at ROI. With that said, we try to do a ROI calculation. We have the challenge of taking into consideration things that are very difficult to quantify from a cost perspective. Many government IT investments, especially at the state level, have social aspects to them. For example, what is the value of information you make available online relative to fire protection during normal times? How much is the value of having that data available during a time of wild fires? You always have to consider these things in any financial calculations. The public benefit calculation is a little more work to get too. You do things in government, not because they return financial dollars, but they are a social investment.

Some of the things we invest in are so esoteric and thus hard to put your arms around. For example, we have a little program here called School Alerts. School districts can use it to post information on the Web about late starts, early dismissals, and major events at a school building. Citizens can sign up to receive a short message service or email. The press can sign up for an RSS feed. From a government perspective, this service offers no specific public value. It's difficult to do financial calculation on this investment. The social value of this investment is huge.

El: Can you describe an investment that offered real bottom line impact?

JG: Different people see the world through different lenses. We invested in an ERP system that would allow agencies to stop doing things on the side because the old financial system wouldn't do it. It had substantial pure ROI associated with it. Unfortunately, we were unable to get agencies to use the new system to replace their old investments. It's the old you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink. I can put a PC on your desk, but if you like the typewriter, you may never use the PC.

Government has a strong and very self-reinforcing culture. Institutional memory lingers on and changes happens very slowly. Some people might tell you about the things you did 20 years ago. I wasn't here 20 year ago. Some people need to move on. This type of thinking has made it very hard for us to get departments to change their business practices and their financial practices to current ways of doing things.

EL: Have you been able to put things, such as the IT Infrastructure Library, or other quality practices?

JG: We've carried out problem management using ITIL methods. We're currently working on change management. We have a long way to go. When you get budget cuts, it becomes even more difficult to make those investments. We have a process where we establish objectives for each of our services and we spend much time measuring how we're doing. I'm not a big believer in formal quality programs such as Six Sigma.

El: How do you motivate your staff?

JG:
Most people are in the public sector because they want to be here. They don't come here for the money.

El: Why did you leave private industry to work for the government?

JG: The company I worked for went through bankruptcy three times. I had the opportunity to leave under a good set of circumstances. I spent a lot of time thinking about what I wanted to do next. I've been in operations. I've turned companies around. I've been in corporate development and business development. I've been in IT and ran an IT shop. I had never worked in the public sector. I wanted a new challenge. I got recruited to do something different than what I ended up doing. This job has been far more fulfilling than I ever expected it to be.

 

Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a free-lance writer and IT consultant from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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ByrneMurphy.jpg

 

The posters of Norwegian waterfalls that line the lobby of the $100 million, 100,000-square ft. data center in Oslo have the word hydroelectric printed across them. It's the reason why this data center and others like it are just about 100 percent green. Today, DigiPlex is one of the leading builders, owners, and operators of green data centers.

After a successful career starting and growing the $2 billion McArthurGlen, Europe's largest owner and operator of designer factory outlet malls, Byrne Murphy, an American real estate developer, couldn't take his eyes off the potential the Internet offered. At the end of the dot.com boom, Murphy partnered with The Carlyle Group, an equity investment firm, to buy DigiPlex, a bankrupt Scandinavian engineering company. Together both parties turned DigiPlex into a company that focuses on building data centers, especially ones that are very green. Murphy says, "We have 100 percent equity and no debt."

Enterpriseleadership.org recently sat down with Murphy, who is the president of DigiPlex, to discuss what it takes to build a green data center, what countries are leading the pack, and how the U.S. ranks in the green data center movement. Here is what he had to say:

EL: Where are you currently building data centers?

BM: We're working on sites in the United Kingdom, Germany, and France. The most important element of our data center in Oslo is that our power comes from hydroelectricity, which is 100 percent green. We don't have a fossil fuel driven energy source. Nearly all of the Scandinavian countries, including Iceland and Greenland, use hydroelectricity.

EL: Besides hydroelectricity, what other advantages do these colder climates provide for building green data centers?

BM: Green data centers are of such paramount importance now for reasons we've have all been reading about. Some companies, such as IBM that are trying to take the lead on this, are looking at the Northern European climate just for its hydroelectric power. The fjords of Norway produce plenty of this power. Also, this climate has colder ambient air. About 40 percent of the power consumed in data centers goes for cooling down the hot air generated by the enormous heat created by the server farms. For example, if you can suck in 20 degree F air and use that air to cool down your servers, you can save a lot of power. Furthermore, if you can also drive the power in data centers by electricity generated by dams, waterfalls, and hydroelectricity, you can also have an enormous amount of power. This clean power leaves no carbon footprint.

EL: Is Europe further ahead of the United States when it comes to building green data centers?

BM: For decades, Europe has been further along the green curve than the United States. In U.S., we rely heavily on fossil fuel. Up until the past few years, we've ignored alternative sources of clean fuel. As a result, data centers in the U.S. have continued to soak up large amounts of energy. They leave massive carbon footprints.

In contrast, you wouldn't build a new data center any old way in the UK or in Germany. Heavens forbid, if you try to get a permit for that type of a data center. These countries don't want large carbon footprints. Instead, they want something that is clean.  The UK has a very active secondary carbon trading market where you get credit for being clean. You can even make a deal with someone that has a dirty data center.  It will be interesting to see if UK data centers with large carbon footprints will want to team up with clean data centers in Scandinavia. There is nothing formal on the books today about doing this, but there is much chatter that this could certainly happen.

EL: What green measures are you using for your data centers that aren't located near sources for hydroelectricity?

BM: If I can get a data center inside the London beltway to open within eight months based on certain specs, I'm not going to wait for hydroelectric to find the data center. For these data centers that aren't located near hydroelectric sources, I'm trying to incorporate as much green efficiency into the design, mostly through ambient airway uptake. The climates I'm looking at are far enough north in latitude where a good number of weeks per year are 35 degree F or less outside. As a result, we can suck in the cold air rather than having to run generators for heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems. Specifically, we push air through from inside rather than re-cooling hot air which is 84 degree F. We put the air through a cool water system and it comes out at 43 degrees F. We don't have to spend all that energy if we suck in outside air that is already 43 degrees F. We use the basic guts of a HVAC system, but the ductwork we've added points directly outside to suck in the cold air. Once you have a HVAC system in place, the ductwork isn't a major addition.

EL: Are you planning to build data centers in the United States?


BM: Yes, but the question is when. We have a skewed supply and demand metric. The Internet continues to grow and grow. In fact, we grossly underestimated the Internet growth projection we made several years ago for the consumption of data. For example, mobile devices, such as the Smartphone and the iPhone, soak up more than two percent of Internet bandwidth just by themselves. These devices didn't exist 15 months ago. Youtube.com now soaks about 13 Percent of Internet bandwidth and that figures keeps growing. And Youtube.com didn't exist two years ago. We can cite plenty of other examples.

All this demand on the Internet has to go somewhere. If you're going to fly an airplane, you're going to need an airport. If you're going to have a virtual world, you're going to need a data center. The problem is that data centers are enormously capital intensive to build. Before you even put in the equipment, it's $1,200 per square ft. to construct a data center. That's very expensive compared to building a normal office building, which could range from $300 a square ft. to $400 a square ft. depending upon where you are.

You have an enormous need for these data centers just when you have a capital crunch. So where is the money going to come from? There is a real need for data centers and thus the problem associated with building them.  It's one that isn't easily solved. The very smart money is going to press on with data center development anyway. For example, Digital Realty, the largest data center developer in the world, is trying to press on anyway, but the company has it own set of issues. It's a very difficult time. To this end, you don't see huge numbers of new data centers just being built any old way all across the U.S. Why? There is almost no debt, even the equity is very hard to find, but yet the demand is there for it.

EL: Can we really build green data centers in the United States?


BM:  The question is 'what do you consider green?' Yes, you can build one, but whose definition of green are you talking about? The answer is this: The data centers being built in the U.S. are greener than those built three years or four years ago. On the other hand, very few of these data centers are as green as some of the ones in Europe. We just don't have the hydroelectric power here. Green data centers are being built in the Pacific Northwest by google.com and amazon.com. Neither company wants to talk about them for security reasons. Amazon.com is building data centers next to rivers to have a source of green power. I can't give out specifications about these data centers because amazon.com won't release any information.

EL: If you wanted to build a green data center in the U.S., what challenges would do you face?


BM: The first obstacle is to find a site that is located next to a water source to make hydroelectricity and that has enough fiber somewhere nearby.  Most important, can you get all of the appropriate zoning in place in time to build? The demand is very high for that. Getting the combination of a hydroelectric location and plenty of fiber exists in many places, but not in all places. If you're in a really rural location, you'll need backbone fiber. How expensive is it to get there? Combined with assembly with the zoning and the very important construction financing  -- debt and equity in a short time horizon -- can make it all feasible. Financing, the last part of the process, might be daunting at the moment. That should change, but the question is when?

EL: Can you power a data center by wind?

BM: Yes, but not a very big one. If you have a large data center, you'd need a huge wind farm. Everybody likes to be green. Any population, however, doesn't like the look or sound of wind farms.  It sounds like you have an airplane behind you the entire time. That's why Ted Kennedy and Walter Cronkite have been opposing wind farm sites on Cape Cod and Martha's Vineyard.  Some folks advocate being green until it hits their backyard.

EL: Would you recommend that a European company or a U.S. company with a European operation build a data center outside say in Norway?

BM: It might be a good idea if you have a European-based business already. On the one hand, it would be a challenge to convince a London-based company to move its primary data center to Norway. On the other hand, you need to answer how the company is going to use the data center. If you're a trading operation, you need milliseconds between when someone pushes a button and the trade happens. If the fiber is too long and too far away from the data center, you run the risk that the fiber can be cut. The further away your data center is from the information being pushed out, you run into latency issues about the quality of fiber. If you're backing up data, then it might make sense to use a data center in another country.

EL: What does the Asian market look like for building data centers? Are they concerned about going green?


BM: Asia offers a huge opportunity for building data centers. In fact, this area doesn't have many data centers. As a result, you can drive the demand there. The very large banks and trading floors need data centers. They need more of them. The big corporations expanding there need more of them. Although it's a huge opportunity for building data centers, being green isn't so terribly important in East Asia. It's growing in importance, but not there yet.

EL:  How about the Middle East and South America?

BM: The Middle East has a huge demand for data centers. Places like Dubai build cities all at once, and these cities need power. Anything that needs also power needs a data center. Because the Middle East countries create and profit from fossil fuels, they aren't concerned about green data centers. It's just not profitable to go in this direction.

As for South America, I'm not well versed on the depth of the market for data centers there. I do know that Brazil has a need for data centers and also has big power generators there.

Canada is a good, but small market for building green data centers. You'll get all the support you'll need because the Canadian people and the Canadian government understand the need to be green.

EL: Many companies are moving to server virtualization as a way to make their data centers greener. What's your feeling about this?

BM: When it comes to improving your green factor, we haven't seen a gain changing process thus far to say 'here is the great secret.' It makes sense to change and to reduce dramatically the amount of power per server. IBM is trying to get way out there. In the meantime, data center demand keeps growing, and we're just beginning to figure how to keep up with that growth and how to do it while reducing power consumption. As a data center builder and owner, I don't want to be perceived as a power-consuming hog.

EL: Have you talked to people in financial services about having greener data centers?


BM: Being green is on all corporate agendas. It's getting into board rooms. Companies like to be green when and where they can just as long as it's not increasing their costs by more than two percent here and there. If you can make a case for it, companies would rather be green than not be green.

 

Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a free-lance writer and IT consultant from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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With roots dating back to the World War I, Brady Corporation manufactures and markets a comprehensive line of identity and protection products, including labels, signs, safety devices, and printing systems. The company operates in more than 26 countries and has 500,000 customers in construction, education, electronics, healthcare, manufacturing, telecommunications, and other industries.

When Frank M. Jaehnert became president and CEO of Brady in 2003, the company's half billion in annual sales had stalled, profits had declined, and employee turnover had increased. Jaehnert gladly stepped up to the plate and accepted the challenges before him. He immediately began a major restructuring effort focused on controlling costs and asking his leadership team to set higher goals for the company to achieve. Jaehnert's vision was for the company to become an international market leader in the maintenance, repair, and operations space. Within three years, the company achieved its growth targets by expanding global operations, acquiring companies that could broaden Brady's product line, and making on-going capital investments in technology. In 2007, Brady got named to Forbes' Platinum 400 List of American's Best Big Companies.

Brady closed out its 2008 fiscal year with more than $1.5 billion in revenues. Jaehnart says, "Our first quarterly results for the 2009 fiscal year had the highest sales and the highest profit in our corporate history."

Enterpriseleadership.org recently sat down with Jaehnart to talk about his strategy for creating shareholder value by investing in technology, empowering his staff to fuel organic growth, and taking belt-tightening steps whenever necessary.

EL. Can you describe some of your key capital technology investments?

FMJ. In 2004, when we were at $500 million in revenues, we invested about $30 million to move our enterprise resource planning system to the SAP platform. That was a huge investment. Today, about 70 percent of the company uses this platform. We have one system for the entire company. We recently made sizable investments in three cloud-based computing systems.  These systems include the following: Salesforce.com, a customer relationship management system; GetPaid, a framework for processing online payments; and Workday, a human resources management system.

EL. How did you go about making these investment decisions?  Did you follow a formal process?

FMJ. Improvements in our productivity and in our competitive environment drive the company's overall goal to keep getting better at what it does. As a result, we challenge all of our teams in all of the functional areas, such as finance, human resources, and technology, to look for ways to improve how they run their businesses or their functions. They seek out solutions from vendors that offer the best-in-class products. Before we make any type of an investment decision, we do financial calculations based on the Economic Value Added (EVA) metric or economic profit developed by Stern Stewart. We look for good returns on our investments.

EL. Can you be more specific about how you measure shareholder value creation?

FMJ.
That's an interesting question. It doesn't matter if it's a technology investment, an acquisition, a new product development investment, or the purchase of manufacturing equipment. We run every investment through an EVA calculation.  For example, you determine your cost of capital and then it becomes a component of the cost of equity and the cost of debt. You might want to create 10 percent more profit than your cost of capital. If your cost of capital is $100 million, you want to make sure that your return is more than $100 million to cover your cost of capital.
 
The ultimate shareholder value creation is if the stock price goes up or the dividend amount goes up. In this economy, the share price could go down because of external influences. The company might still see an increase in EVA, but real shareholder value comes from the share price plus dividends.

EL. What was the executive governance process for the SAP investment?

FMJ. Before we moved to SAP, we had a third-party company managing our many legacy systems for ERP. Unfortunately, this company had its own share of problems and was up for sale. We knew we wouldn't get the support we needed. We had to move right away to another system. On the other hand, an ERP system implementation is a big deal. We spent much time trying to justify this capital investment.  For example, we looked at how much money this system could save us, what additional information it could give us, and what reductions in administrative costs and sales costs we could expect. We presented our proposal to the board of directors. We went back and forth answering questions the different board members had. Eventually, the board approved the proposal.

EL. Do you have an executive committee that looks at technology investments across the company as part of the governance process?

FMJ. We don't have one committee. We have different committees. The executive committee includes all of my direct reports. They have a say on every major decision. We have an engineering committee, a new product development committee, and a technology committee. We don't have a manufacturing committee. Each manufacturing site makes decisions about its routine machinery and equipment. If a manufacturing site needs to move to a more advanced technology, then the engineering committee works with the machine manufacturer to make the business case for developing the new manufacturing technology. The business case then goes before the executive committee. I look to my CFO's expertise to determine if this investment will benefit the company financially.

EL. What do you expect from your chief information officer (CIO)?

FMJ. I consider my CIO, who is one of my direct reports, to be a business leader. He'll also tell you he's one, too. In fact, I expect all of my direct reports to be entrepreneurs who have ideas that can benefit the business. Our priorities include helping the company to grow sales and profits and to create shareholder value. I'm not looking for a CIO to be just a technologist. My CIO knows how to apply his technological expertise to make the company grow and to become more successful. The same goes for my human resources person, and my CFO. For example, if my CIO might see an opportunity for us to save millions by having a call center in the Philippines, then he'd do his homework to make sure we could support it and we could integrate it seamlessly into the company. As a result, it all comes down to what each business leader can do to improve the company.

EL. How has the economic climate affected your business?

FMJ. At the same time we announced out best first quarterly results ever, we also announced   a 10 percent cut in the workforce going forward. We have a freeze on salaries. We perceive a long and a deep recession. It felt good to have the best quarter ever. On the other hand, it felt like we contradicted ourselves when, we at the same time, announced some cutbacks. Up until a few months ago, some of our businesses were working three shifts just to keep up with customer demand. We've started to see a decline in our work volume.

EL. Can you give examples of how you've leveraged technology to get closer to your customers?


FMJ. By providing more information about the customer, Salesforce.com, for example, will enable our sales people to be more responsive to customers’ needs. This system isn't a response to the recession. Rolling this system out in the middle of a recession will help us to save money by making our people more productive.

In many ways, we connect to our customers through our SAP system online. Sometimes we even provide software for our customers to run. For example, Grainger, one of our largest distributors, uses our software so customers can create signs. If you go to www.grainger.com and click on signs, you can design your own sign online. You can see how it looks. You can change color and letter size. You can pay for the sign by credit card. All of the information gets transmitted to us and we produce the sign.  That's one way how we work with a large customer. It isn't all about SAP.

EL. What is your business strategy and where role does technology play in it?


FMJ. Our business strategy is very simple. We want to be number one or number two in all of our businesses. We have to define which businesses we're in. The role of technology is to help us to get to wherever we need to head. For example, to keep our sales people better informed about customers, we decided to go with Salesforce.com and BlackBerries.

EL. Do you have a formal process to set your business strategy?


FMJ. We talk about strategy every month. I don't believe in having one big annual meeting to establish what we're doing for the next two years, and then going off an executing against this one plan.  Because things move so quickly, we constantly have to keep on top of our strategy. When I became CEO in 2003, we did a three-day strategy session. I announced that we'd have a strategy session the following month. The next month, I announced the same thing. That's how our monthly strategy session came about.

You can't go off to a three-day, off-site meeting somewhere in Florida and expect to come back with your business strategy. Albert Einstein didn't go off to an off-site meeting with the hope of inventing the theory of relativity. He refined what he developed over time. The same thought process should go into developing a company's a business strategy. At first, everyone had some angst about the monthly strategy meeting, but today we can't live without it.

EL. How does the monthly strategy meeting process help your team to make better decisions and to deal more effectively with the board of directors?

FMJ. The meetings consist mostly of my direct reports. On occasion, we'll invite people who can help us to make better decisions. For example, when we talked about the adjacent markets we'd like to pursue, we had two middle managers present their findings about these markets. These experts went out and investigated these markets for several months. They know more about this subject area than we'll ever know.

During a session, we might look at how we can improve a particular business. Can we take it in a different direction or in another geographical area? Has the marketplace or the customers changed? We might try to answer questions like those.

During a two-day strategy session we had with board in May 2008, we gave a presentation on what we plan to do for the next five years. Our monthly strategy sessions helped us to put everything together and to make sure we understood what questions the board might have. For example, if we were going to talk about a possible acquisition, we might prepare our respond to questions about debt level and leveraging.

EL. How has the belt tightening affected your direct reports? Are they working harder on how to create business impact?

FMJ. During the past five years, we've acquired more than 30 small companies. We've focused on how and what we could improve and took the appropriate action. We consolidated factories and sales forces to become more productive.  We cut back on discretionary spending for things such as seminars and travel. In some cases, we took out a management layer.  We now have a heightened sense of urgency, but it's not like we weren't doing anything before the downturn in the economy.  Our management team has much experience dealing with ups and down in the economy. We've just taken it to another level.

EL. What quality practices do you use the most?

FMJ. Some companies transform themselves into a Six Sigma or a Lean shop. They even wrap their culture around Six Sigma or Lean. In contrast, our culture has always and will always be dedicated to creating shareholder value. To this end, we use techniques such as Lean, Six Sigma, Kaizen, and Value Stream Mapping for how we can create this shareholder values.

Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a free-lance writer and IT consultant from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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One of the largest privately held companies in the United States, Day & Zimmermann, which has annual revenues of $2.2 billion, provides government agencies and 60 percent of the Fortune 500 with contingent employees and services in the following areas:  engineering and construction, security, information technology, office administration, architecture, maritime, reprographics, and munitions.

Handling the paperwork to pay 24,000 employees who work for 1,300 customers at 150 worldwide locations can stretch the muscles of most IT departments. However, Anthony J. Bosco, Jr., the CIO and a 28-year veteran of Day & Zimmermann, has managed to outpace his competitors by using technology to automate a lot of employee paperwork, to speed up cost accounting of projects to customers, and to collect monies from customers sooner.  Bosco also spearheaded a system consolidation using SAP, which dramatically reduced overhead and interest costs.  In fact, the Yoh Exchange, a portal Bosco's group built for one of the company's operating businesses, received an Impact Award in 2004 from the America's SAP Users' Group.

Enterpriseleadership.org recently sat down with Bosco to talk about how the e-commerce initiatives have driven the company forward, and how the company has become more agile and innovative.  Here's what he had to say.

EL: Can you describe some of the IT initiatives that are making your company more customer centric?


AJB: In 2003, we built the Yoh Exchange, a SAP-based portal that exploits the entire supply chain and supplier management process.  It allows customers to see what's happening with their existing workforce in terms of time, expense, recording, and approval. It also delivers specific content to the workforce that may be particular to projects they're working on, or the location they're working at. We've been doing well for many years.

We've automated, not only the transaction flow between the customer and us, but us and the management of a number of subsuppliers who provide talent to our customer. We act as a clearinghouse. With one push of a button, we now disseminate information, everything from invoices to talent requisitions to a number of sub suppliers. The subsuppliers can only see their information.  It is from our perspective all within the same portal so the customer can see the activity, and we can see the activity. We've taken the management of the entire contingent workforce out of the email box, and put it in a portal that gives customers end-to-end transparency based on who they are, and where they are in the staffing process.

EL: Can you be more specific about the role of the sub supplier?

AJB: Subsuppliers can be competitors of ours. Large companies have a very diverse and extensive contingent workforce. One of our lines of business manages that contingent workforce on behalf of our customers. About 20 years ago, many companies decided to go with vendor consolidation. The process involves one key vendor entering into contractual relationships with the other suppliers, and thus eliminated the need for customers to deal with many subcontracts and subcontractors. As the managing vendor, we deal directly with all of the administration of the other contingent labor vendors that supply our customers. By negotiating the price, we enable customers to control their spend.

EL: How have you automated the requirements and approval process for getting talent?

AJB: A major customer might have anywhere from a dozen to 50 other staffing companies competing to fill that role. When we first built the Yoh Exchange, we provided a consolidated invoice. However, the requirement process and the approval process were still decentralized. In fact, if a customer got a huge invoice, department managers often argued that a purchase order hadn't been augmented. We enhanced the portal to enter requirements gathering, candidate sourcing, both from our internal database as well as our subsuppliers. We also disseminate the appropriate information back to the individual department managers.

The most important thing is that we put the best people in front of our customers quickly, and we can start evaluating how well our vendors are performing. For example, vendor one provides a customer with three resumes within a day, and each resume meets 90 percent of the customer's requirements. Meanwhile, within two hours, vendor two provides 10 resumes, which meet 20 percent of the requirements. It's obvious who is the better supplier. We track all of those types of statistics so we know who's performing and who is just throwing out resumes to customers.

EL: Can you customize the Yoh Exchange portal for specific customers?

AJB: We can customize the customer's view of the portal to go beyond transaction processing to include services that empower the contingent workforce. For example, we supply contingent security guards for one of the largest petrochemical companies in the world.  Safety is the number one concern of the guards who staff the company's refineries, plants, and office buildings.  The guards use the portal to process all types of OSHA violations and other types of security incidents. Depending on the type of issue and the location, the information flashes in a real time across the dashboard of key security personnel.

In addition to transaction processing information, the NBC portal provides continent workers with content they might need on the job. It could include the signup to visit a particular studio or particular site, or orientation information for a new employee at a specific site. We can push that content out so when that employee goes to the site, he or she knows what to expect.

When NBC was covering the 2004 Olympics, people found the portal to be a good way to communicate with others working at different location. For some engineering and construction companies, we made certain equipment manuals, drawings, and collateral available through the portal. When an employee goes to work at that location, he or she doesn't have to search the Web or to look internally for specific documents they might need.

EL: Where are you getting this information from for the customizing of a customer's portal?

AJB: Some of the information comes from the customers. Some of it comes from work we've done, such as proprietary designs we've built. We might provide links to customer sites for particular collateral that exits. Again, people can find information on their own. If we know the content they need exists, we'll make it available. We believe that employees should have the tools to work more effectively and more successfully.

EL: Does the portal create more revenue for your company?

AJB: We don't typically charge extra for the portal service. It creates more revenue for us because it enables us to differentiate ourselves from our competitors. When you're competing for a job, you need to present good talent that meets the customer's requirements.  We can attract high quality employees who know they can be more successful here than the company down the street.

EL: What changes did you make in IT processes to drive innovation and agility?

AJB: We changed our IT structure from shared services, to decentralized services, back to shared services and now to selective shared services. Because of this process, we've become very mature with a time-tested IT infrastructure. We can retrofit a process very quickly. We can do what is best for our customers or our business during a particular time in the economy or a cycle of a business.

For example, we took the hands-off, forms-based recruiting process and created an online recruiting system where candidates submit their resumes online. As an applicant, you can have an account with us. A manager can see the status of how many jobs have come in, how many candidates have been screened, how many candidates are waiting for interviews, and where we are with background checks or drug screens. We've made this process more transparent.

EL: How are you driving cost out of the organization?


AJB: We don't have a manufacturing system where we can change a process and drive dramatic cost savings. As a service organization, we have to focus on transparency so people act more productive. Our business depends on speed and accuracy of information. We've been able to increase our asset turns by 30 percent where our number of days' sales outstanding has dropped by 35 percent or 40 percent. This decrease has resulted in major economic benefit. By eliminating some departments, we've been able to drive down the cost of our internal processing. We continue to tweak it.

The various improvements we've made have given everyone from business unit managers to project mangers the right kind of organizational transparency into what's happening in the organization. In fact, transparency into everything from an employee-related issue to a supplier matter, not only raises the level of accountability, but it enables us to mitigate issues before they get out of hand.

EL: How do you measure the effectiveness of your organization?


AJB: Our tools and the techniques have helped us to cut the time of customer projects, such as building a refinery. I have a whole set of tools and templates we use. Every internal project has a SharePoint site. We have certain templates we follow. We use project-based tools and techniques that have been around the construction industry for years. All of our projects have critical path methods.

I have a bet with some of our businesses that they can acquire a company similar to us, and we can implement a core ERP system, which goes from core financials to procure, in 60 days.

Our basic business metric is asset turns. We know that our technology enables us to build faster, and to provide more accurate information.  If you're accurate, you'll get paid faster. IT is part of our business strategy. Our IT metrics look at how much money we spend on innovation and front-facing issues versus how much it costs us to operate and keep the lights on. In 2008, we cracked the 55 percent level of how much goes for innovation and front-facing business support of the customer.  I won't be happy until we get to 60 percent. Business transaction processing has nothing to do with keeping the lights on. It's about creating customer value beyond what you think of for IT.

We spend less than one percent of the company's revenue on IT, but we have a 55 percent level of spend for innovation and the like. I challenge my CFO colleague to spend less on financial processing in the organization than I do for IT. We have an internal initiative where we look at process improvement as a way to exploit some of the features in our technology toolset to drive the CFO's cost down. There was a point in time where our costs as a percent of revenue were at par with one another. The CFO's costs have crept up and mine have gone down.

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Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a free-lance writer and IT consultant from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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GaryCantrell.jpg When Gary Cantrell became chief information officer at Textron in early 2006, the company was almost three-quarters of the way through a six-year transformation of the information technology organization. Over the years, Textron had become an $11 billion global, multi-industry organization by acquiring aircraft companies and industrial firms. Some of the Textron brand companies include Cessna Aircraft, Lycoming Engines, and Bell Helicopter.

 

By leveraging formal best practices and governance, Cantrell and his team have continued to streamline the IT infrastructure across all of the Textron companies. He says, "We're doing things faster, better, cheaper."

 

Recently, enterpriseleadership.org spoke with Cantrell about how the IT organization is structured, what initiatives were key to the transformation, and what were some of the lessons learned from this process. Here's what he had to say:

 

EL: You've taken a kind of matrix approach to your IT organization. Can you describe it? 

 

GC: We have a federated model with nine divisional CIOs. They focus on delivering application services and support, but are also accountable for the infrastructure. Our shared services model for IT comprises six Centers of Expertise (COEs) including infrastructure, security, enterprise initiatives and strategic planning, collaboration, SAP, and PeopleSoft. Each COE has a leader. For example, the CTO who reports to me oversees the infrastructure COE. The collaboration COE is working on how we handle virtual teaming across all 400 Textron locations.

 

EL: How does your governance structure work?

 

GC: We have two ways to manage the governance process. Our information management council comprises the nine CIOs, all of the COE leaders, and me. This group provides our strategic direction, the corporate business unit alignment, and then our integrated planning activities. Below this group, we have started to organize tactical review boards staffed by people who report to the COE leaders. For example, we have an architecture review board.

 

The Textron executive management committee has five members, including the CEO. Below that, there is the Textron Transformation Leadership Team, which consists of all the business unit presidents. All IT capital issues, such as deploying SAP, would go through the TLT. If something affects the business, I might go to the executive management committee. I don't have to go to either committee for everything that happens in IT. Neither one of these committees works on IT issues independent of my involvement.

 

EL: Textron has undergone a six-year transformation in process improvements. Can you talk about some of the key IT process improvements?

 

GC: We call our transformation process "systems modernization." Like a lot of companies, we've acquired several companies over the years, nine in our case. SAP has been a big part of our IT modernization.

 

We're trying to clean up the portfolio of acquisitions. Six Sigma has helped us to reduce the variation in our environment, and Lean has helped us to move a little faster. That's where Lean fits in. You still have to deliver high quality and value, but you have to find innovative ways to do it.

 

EL: Can you describe the specific areas of IT modernization where these best practices have helped you improve processes?

 

GC: Using Lean processes and with the help of an outsourcer, CSC, we restructured nine different infrastructures and architectures where we took out dozens of data centers. We also restructured our email service from 150 servers in 70 locations to 40 servers in six locations. Now we have the redundancy and backup capabilities we need on the network backbone.

 

We also put in a new manufacturing system across the enterprise. However, some of our business units use specific applications that complement the manufacturing system. We leverage these applications across the enterprise also.

 

EL: Do you use the IT Infrastructure Library, CobIT, or the Balanced Scorecard?

 

GC: We've tied use of the Balanced Scorecards in with our Six Sigma gold deployment that we used in the beginning of the IT modernization. We're now working on integrating CobIT into some of our process maturity initiatives with Six Sigma. We've pretty much standardized on a plan for using CobIT for the next few years. We have a little bit more work to do on our tactical action plan.

 

Some of the business units have become very advanced CobIT users. We used the Lean manufacturing philosophy of Shigeo Shingo for one assessment we went through. In some cases, we've gone from silver to gold; in other areas, we're at the basic level moving to bronze. We're working aggressively on having a standard implementation methodology and assessment methodology for driving our maturity. Over the next 24 months, we will get the horses all lined up and get the enterprise on the same level footing.

 

EL: What kind of certification levels do you have in place?

 

GC: Right now we have two Six Sigma black belts for every 100 people on our IT staff and on the CSC staff. The ratio of Six Sigma black belts is higher on the corporate side. This year, we're pushing to have 60 percent of the first two levels of IT professionals green-belt certified in Six Sigma. The goal for 2008 is to have 100 percent of these folks green-belt certified.

 

EL: You have been quoted in the trade press saying that Textron's IT strategy resembles General Electric's IT strategy. How are they similar?

 

GC: When I was CIO of Honeywell, I had some first-hand exposure to GE. That company has a core corporate IT function similar to our COEs. GE's IT organization also has a fairly strong presence in their business units similar to us.

 

On the other hand, GE is larger than us and its business units have more scale that ours. We have a more standardized, rigid infrastructure, which provides us speed and efficiency and a lot of leverage. Also, our architecture review process is more rigorous that GE's. We try to do as much enterprise standardization as we can.

 

EL: Do you think IT can be run as a business?

 

GC: We had these conversations at both Honeywell and Bank of America. As far as I'm concerned, IT is a support function, enabling the business units to generate revenue and generate support for their customer. If you're an IT provider such as CSC or IBM, then you can argue about running IT as a business. Internally, IT is a cost center. It might not be a core competency in each business unit, but it's critical to support the work of each business unit. To this end, my charter is very simple -- help give each business unit a competitive edge and to achieve customer satisfaction.

 

EL: What do you get out of venues such as the CIO Executive Summit?

 

GC: Venues such as the by-invitation-only CIO Executive Summit give me tremendous network opportunities. That's the most important thing that comes out of it. Second, I get to discuss common challenges or technologies or industry threats. The most common discussion among peers deals with the latest virus threat on the horizon. These venues also expose you to lot of new IT talent or new suppliers. If you select your venues wisely, you can spend several days looking at a lot of new technologies. This process eliminates the need to have vendors parade through your office.

 

EL: You spoke at the Hackett Group's 17th Annual Best Practices Conference. What did you have to tell attendees?

 

GC: We've used the Hackett Group to benchmark some of the processes we are doing, as well as to assess how well we are doing with some of our best practices. This year I spoke about Textron's IT transformation and the best practices we deployed. The group of 100 really wanted to know what best practices worked and what best practices didn't work in our environment and why.

 

EL: So what things didn't work?

 

GC: We had a strong business case for many of the things we planned to do. Communication seems to be fairly robust. On the other hand, we grossly underestimated employees'

resistance to change. We had to do a lot of front-end work on change management. If I had to do things over again, I would've put more emphasis on this.

 

EL: What best practices did you find to be ineffective?

 

GC: Our change management process, which is based on Six Sigma, worked very well. This seven-phase-gate approach requires you to define everything from business case to stakeholder involvement. It worked well for the high-risk, high-changes areas. When it came to routine activities, it didn't hold up for us. That's where we could've done a better job of selecting a better methodology.

 

EL: One of your IT teams is looking at virtual teaming. What are your thoughts about 3D virtual worlds such as Second Life?

 

GC: I'm not sure what to do with it. It's not based on reality in the first place. If someone can help me understand the applications for Second Life, I'd be glad to listen.

 

EL: You were one of the nominees for the Information Security Executive Award from this year’s Northeast division of the ISE. What initiative did you get nominated for?

 

GC: We've had a comprehensive push on consolidating perimeter security, along with improving other areas of security. The nine acquisitions Textron made presented IT with the challenge of how to handle disparate approaches to security. We also focused on how to extend secure wireless connectivity to all of our Textron locations. Here, we sewed up all of the areas for possible data loss. Next, we overwhelmed our disaster recovery and business continuity programs to focus on our consolidated data centers. We also carried out a program to educate employees about security.

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Elizabeth M. Ferrarini is a writer from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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The failure of Washington Mutual Bank, along with 100's of other U.S. banks on the verge of failure, has caused consumers to question if a similar event could happen to their bank. However, consumers who bank with Farmers & Merchants Bank (F&MB) in Long Beach, California, don't have cause for alarm. Rating services, such as Weiss Rating, Highline Data, and others, consider F&MB to be the strongest bank in California and one of the strongest in the nation. The bank has assets of $3 billion and a capital ratio four times higher than the FDIC limit and sufficient liquidity to pay every depositor in full.

 

Financial strength has formed the underpinning of F&MB from the day it was founded in 1907 by C.J. Walker, great grandfather of Henry Walker, the current CEO. For example, F&MB didn't need any government assistance. When Gus Walker, Henry's grandfather became the bank's chairmen and president in 1938, he started the important tradition of transferring much of the bank's annual earnings into capital and reserve accounts. This wise practice enabled F&MB to flourish during the inflation-riddled 1970s, the fluctuations of the 1980s, the recession of the early 1990s, and even to grow despite today's problems.

 

Today, Henry Walker, along with his brother Daniel, who is chairman and president, continues to carry out his family's legacy, but with one difference - a heavy emphasis on capital investments in technology and facilities. The goal of these investments says Walker is to provide new services and to improve the bank's quality of customer service. Enterpriseleadership.org recently sat down with Henry Walker to talk about the business processes and the investments that've helped F&MB to earn its coveted reputation for financial soundness.

 

EL. What motivates you to follow in your great grandfather's  footsteps?

HW. The bank has three executives: my brother Daniel, who is chairman and president; a chief financial officer; and me. The bank is our life. My father and my grandfather mentored both my brother and I. The bank's safety and soundness come from our founder. Every day, we carry out the bank's long history of guiding principles. That's how our job differs from other people in banking.

EL. What decisions have  you made to avoid some of the problems other banks have encountered?

HW. Our decisions reflect the safety and the soundness of our balance sheet. We have the willingness to stick to our core principles, which others in banking aren't willing to do. For example, we have a very sound and very secure investment portfolio, which has minimal risk. We have no sub-prime loans in that investment portfolio. A number of investments and its loan portfolio typically comprise a bank's balance sheet. We have a very sound loan portfolio. We continue to run with those conservative principles we've always had. My grandfather guided our bond portfolio, and my father designed our lending standards. Those core principles from both of those generations have really flowed to my brother and I. We continue to run what is considered the safest bank in California.

EL. You've had some customers for many generations. How are you leveraging the right technology to provide service for multi-generational customers, especially young people?

HW. We're providing a stratified approach to customer-to-customer service. At times, it's a challenge. The younger people want technology, but they don't comprehend the idea of relationships. Business owners appreciate the value of relationships, especially with their lending partners. Meanwhile, the elderly are accustomed to banking in a certain fashion and value relationships. The nature of forming a relationship hasn't changed in consumer banking. As the demand for technology has come about, we've stayed up to date on everything. We have top of the line software vendors that provide our online banking, our online bill paying, and our remote deposit capture. We also have a voice response unit. We complement all of these things with the highest level of security available today in the banking industry. We consistently make sure we have all of the proper safeguards, the proper firewalls, and the proper audits and validated programs.

EL. What criteria do you use for  measuring the quality of customer service you provide?

HW. We continually monitor the customer experience both in our call centers and in our branches. As executive officers, my brother and I make sure we can deliver on this promise of service. This goal isn't that noticeable with customers we've had for years because they've become comfortable with our level of service. However, when people switch from other banks to ours, they say things like 'Why didn't I use you people years ago.' Comments like this provide us with the contrast we did to really notice our level of service. Without any contrasts, we'd wind up resting on our laurels and taking our service quality for granted. We have to keep improving on it.

EL. Can you describe some of the capital investments you've made  to improve the bank's technology?

HW. Technology is continuously changing. It may be hitting a bit of a plateau as the population absorbs how the changes have affected their lives during the past decade. Data is very accessible. The changes we've made include continuing to upgrade our internal hardware, especially our scanning systems within the branch system to process deposits more efficiently. We have consistently updated all of our online banking applications, all of our bill paying applications, wire transfer applications, and anything that has to do online to test the customer. This year we moved forward again with a substantial investment in our technology infrastructure. Our $20 million data center is a completely new facility for us. This facility will enable us to bring together the core departments that touch customers so we can continue to provide them the highest level of service possible.

EL. Can you describe your process for making capital  investments in technology, such as your data center?

HW. We did a cost benefit analysis in quantified dollars in our ability to manage and to provide customer service, and in our ability to make an investment like this. After we look at all of these benefits, we bring the investment to our board of directors. We have three committees: a technology committee, an executive committee, and a board committee. We have three levels of review for that kind of infrastructure investment.

EL. How do you look at the payoff for an investment like the  data center?

HW. We track all of our expenses around the clock. Because many businesses come to us for loans, we're quite familiar with how people run their businesses. We look at how they track expenses, how they use technology, and what kind of reporting they do. Most of the time, these people can't get a balance sheet out for 30 days or 60 days or until the close of the quarter or even at the end of the year. We produce a balance sheet every day.

EL. Do you have a dashboard that shows  you how much you're spending on technology?

HW. I get monthly reports on capital expenditures from all departments. I also get a profit and loss statement on all the monthly transactions. It would be too much data to absorb daily. On the other hand, if I wanted the data daily, I could have it.

EL. Do you use  technology to track marketing campaigns and to do lead generation?

HW. Yes. We have a system where we input data on customer sales, and on customer follow up by our people. For example, we can track how long it took us to handle a new customer referral. We have good reporting from this standpoint.

EL. What is your business  technology management strategy?

HW. We want to continue to update and to provide a high level of service. As technology changes, we have to address the cost and benefits of it as it changes. Many times technology comes about and there is no immediate benefit for a couple of reasons. The customers might not know how to use it. You can have the best technology in the world, but if the customers don't harness it, than it doesn't make sense to incur an unnecessary expenditure. If customers start asking for a specific technology, that's when we seriously have to look at making the investment. We analyze technology from that standpoint to see what benefits it would provide us and will our customers use it.

For example, we decided to offer remote deposit capture or the ability to enable customers to scan their deposits at their place of business and then to forward the deposits to us via the Internet. Some customers said that they liked the idea of not going to the bank every day. However, after trying the service, these same customers said that they didn't realize how much work it took to scan their deposits. They questioned whether or not the bank should be doing the scanning for them. These customers decided to go back to coming to the bank each day or doing a nightly deposit. On the other hand, many customers said they liked the service and had desire to visit the bank each day. Technology always has its plusses and minuses.

EL. Have you had any technology failures?

HW. Not really! We've had some issues with getting new  technology to work with our business processes and our current systems. 

EL. What kind of a technology team do you have?

HW. Our chief information officer (CIO) has been with us for about 10 years. The technology committee, one of our three executive governance committees, meets regularly with the CIO. My brother deals on a daily basis with the CIO. My brother and I take a balanced approach to running this company.

EL. What are you key responsibilities?

HW. I handle most of the business strategy. I also hire the bank's officers and oversee the strategies they put in place for their time. I make sure our credit portfolio is safe and sound from a policy standpoint. My brother and I both handle branch acquisitions.

EL. Do you have a  fifth generation who will be taking over the bank?

HW. My brother's two children work in the business. One manages our Laguna Hills office and the other one works as a compliance officer and risk officer in our trust company.

EL. How aggressive have  you been with acquisitions?

HW. Although we've reviewed some potential candidates, we haven't found an acquisition we want to make. Because of the economic climate, we're seeing an increase in our branch business. In fact, we totally rebuilt one of our branches and added several ones in Orange County.

EL. Do you provide personal investment  services to your customers?

HW. We don't offer brokerage services. However, for our high net worth, long-term customers, we make it possible for them to invest in the same securities we invest in. These securities include municipal bonds, treasuries, or mortgage-backed securities. We provide this service at no cost. All of our transactions go through our CFO who buys all of our bonds. These customers receive an account statement.

 

Author: Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a technology writer  from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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EvanRosen.jpg

 

Today, companies must maximize their time, their talent, and their tools to create value in the global economy. To better leverage these things, many companies have begun to design new business models and new workplace models based on one concept -- collaboration. However, too often companies say they have a highly collaborative environment because they've encouraged employees to use specific tools, such as Microsoft's SharePoint. Evan Rosen, collaboration strategist and author of the award-winning book, The Culture of Collaboration, says, that there's a hidden danger in making this type of statement. He says, "You need the culture to support the tools. Just introducing tools into an organization doesn't create collaboration."

 

Using examples from some of American's top collaborative companies, such as Boeing and Toyota, Rosen, in his book, explores how organizations of all sizes and types can adopt a collaborative culture to create value. Rosen, a former television news reporter and news anchor, spent much time visiting with all of the companies. He is the chief strategist for Impact Video Communications in San Francisco, California.

 

Enterpriseleadership.org recently sat down with Evan Rosen to discuss the benefits of collaboration, the trend toward real-time collaboration, and the essential elements that go into effective collaboration. Here's what he had to say:

 

EL: What prompted you to write this book?

 

ER: I've been involved with collaboration for many years. I planted the seed for the book back in 1999. At that time, I was in Munich, Germany, where BMW was preparing to launch the X5 Sports Activity Vehicle. It was using a highly collaborative process to do so. BMW created what I call mirror organizations between the manufacturing plant in Spartanburg, South Carolina, and the design and engineering center in Munich. By extending the workday and using the workday in both places, BMW wanted to shorten product development time from 60 months to 35 months. I realized as time went on that this type of collaboration could apply across major businesses. That was the genesis of the book

 

EL: How does collaboration benefit the bottom line both in hard dollars and in soft dollars?

 

ER: First off, I define collaboration as working together to create value while sharing virtual space or physical space. If you're not creating any value, what's the point of the collaboration? Value can be in hard or soft dollars. Hard-dollar benefits include reducing product development time, reducing time to a decision, and innovating a production process. Soft dollars really are hard dollars that are difficult to quantify. Soft dollar benefits include engaging people throughout the organization, recruiting and retaining the best people regardless of geography, and having better relationships with business partners.

 

Collaboration involves breaking down barriers among levels, functions, business units, and regions; and getting broader input into decisions. For example, people feel more engaged if they know their input counts, rather than if they're just handed instructions and told what to do. A highly engaged workforce results in a soft dollar asset. Responding effectively to customers' concerns can result in the soft dollar benefit of enhanced customer relationships.

 

BMW did accomplish its goal of reduced product cycle time, which resulted in a hard dollar benefit. BMW assembled the vehicle at its South Carolina plant, but engineers in both places collaborated to design the X5 and to support the product. The engineering teams used both synchronous collaboration tools, such as video conferencing, and asynchronous collaboration tools, such as video mail, to leverage both time zones. BMW realized that collaboration wasn't about tools, but about changing the nature of work and the culture of the organization.

 

EL: What company would you say has done an outstanding job of collaboration besides BMW?

 

ER: I'd say Boeing because it's an excellent example of what I call a global collaborative enterprise or an extended enterprise. It consists of a collection of independent companies that engage in a shared creation of value, often in real time. Boeing collaborates closely with global design partners, suppliers, and customers.

 

For the new 787 Dreamliner, Boeing has moved away from designing and manufacturing planes by itself and, instead, has transformed itself into a large-scale systems integrator. The move from linear design to concurrent design supports this shift. Take the linear design of the Boeing 777, the first digitally designed airplane. Boeing's engineers first designed the aircraft; then the sub-systems followed by the assemblies, the sub-assemblies, and the parts; and lastly they designed the manufacturing processes. For the 787, Boeing's engineers designed the parts, plans, tools and processes plus the assemblies, the sub-assemblies, and sub-systems all at the same time. To design and to produce the 787, Boeing had engineers in Everett, Washington, working with contract engineers at the Moscow Design Center. This shift mirrors what happens today in other industries. We're moving from the pass-along approach to work and interaction to do it now together through real-time collaboration.

 

EL: Did Boeing have to make any internal culture shifts to support the concurrent design workplace model?

 

ER: Every successful collaboration model always involves culture. To support the global collaborative enterprise, companies including Boeing have leveraged what mirror zones, which are time zones that are opposite or nearly opposite with some overlap in the workday. They allow for a nearly 24-hour production environment. People in different continents may share a job. When one time zone is sleeping, the other is working. Collaboration occurs in real time during the shift overlap and asynchronously at other times. The real-time collaboration involves, not only the ability to see and to hear one another, but to design everything from airplanes to 3D animation, regardless of geography.

 

EL: When it comes to collaboration or social networking, how do you deal across boundaries of managers and supervisors without someone getting their nose bent out of joint?

 

ER: It gets back to culture and the degree of transparency, or how well people are informed on business matters. Transparency can frighten a command-and-control oriented organization. The culture needs to support the kind of behavior such social networking tools allow and encourage. A company that has already embraced some attributes of information democracy will have an easier time with social networking. For example, one manufacturing company I've worked with provides all employees with key business information, such as the day's sales and the amount of inventory. In many companies, only key managers get that kind of financial information. If the depot person loading the product on railroad cars knows how much inventory awaits shipment, then this person can do his or her work more effectively and can contribute to decisions. Information flows both ways. Leaders can quickly gain insight from people anywhere in the company so everyone has a voice into decisions.

 

EL: What is the one element that can make or break how well people in an organization collaborate with each other?

 

ER: Collaboration tends to fail when the organization lacks common goals and when culture doesn't support the kinds of tools being forced into the organization. Before you can effectively collaborative, you need to build trust into the organization. It means moving away from a culture of internal competition that prevails in too many organizations. These organizations will pit the so-called star employees against other employees. Some competitive cultures don't encourage a lot of trust among employees. In this type of an environment, collaboration becomes fragmented. A good collaborative organization understands the values of long-term strategic relationships and that all partners must have a stake.

 

EL: IT people often get accused of not speaking the language of business, and business people don't always understand what IT is all about.

ER: How do you start overcoming barriers like this?

 

A company's survival, especially in tough economic times, requires breaking down barriers among functions, business units, levels, and regions. IT people who work for highly collaborative companies often get involved in decisions made by the business units. Likewise, these companies often engage sales, marketing, and engineering, as well as IT, in their key decisions. Organizations have many interrelated and interdependent parts. For example, redesigning the workplace environment involves facilities, IT, HR, corporate communications, and business units. Companies need to get these cross-functional groups engaged early in the decision-making process so that everyone has a stake in the outcome.

 

EL: How are companies redesigning the workplace to improve collaboration?

 

ER: Good collaboration consists of three components: -- culture, environment, and tools. The interplay of these three things determines effective collaboration. When it comes to physical environment, some companies have replaced cubicles with more flexible workspaces. Likewise, some organizations have created dedicated collaborative spaces that are designed to bring cross-functional teams together and to encourage them to brainstorm. The typical meeting room and conference room aren't necessarily equipped to encourage collaboration.

 

Mayo Clinic's dedicated collaborative space is part of its SPARC program, or See Plan Act Refine Communicate. The program's purpose is to do prototyping with new patient services by involving many different functions, ranging from doctors to marketing specialists to facilities people. Mayo Clinic has created an informal environment optimized for cross-functional brainstorming where people can relax and share ideas.

 

EL: When should an organization bring in an expert to improve collaboration?

 

ER: The answer depends on a company's background in collaboration. Some companies have built a collaborative culture from day one and have the knowledge and resources internally to extend collaborative culture. On the other hand, companies with less collaborative cultures that want to become more collaborative may need to bring in experts from the outside.

 

EL: What problem does an emerging company have with collaboration?

 

ER: A company's age doesn't determine how well employees collaborate. The Mayo Clinic, which is about 125 years old, has always had a collaborative culture. In fact, Mayo was founded on principles of collaboration. Many organizations view collaboration as a division between younger workers and older workers. Sometimes older people who've been with a company longer than younger workers view collaboration as a challenge to their authority and to their expertise. It's a destructive perception. On the other hand, some people who've been with the organization longer than others can collaborate more than people starting in the workforce can.

 

EL: How do companies measure the degree of collaboration?

 

ER: I'm going to address that topic in my next book.

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Additional Reading - Sponsor Link:
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Author: Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a technology writer from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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In 1987, the 42 separate insurance companies that comprised Factory Mutual Engineering & Research (FM), an industrial property insurer, and engineering-driven underwriter, consolidated their operations into three FM companies: Allendale Mutual Insurance Company, Arkwright Mutual Insurance Company and Protection Mutual Insurance Company. The three separate mutual insurance companies found it difficult to deliver reasonably priced, value-added engineering services in a marketplace driven by increasing competition and a demand for more challenging property protection. To reduce costs and to eliminate competition for the same customers, the three FM companies in 1999 merged to create one company, FM Global.

 

Today FM Global is an international property insurance and loss prevention engineering company with $4.7 billion in premiums and $9.7 billion in investments for 2007. The company's research group conducts tests in fire and explosion hazards, hazard detection and protection technology, natural disasters, and electrical hazards.

 

Enterpriseleadership.org spoke with Jeanne Lieb, senior vice president of information services (CIO) of FM Global at the MIT Sloan CIO Symposium 2008 where she spoke about managing a corporate business transformation. In this interview, Lieb talks about how executive commitment helped to make the merger go smoothly, and how standard processes, strong governance, effective leadership practices, and a good understanding of the business have helped IT deliver value to the business. Here's what she had to say:

 

EL. You can describe your organization's key responsibilities to  support the business? 

JL. We centrally manage all of our infrastructure, our systems development, and our enterprise architecture. Because our business model is unique in our marketplace, we had to build the majority of applications we require to run our business. These applications aren't available off the shelf. We're in the midst of a major six-year initiative to update our entire platform. 

On the infrastructure side, we're upgrading our internal voice network to voice over IP. From a server management, we're trying to gain efficiencies for using virtualization technology. 

EL. What other IT changes have you  made to operate both locally and globally? 

JL. Because of our presence in 50 countries, we had to standardize our global operations across the enterprise. As such, we use the same North American custom software in all of the countries where we operate. The software is centrally developed and centrally managed. This arrangement enables us to bring key information assets on the standard platform and use these assets in other parts of our business process. We drive economies of scale by doing that. 

Some of my CIO peers face the challenge of how to bring all of the financials together for doing business in several foreign countries. At FM Global, we don’t face this issue because we rely on this consistent platform. Because everything is centralized, we've been able to develop standardized business processes. As a result, we can focus on providing value back to the core business as opposed to worrying about how to handle financial reporting. 

EL. Can you describe why the merger went as well as  it did? 

JL. The three insurance companies that owned Factory Mutual were three equally matched companies. It was a merger of equals coming together to form a new company, namely, FM Global. This's important to understand. Because the merger didn't affect our clients, we quickly had to make some critical decisions at the beginning of the merger. For example, we had to decide which business-operating platform we wanted to use for FM Global. We didn't allow ourselves to say, 'Let's take a bit here and a bit there.' All of the insurance companies had valid platforms. Within three hours, four individuals, including me, made the decision to select one platform. We then worked with the executive committee on our rationale for our decision. During the 15-month merger period, the executive team continued to validate that we made the right decision for FM Global. No one challenged the platform decision. During this period, we also removed all of the system redundancy, and had all of the operations using a common platform. We couldn't have accomplished all of this if we didn't have full executive commitment. 

EL.  How are you providing value to the business units that translate to  profitability and to competitiveness? 

JL. I can approach that in several different ways. We've developed those business applications that run our business. Applications, such as engineering, underwriting, and claims, have an intrinsic value in ensuring that people have the tools, the technologies, and the infrastructure to respond efficiently and immediately to our clients' needs. 

As a developer of products for FM Global, we return a lot of value back to the company. As an insurance company with a foundation in engineering, we think of the information that comes from our visits to clients' facilities as the raw material for a manufacturing process. We have data management practices in place so that we then derive value from our product development, our underwriting, and other process supported by all of that information flow. 

EL. What initiatives have you  developed to become more customer centric? 

JL. We focused an important initiative on the core business roles, which include client-servicing departments, such as underwriting, claims, engineering, and sales. Using that portal technology, we knew we could provide ready access to all the client information and client content our employees needed, depending on their role. We then took a step forward by integrating our business applications into that portal. It presents employees with a list of their associated clients. After they've selected the client of interest, then all of the underlying applications then operate off that client. This streamlined interface helps employees to understand our working relationship with the client by providing information such as policies, terms and conditions, inspections completed, and other services. Essentially, we have one place where we go to find what we need. 

Sometimes business processes get lost; no one knows who owns what. We've worked to provide a clear understanding of which parts of the business own what components. It's important to know which sponsoring part of the organization drives any change or innovation. These things need to evolve over time. Because of our role and our integration of technology into our core business, we play a key role in every aspect of the business. Planning activities, for example, help us to ensure that we put together an annual plan we can respond to. 

EL. Can you  describe your governance process? 

JL. We have a cross-functional technology steering committee comprised of senior management, along with representatives from marketing, underwriting, and engineering. We ensure that we have the appropriate targets on the plan, and we deal with allocating resources appropriately. Our efficient process to resolve issues helps us to break down barriers as they arise. Usually, a team working on an initiative might have issues they can't resolve efficiently. Our resolution forum helps to resolve the team's issues. For example, we might try to resolve how far a certain application might go, or how the scope of a project needs to change. 

EL. How do you make investment decisions? 

JL. Working with the technology steering committee, we come up with a plan. Once the plan is agreed upon, I work with the CEO of on an appropriate budget to support the plan. The board gets involved as needed. Many of our decisions focus on defining the needs of the core business, and looking at what things are in our clients’ best interest.

 

EL. What steps do you take to address your clients' needs? 

JL. The business organization, not IT, talks with clients directly.  We call them our risk management executive councils, which foster a direct exchange between local management with clients. We also have advisory boards represented by CFOs at our clients’ organizations. 

EL. Do you assign IT people to be the liaison with the  business units? 

JL. I don't have people in the specific role of relationship manager. A good IT professional needs to understand the business. You're always going to need people who are good at coding or managing the infrastructure. Because our business model relies on technology, I require my entire management team, as well as business analysts, to connect directly with the business and have sound relationships with their business peers and understand the plan, the objectives, and the way we leverage technology to best meet those objectives. 

EL. Many people say there is often a disconnection between management and IT. So, when you hire someone, how do you know they speak the language of the business? 

JL. I can't point to a specific methodology we use to ensure that. I've seen many technologists who provide great value, but they do a mediocre job of speaking to business peers about solving business problems. In these cases, you need to have a liaison or a translator in the middle. This person could sit in the business unit or sit in IT.

 

EL. What are you doing to minimize the personal risk for employees to  understand and to embrace change?

 

JL. Management experts will say you need to layout and to articulate to an individual what success means to their organization. You need to communicate early in the relationship about your expectation for how employees can contribute and positively influence the changes they want to affect. When it comes to asking employees to accept major changes, you need to take a step back and to understand what obstacles would prevent employees from embracing the change. If you believe, as I do, that people want to do what's in the interest of the company, then you need to look at those other personal factors that define success for those employees.

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No one can deny that Jerry McElhatton has mastered many successful IT moments. During his 10 years as CIO with MasterCard International, McElhatton spearheaded a five-year, $160 million upgrade of the company's global processing system into one unified, single messaging standard. Even more impressively, he delivered this enormous undertaking on time and within the budget. The systems support more than 15,000 customers worldwide, handle more than 40 million transactions daily worth more than $1 trillion annually, and are linked to 800,000 ATMs globally. Also during his tenure, McElhatton oversaw the building of a $135 million, 52-acre campus for MasterCard's primary IT team.

 

In March 2005, McElhatton retired from MasterCard, where he had anywhere from 1,600 to 3,200 IT professionals under his leadership. Enterpriseleadership.org recently spoke with McElhatton about what his experiences managing an IT organization that could make or break MasterCard's success.

 

EL: What are you doing now?

 

JM: After 10 years with MasterCard, I retired to start Virtual Resources, a company that does consulting for organizations in the payments area, and for some architectural engineering firms. I also sit on the boards of directors for several technology companies, where I set up advisory committees to provide feedback on the company's products and examine what competitors are doing. I spend my free time tinkering with a massive model training collection, which my four grandchildren love. I almost forgot: I write articles for business publications, such as CIO Decisions.

 

EL: Now that you've retired from MasterCard, would you advise other near-retirement CIO's to go off and keep their hands in IT?

 

JM: Why not? I'm enjoying helping companies understand the cost benefits of technology. I've successfully gotten people to look at their cost structures, to put some best practices in place, to help them evaluate some future cost-effective architectures, and to get them to be more responsive to business needs.

 

EL: Looking back at the technology overhaul you implemented at MasterCard, what things really made it happen?

 

JM: The credit goes to my great team. The company had some very mature systems that did a nice job, but it took too long to bring new products to market. New and better technology could simplify things and reduce our infrastructure costs. My assignment included restructuring, rewriting, and redeveloping the core systems. It took five years of changes to give those systems the scalability and flexibility they needed to meet best business practices. We completed that project within the assigned budget and ahead of schedule.

 

EL: What were some of the best practices that were put into place?

 

JM: We put reusable systems code and architectures in place. When it came to databases and data warehousing, we made sure we captured the data correctly and could easily segment it. Our key members had to analyze this data to help them build their marketshare.

 

At MasterCard, I had the unique position of being responsible for all technology, all IT operations, and both IT security and physical security. Fraud is a big problem in the credit card business. For example, I oversaw all of the risk systems that enabled our members to report fraud to us so we could stop it. We gave them information to make them aware of certain types of fraud that were taking place or had the potential to take place. We spent a lot of time reworking those systems. We put together things that would give us an advantage in identifying some characteristics and traits of fraud.

 

JM: Yes, the entire security team reported to me. I was also responsible for the access control side of physical security. The entire team that guarded our campus buildings reported to me. These folks did a lot of investigations internally to make sure employees did not access unauthorized areas.

 

EL: What was the business model for MasterCard when you were there?

 

JM: Simply, we worked very closely with the business units to help them define priorities, to help them move marketshare and generate income, and to help them reduce operational expenses. As a member of the operations and policy committee, I looked at how we could leverage technology to get the biggest payback.

 

EL: What was your IT model at MasterCard?

 

JM: MasterCard's technology generates a significant amount of revenue on what's called a "quick charge." We have charges for authorization, clearing, settlement, and also charges on our risk systems. On some of the systems, we had profit and loss residing with the operations and technology group. And on the others, we had direct chargeback to the marketing group for the cost and expense of generating that revenue.

 

EL: Did you folks use anything like Six Sigma?

 

JM: It's an interesting concept that has to do with the definition of root cause analysis and definition of quality standards. Eighty-five percent of the program we used consisted of Six Sigma and the benefits associated with it.

We measured everything, and we drove staffing and quality off those numbers. In our system, we posted implementation reviews, and whenever we had a problem, we did a root cause analysis to determine where to patch the problem. So, our systems got stronger over time. The performance of MasterCard as a company became outstanding because of the work we'd done to engineer the system.

 

EL: How successful were you in combating fraud?

 

JM: It was very good. We did a lot of proactive things to put people on notice. In the credit card business, fraud often happens at the merchant location and at some of the processors. If someone doesn't follow the rules, you might do routine audits, but an IT security audit is only good for the day you do it. Someone can make a change the next day, and thus, put a hole in the system. You might not catch it until you do another audit, or you might not catch it until you have a problem. We did a lot of proactive work to identify potential fraud. We not only used our systems, but we had cooperative efforts with others, and we used their systems, so we had a significant reduction in fraud.

 

EL: Do you have any comments on Oracle's recent buying spree?

 

JM: On the one hand, Oracle will have a strong product offering. On the other hand, as with all technology mergers/acquisitions, IT departments no longer have a lot of product choice; they'll lose their ability to negotiate on price, and service levels.

 

EL: Are you writing a book?

 

JM: I've thought about it. My working title is, 101 Easy Lessons Learned the Hard Way. IT folks today have similar sets of issues and problems as their counterparts five or 10 years ago. Yes, there might be more flexible ways to solve these problems, but every generation seems to have to touch the top of the stove to see if it's hot. I have a lot of advice to give about how to avoid some of the mistakes other IT people have made in the past.

 

EL: What's the biggest mistake people make in climbing the career ladder?

 

JM: IT people are smart people, but they don't often have a sense of how to budget for projects and how to meet the deliverables. IT people often make things harder than they really are.

 

At MasterCard, we learned how to eat a big marshmallow without getting sick. The answer is a bite at a time. We broke down projects into very significant deliverables that we measured and monitored.

 

IT people have to first learn to commit to a project, and then stick to the schedule, the budget, and the deliverables.

 

EL: Do you think the CIO role should be rotational?

 

JM: Some companies might be better off if they went in that direction. If someone has been a CIO for 10 or more years, then that person might be stuck in that role. Let me tell you what helped me at MasterCard. For example, at one time I was assigned to run the process change team. We took more than $100 million out of the systems by leveraging technology, and leveraging people's skillsets. This experience helped me to grow closer to the business units. I had some other great business opportunities.

 

If you want to cultivate stronger IT professionals, then assign them both business problems and technology problems. This process enables IT professionals to gain a more realistic view of how the business uses technology, and how they should use it to solve problems.

 

EL: Have you read Nicholas Carr's book, Does IT Matter, or his Harvard Business Review article, "IT Doesn't Matter?"

 

JM: I've read the book. I've been in businesses where technology has made a big difference. At MasterCard, we leveraged a lot of technology to get good business results. Carr perceives technology as a commodity -- spending a lot of money on IT doesn't necessarily translate to creating competitive differential. For example, if an IT department is late with deliverables, then the company can loose its competitive edge. At MasterCard, we won a lot of new business by being the first to deliver new, working systems, and to continue to enhance those systems. The other guys had a hard time catching up with us.

--

 

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Elizabeth M. Ferrarini is an IT consultant from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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When Women In Information Technology wanted to empower its members to have better working relationships with colleagues, this organization invited David Nour, managing partner of The Nour Group,  to be a guest speaker. At the time, Siemens, Marriott, and IBM have also sought out his consulting services. Nour's firm helps organizations develop relationship-centric goals and objectives, as well as to train people to improve their human interaction skills. Nour calls this more sophisticated, version of social networking relationship economics. In fact, John Wiley & Sons published Nour's book, Relationship Economics.

 

Nour's work goes beyond how to leverage existing relationships to get things done. He's working on a concept called influencing without authority which would enable line managers to get help from their vice president's team.  Nour's consulting work also extends to e-social networking. He has written a guide to LinkedIn and is taking Second Life very seriously.

 

Nour has racked up some relationship economics kudos.  In 2005 he was named to Georgia Trend’s 40 Under 4", Atlanta Business Chronicle’s Up and Coming and Who’s Who in Atlanta Technology Awards. Articles about Nour have appeared in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times.

 

Recently, enterpriseleadership.org sat down with Nour to learn more about how IT professionals can apply some of his relationship economics methodologies. Here's what he had to say:

 

EL: Why should professionals, such as CIOs, be concerned about relationship economics?

 

DN: I recently spoke before 200 people at the National Association of State CIOs about the strategic value of social networking.  Of the 50 state CIOs in the room, the 40 who I spoke to told me that they had never thought about social networking as relationship economics.

 

Specifically, relationship economics is the art and science of relationships. It can help you, as an individual, as a team, or as an organization more efficiently and more proactively to identify, to build nurture, and to leverage relationships to get things done. Improving other people's lives provides the foundation for this process. It can yield a real economic outcome you can quantify. For example, on any given day at work, you could talk with 50 different people. You don't have the bandwidth to invest in all of your relationships equally. How do you prioritize which relationships you want to invest in?

 

EL: What are the different ways people approach social networking?

 

DN: I talk about three types of networkers: givers, takers, and investors. Givers do things out of altruism.  Takers reach out to you when they want something. For example, if a CIO is looking for a job, he or she will actively network to find influential people who can open doors. Once this CIO gets a job, you might never hear from this person again. If you hear from someone like this several years later, don't be afraid to call them on it by saying, 'When was the last time you called to see how I was doing?' The investor takes the time to cultivate a relationship. We call this relationship currency because you give your knowledge, your talents, your time, or your access to an influential resource.

 

Although many people might invest in a relationship, they face the challenge of how to identity, to measure, and to leverage about investments. Relationship economics provides the discipline process they need as a relationship investor.

 

You wouldn't pick a stock in a company because you liked the logo design.  Most people walk into a relationship blindly. They do very little due diligence of the relationship bank. They also do a terrible job leveraging those relationships to get things done.

 

EL: How can CIOs begin to nurture relationships with leaders in business units?

 

DN: I've written about the top 10 reasons why most networking doesn't work, and  what five relationship-centric mistakes most executives make. CIOs, like other professionals, need to realize that relationships aren't a standalone concept. Instead, relationships can enable things. Most relationship development doesn't work because it's haphazard and reactive. You don't go through the process of what's your purpose for doing this. You don't ask yourself these questions: What are my goals? What's my plan for nurturing, building, and investing in this relationship?

 

You have to first identify the purpose for your relationship-centric goals. Why are you trying to build relationships? For example, you might say: 'I need to improve the relationship with a divisional leader who is the biggest customer for IT.' Now you have a purpose.

 

EL: What questions should CIOs be asking themselves?

 

DN: When faced with a challenge, most CIOs ask the following questions: What do we need to do? How are we going to do it? What's the process?

 

On the other hand, they also need to ask about who they need, who they know, and how do they leverage both of their internal and external relationships to get things done. How do they go about doing this? They can start by identifying what some of those relationship-centric goals. They need to start identifying for what purpose, and for what goals -- as an individual, as a team and as an entire organization -- they need to nurture and to build those relationships.

 

We call these resources pivotal contacts, those individuals who can help you to accelerate and to achieve your goal. They've walked in your shoes, and might have experienced the pitfalls you might encounter. Many CIOs come into a new role or into a new project thinking they can reinvent the wheel. If you start by asking whom do I need as pivotal contacts, you have just saved yourself a lot of time, resources, and wasted cycles.

 

EL: Why do most professionals have a terrible time reaching out to people whom have played an important role in some aspect of their life?

 

DN: We operate under the premise that most people do a terrible job getting their arms around and analyzing their existing or past relationships. For example, you spent several years working with key executives at a Fortune 100 company. Why can't you use them as your own board of advisers? I'm still in touch with my college professors, and people at IBM I worked with 20 years ago. Most people make the big mistake of allowing those incredibly valuable relationships to fade.  Most people also do a terrible job of analyzing and measuring their relationship bank.

 

EL: Why do a few people benefit from professional organizations, while many others see them as a waste of time?

 

DN: Many professionals don't think about return on involvement. They miss the best asset in their portfolio of relationships. Diversity!  It has nothing to do with how many people you know. It has everything to do with how diverse your portfolio of relationships is.  If you keep hanging out with the same few people you've always known, that's about as far as you're going to get.

 

You can determine quality by business stature, rank, and influence. Some people call this influence map. You need to focus on constantly raising the bar on the business stature of the people you engage. This process is key to that relationship bank analysis.

 

Some people belong to several professional organizations, but they seldom show up for a meeting, or they show up when the program is just starting. If they showed up an hour before the event started, they would've had the chance to engage the audience that's there. Most people gather for two reasons: content and community. Ask yourself: Why am I going there? What am I going to get out of it? Who else is going to be there? How can I get the most out of this investment of time and effort? Most people show up, put on a badge, and then wonder why they aren't getting anything out of it.

 

EL: So how what can you do to get more out a professional membership or a professional venue?

 

DN: You need to pick fewer organizations, and get deeply involved with then. As a CIO, you can take a leadership role by getting your team involved on a subcommittee to research a particular topic. You need to do this without a hidden agenda. If you work hard, the spotlight will shine on you. The well-established people in the organization will thank you for your contribution. They will want to know more about you and, in turn, you will get to know them. An officer might even ask you to be on the organization's board of directors.

 

EL: What is your feeling about Web-based social networking?

 

DN: We researched 400 different social networking sites in nine different categories. Social networking technologies have the potential of defining the basic tenets of business-to-business interaction moving forward. For example, LinkedIn has 15 million members from 150 different industries. Some senior executives of Fortune 500 companies have profiles on LinkedIn.

 

At the turn of the 20th century, there were 200 auto makers in the U.S. E-social networking today faces a similar challenge of too many players with little value-added differentiation. Besides LinkedIn, you have Zoom Info, Spoke, JigSaw, and Visible Path. Some of these companies have clever niche applications or tools, but a tool doesn't make a platform and a platform doesn't make a company. Eventually, we'll see either a mass consolidation of them or their demise. Some of these companies were poor investments. Kleiner Perkins put a lot of money in to Visible Path. This company has had about four CEOs, and has changed business models several times. Venture capital firms can't continue to throw money at companies that don't have a viable revenue model.

 

EL: How do you feel about Second Life as a networking vehicle?

 

DN: This interesting one will allow people to collaborate. That's the real value of Second Life. The technology has moved from the gaming industry to the business use of building avatars and having an alter ego. Linden Labs, which runs Second Life, pulled the plug on its big moneymaking porno offering, and is now focusing on business users, such as IBM and Xerox. These companies want to leverage Second Life for things such as simulation-based training.  Members of Generation Y won't focus very well if they have to sit through a 14-page case study analysis. However, they will get involved in an online simulation. Armed with a library of business scenarios, you can change that simulation and put them in difficult situations, almost like what medical professionals so through in surgical simulations.

 

Author: Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a technology writer from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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Gerald Shields, CIO of Aflac, the $14 billion disability insurance company, believes in the power of continuous learning for his IT directors and managers. In fact, his lunch hour book club doesn't read books about IT, but about leadership. His book list often includes the works of Noel M. Tichy, a professor at the University of Michigan Business School, and director of the School's Global Leadership Development Center. Both BusinessWeek and Business 2.0 have rated Tichy as one of the Top 10 Management Gurus in the country.

 

As the former head of General Electric's Crotonville Leadership Development Center, Tichy packs his books, such as  The Leadership Engine and The Cycle of Leadership, with plenty of management insight from General Electric. He also co-wrote the best seller, Control Your Destiny or Someone Else Will. Recently, enterpriseleadership.org sat down with Professor Tichy to talk about his recent book, Judgment: How Winning Leaders Make Great Calls. Here's what he had to say:

 

EL: What judgment challenge does a functional leader like a CIO  have?

 

NMT: Functional leaders, such as CIOs and CFOs, have a dual role -- a lead role and a supporting role.  They run an organization. CIOs run IT. They have to make judgments about people, strategy, and crisis. They also have to support the line organization, which has to make better judgments.  You have to be conscious about what makes good judgment.

 

EL:  When should someone begin to go on the journey of  self-understanding?

 

NMT: In my ideal world, it ought to start as people are growing up. Immelt's intense journey began when he was starting to run the major appliances business unit at GE in the late 1980s.

 

Good leadership requires a good self-understanding. The good leaders, such as A. G. Lafley, CEO of Proctor & Gamble, are reflective. They're actors who can also reflect. Welch had an amazing ability to move fast and to make good decisions. He'd also have down time where he'd write and he'd reflect. A lot of leaders act and don't reflect. If you don't have some of that self-reflect time, you'll have a hard time making good judgments.

 

EL: Why did Carly Fiorina, the  former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, have trouble making good  judgments?

 

NMT: Carly Fiorina's problem was her background.  She never ran a true profit and loss business.  This experience requires you have to make tradeoffs in marketing, sales, and manufacturing. Lucent flew high before the dot.com bust. She sold switches to executives at eight companies, such as Ameritech and Verizon. These executives moved millions and millions of dollars of switch gear. That's not running anything.

 

If you wanted to develop her as a leader, then you'd put her in a true P&L situation. You don't go to the major leagues without first playing in the minor leagues. She was at risk the minute she walked into HP. She could argue that Mark Hurd has gotten credit for all of the great things she did.
There's some truth to this. She did accomplish some significant things. The Compaq acquisition is paying off. Mark Hurd had plenty of minor experience at NCR, which is not as large as HP. He, however, had true P&L experiences in his career. He really understood operationally how to run an organization that had manufacturing, engineering, and marketing. He knew how to make tradeoffs.

 

EL: When you ran the leadership development program for HP, did you see Carly Fiorina make frequent appearances as Jack Welch did at Crotonville?

 

NMT: I saw a good example of her failing to connect with employees, especially future leaders. When she first joined HP, I was running HP's leadership development program for upper middle managers. About 30 HP employees at the time would attend a four-day workshop at the University of Michigan, and then return for a three-day workshop after 100 days. At first, the women said they were happy to have a female CEO. At the end of three months, these same women gave Fiorina low marks, saying she didn't relate well to people. They said she was arrogant and standoffish. She never came to the program once. Jack Welch or Jeff Immelt visited Crotonville regularly. You couldn't keep then away.

 

EL:  Can you briefly describe what you mean when you say a good leader needs a  teachable point of view?

 

NMT: In the Leadership Engine book I laid out the four components of a teachable point of view. First, create business ideas that will drive shareholder value. Second, determine the values you want people to live by in the organization. Third, learn to energize people so they buy in and support the values and business ideas. Fourth, have the courage to make yes/no decisions. If you don't have a set of values people can model their behavior by, then you'll create more Enron's, Imclone's, and Tyco's. I've been talking about this for the past 15 years. It's just part of being a good leader. Every so often, we have to remind people about it. A good organization has always had a strong set of values.

 

EL: Several years ago, Fortune magazine did an article describing how a new management paradigm is replacing the venerable Jack Welch style. What's your assessment of this?

 

NMT: I know Jack Welch very well because I worked closely with him. He used to visit GE Crotonville once a week. All of my books have chapters filled with tremendous insight from GE. Many people who write about Jack Welch have never met him or even worked at GE.

 

Welch was a very collaborative team builder beginning when he was a hockey player in Salem, Massachusetts. He built an incredible team for 17 years in plastics. He knew how to build gangs and groups of people. He introduced workout, which took layers out of the organization. 

 

He developed more leaders than any other CEO in the history of business. Jim McNerney now runs Boeing, while David Cody runs Honeywell. Robert Nardelli, who messed up as CEO of Home Depot, now runs Chrysler. About 30 leaders developed by Jack Welch run Fortune 500 companies. That kind of record of accomplishment doesn't happen by beating up on people. He was an incredible coach. He spent 30 days a year on succession planning. He was tough on business matters, which explains why GE succeeded and Westinghouse didn't.

 

EL: When it comes to making good judgments, do many  leaders put a lot of weight on analytics?

 

NMT: I don't know to what degree companies today rely on analytics. You have to look at the history of analytics, which goes back to GE in the late 1960s. GE developed the PIMS database. Things like, strategic planning and systems thinking, originated at GE. When I started as a graduate school business professor in 1972, we immersed ourselves in analytics. Over the years, we learned that business schools had oversold analytics as being able to lead to the answer. Analytics comprise one part of the puzzle. For example, before making a patient diagnosis, a physician compiles analytics from all the tests the patient took. At the end of the day, that physician has to make a judgment.

 

Some organizations, however, do rely heavily on analytics to provide answers. On the other hand, you shouldn't just wing it. Good judgment requires two things:  as many analytics as you need to frame your decision, and the courage to take a leap of faith.

 

EL: What was your most interesting assignment at GE's  Crotonville?

 

NMT: Developing the next generation of leaders turned out to be my most interesting assignment at GE. In 1986, Jack Welch said because the world had changed and because the business had changed, the way we developed leaders in the past no longer applied. We had to look at the leadership pipeline from 22-year-old campus hires to future CEOs. Eighty percent of development happens on the job and in life experiences. Crotonville, however, will never go out of business.

 

For example, how do you help a 22-year-old bench engineer develop an awareness of his or her own values, the values of GE, the work planning tools, and a combination of both the soft people skills, as well as the hard business issues? What happens when that same person becomes a 28-year old manager of seven other bench engineers? He or she has to learn, not only what their values are, but also how to teach those values to other people. They need to learn how to manage a team, and how to do appraisals.

 

When Jim McNerney ran GE's aircraft engine business, he oversaw 40,000 employees. He had the challenge of teaching those people the appropriate company values. If you're in a similar situation, you need to say: How do I set a strategy in a business and in an industry? How do I deal with the types of conflicts that come up in a unionized shop? At every level, you start thinking through. You then say what are the developmental experiences you need to give people? What formal experiences can accelerate what you actually can imprint on people?

 

EL: What advice do give your consulting clients about  succession planning?

 

NMT: Whenever I work with clients, I tell them to forget about what path they used to take to the CEO post. They, instead, need to examine their business and their environment. From this, they can determine how they can develop people.

 

EL: How well do Fortune  1000 companies handle succession planning for C-level  leadership?

 

NMT: Terrible! Whenever you need to go outside for a CEO, you've failed. HP went outside twice. 3M went outside twice and failed. Merck failed. Home Depot is on its second outsider. Citigroup was lucky to have someone inside. Succession planning ranks at the top on a CEO's and the board's list of responsibilities.  It should be number one. Most major companies don't have many prospective candidates in the succession pipeline. We mention this in Judgment.

 

There are some wonderful exceptions to this dilemma. Indra Nooyi, CEO of PepsiCo, came from in house.  A.G. Lafley at P&G came from in house. GE can produce a surplus of leaders.  The minorities of companies that have done it successfully had succession planning in their DNA from the start.

 

Author: Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a technology writer  from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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KevinBott.jpg

 

The name Ryder means one thing to a lot of consumers and business owners -- it's the company you call when you went to lease or to rent a truck. However, that's just one part of Ryder System, Inc.'s business, based in Miami, Florida. With yearly revenues of more than $5 billion, this global organization ranks as the leader in providing outsource services for supply chain management.

 

IT has played a major role in helping Ryder distinguish its fleet operations -- consisting of about 125,000 vehicles and about 40,000 trailers -- from its competitors. In fact, in 2007, Kevin Bott, CIO and senior vice president of Ryder, made Computerworld's list of Premier 100 honorees. Bott demonstrated his leadership skills when RydeSmart, a pilot project to improve fleet operations, took off in the wrong direction. As a member of Ryder's senior management team, Bott makes sure his IT team spearheads projects that help improve the Ryder customer experience, as well as to enhance the company's internal operations.

 

Enterpriseleadership.org recently sat down with Kevin Bott to discuss some of the CIO challenges he faces. Here's what he had to say:

 

EL: Can describe the structure of your IT organization?

 

KB: My team consists of mostly employees and some contractors. They all support operations in seven countries, including the U.S. Mexico, China, and Argentina. Our contractors in India do development work for us. Contractors in the U.S. work as capacity buffers for large projects as we need more resources. My annual IT budget ranges between $70 million to $80 million.

All of the IT resources report to me. Two major IT teams support the supply chain, the outsourcing group, and the fleet management solutions, which is leasing and rental. A central support team handles our back office functions, such as human resources and finance. I have an infrastructure team. Each team has specialists in different areas, such as telecom, or certain applications.

 

EL: Why did the RydeSmart wireless fleet project go off track?

 

KB: The project took longer to deploy, resulting in the delay. We had to take the time to put the technology on the older vehicles. For new vehicles, we had the technology installed at the OEM site. We already had all of these vehicles in our shop or with our customers. Our customers run and manage these vehicles. We maintain them when the customer brings them into our shop.

 

First, we had to schedule our customers to bring in the vehicles so we could install the technology. We had about 225 shops and 5,000 vehicles in the pilot. Personnel in each one of us shops needed training on the technology. Sometimes we wouldn't see the vehicles for six weeks or eight weeks.

 

Furthermore, we run into some technical issues, too. For example, the on-vehicle communication bus connects to the electronic communications module (ECM) in order to talk with various computers located throughout the vehicle. This communication enables us to obtain the information we transmit about what the vehicle is doing. We have about 60 different makes of vehicles of all different ages. These vehicles range from brand new to seven years old. The industry needs to standardize the communications bus on the ECM. Working through the technical issues with all of the different vehicle models took more time than we anticipated.

 

EL: According to Computerworld, you refused 'to let the effort become too corporate and to concentrate on tangible savings' How did you work with senior leadership and the business units to make this happen?

 

KB: I had luck on my side here. My core leadership team consists of two members of the fleet management solutions group, namely the division chief operating officer and the executive vice president for sales and marketing. We all met frequently. I had their support all along. We were able to overcome obstacles. They came up and pushed things through. When you have senior management support, it makes any type of project go easier.

 

EL: How does IT align with the corporate strategy and with the strategies of business units?  Can you briefly describe all organization levels of your IT governance model?

KB:
The governance for the fleet management solutions group, the supply chain and sourcing group, and the central support group consists of a business steering team. We meet a couple of times a year to go over all the major projects we want to work on in the upcoming year.

 

We also have an overall corporate IT strategy team, comprised of the company's leadership team. After the three sub-teams have come up with their project list, then the corporate team comes back and approves the list. We set a capital plan for IT investment at the end of each fiscal year. We treat that as a portfolio throughout the year. We do projects on the list as they come up. They can change after that. If something bubbles up that takes a higher priority, we bump something off that list throughout the year. We continue to work on the list from a project standpoint.

 

Each one of my direct reports meets with his/her business leadership either weekly or monthly. They review all of the short-term projects. We, unfortunately, work from a backlog. The business team helps us to prioritize all of the projects and all of the work we're doing. We give IT funds back to those business teams. To this end, they have an inherent interest to make sure we spend their money wisely.  This cooperative and collaborative initiative tasks us to make sure we're doing what the business units want us to do, but we're making recommendations about what we think we need to get done.

 

That's the main core of the governance. Each major scale project has a steering committee that meets once a month to review the status of the project. We also do weekly reporting on the major projects that go up through the organization.

 

EL:  Are you  using anything like the Balanced Scorecard to measure the effectiveness of  projects?

 

KB: We have four different Balanced Scorecard criteria, including on time, on budget, within scope, and achievable benefits. Projects on budget rank higher than the projects done on time. The business units have their own project scoring system for large project deployment.

 

EL: Besides the Balanced Scorecard, what other  quality practices are you  using in IT?  
  
KB:
Ryder has been using Lean, Six Sigma and ISO for several years. All of my supply chain management people have gone through the initial Six Sigma training. I have one person working on a Black Belt. We have various ways to use Six Sigma. We're doing a very large scorecard project for a subgroup within the supply chain, which is dedicated contract carriage. It's a process control type tracking system. Anyone in management can view the different performance indicators. We're rolling it out for 2008.

EL: How did your predecessor mentor you, and how are you  mentoring your direct reports?


KB:
Robert Sanchez, the former CIO, is now the chief financial officer. I see him frequently because I report to him now. When I didn't report to him, I'd still seek out his advice if I wasn't sure how to handle something. It worked out very well. I don't know if I was a pain to him or not. He helped acclimate me to my role as CIO. He's a very calm and very logical person. He's easy to run things by.

 

For my staff, I'm working with our human resources group. We're having people work on 360-degree self-assessments. We're also doing succession planning. I have regular communications meetings with the staff. Twice a year, I hold a state of the union meeting with the entire global IT organization. We try to keep the communications channels open.

 

We had higher turnover this year than we experienced in the past. As a result, we did a lot of detailed review of what was doing on there. We got some good feedback from the interviews we did. We try to react to what we hear. We're trying to be more proactive as we can with these issues.

 

South Florida right now has a tight job market for people in IT. Every six weeks, I meet informally with other CIOs to talk about different things. Finding qualified people and keeping good people rank high on everyone's list of priorities.

 

EL: You have a doctorate in  operations and management.  Why did you decide to get into  IT?

 

KB: I majored in production operations management and minored in. Together, they translate to supply chain management. Logistic always interested me. In fact, after I gave up being an assistant professor at Case Western Reserve University, I went to work in operations research applied mathematics area. I work with a lot of technology to develop different tools to help with logistics. I've always sat on a three-legged stool with a lot of interaction with the business, a lot of interaction with technology, and a lot of interaction with the operations research side. Now I'm on the IT side. It has been interesting.

 

EL: What is Ryder's  process for driving sustainable innovation to keep the company more  competitive? 

 

KB: Each quarter, the leadership team meets off site to discuss the development and the execution of the annual strategic plan. As a company, we push for sustainable profitable growth in the market place. We look for new ways we can make it easier for customers to do business with Ryder. We also look at how we can use technology to increase the efficiency and the effectiveness of our operations. RydeSmart is an example of a technology innovation. My team has the task of helping business with things that meet any one of these strategies. We create tools to help the business work more successfully with our customers. For example, about 3,000 or 4,000 of our customers have daily access to all of the things we do for them, such as their shipping history. We leveraging this technology to make our customers feel better about Ryder and make them be more successful. That's what they're hiring us for!

 

EL: How far along are you with deploying  RFID?

KB:
We've had RFID in our supply chain for several years. Once it's set up, it works fine. Some of the original mandates for RFID, however, added cost to the supply chain. Putting RFID chips at the originating point rather than at our proposed middle of the supply chain reduced this cost.

 

It hasn't grown as fast as everyone said it would. You have the Wal-Mart RFID initiatives and the military RFID. Other than use by retailers, RFID hasn't grown wildly. People still search for ways to use it.

 

This technology will eventually take off. There are many uses for it. For example, our badges to get into the building have RFID. Your garage door openers are an RFID device. All of the toll roads have RFID. The cost keeps coming down. You'll eventually see RFID in wireless appliances.

 

EL: What new technologies do you have planned for 2008?

 

KB: We're rolling out a major operating system for the supply chain division. The new centralized platform will us more benefit than our distributed platform. This project will affect about 600 operating locations in North America. It will also change our operating processes. We're connecting this new system to RydeSmart program, as well as to our financials for billing and payroll.

 

Author: Elizabeth M. Ferrarini - She is a technology writer  from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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In 2003, John Golden, the chief information officer at CNA, the fourth largest insurance company in the U.S., had completed the consolidation of applications, had centralized more than 20 IT groups, and had trimmed systems maintenance costs. He then put a five-part strategy in place to make sure IT could put a lot of muscle in the business units, thus moving CNA forward. Golden's strategy to improve business processes includes having the right partners, doing proper program management, using more comprehensive solutions, making more use of portfolio management, and sticking to a comprehensive delivery system.

 

For the past four years, Golden has stuck to his IT strategy for CNA. "Its purpose is to make sure we do the right thing for the business. We've been evolving from an organization that did $10 million IT projects to one that does $100 million complex IT projects that will transform the company. These projects involve a business process change in addition to a change in technology. We've looked at it as an investment which would yield a return."

 

Enterpriseleadership.org recently sat down with Golden to talk about the challenges of carrying out some parts of his strategy. He oversees a centralized IT organization with 1,100 employees, and manages relationships with several partners and offshore IT resources.  In 2006, CNA had $10 billion in revenues and assets of more than $58 billion. Here's what he had to say:

 

EL: What were some of the things you looked for in finding the right partners and in building relationships with them?

 

JG: We knew that the increase in spending was a big risk. We've found two good partners -- Accenture and IBM. We wanted no more than three partners. It took us longer than we thought to find the right ones. We had to mix their style with ours, to have the right contractual terms, and then to allow them time to deliver. We quickly got a sense of each other's disciplines, and risk tolerances. With one of our partners, we now have a deep risk sharing and reward sharing. It took us a year before we could get here.

 

EL: How would you rate your program management imitative?

 

JG: We've hit a homerun with our world class program management. Our project management office is extremely strong. We have the right measures in place for consistently delivering high quality services. That's what I wanted to make sure we did. We're still maturing at the high end of a $100 million program. It's more on the execution piece in the organization with our partners. We have good methodology, good tools, and good expertise. We've really developed a good skill set there. We have good leadership here because our project management office has been very strong.

 

EL: What changes have you made to your portfolio management strategy?

 

JG: In 2004, we introduced our portfolio management strategy to make sure we had the right portfolio structure and the tools to support that. It was an area that  became problematic because of priority issues. We deserved it.  We got the right structure in place that year and the noise went away.

 

We've gotten better at the way we prioritize, the way we interact with the project team, the way that we schedule our work and the way we make decisions around the investments. We've really improved our day-to-day actions. My organization has also had a strong relationship with the executive committee, including the chairman. My peers have given me a lot of good direction. As a result, portfolio management really excels for us now.

 

EL: What changes have you made to your delivery framework so you can handle larger projects?

 

JG: We have a comprehensive delivery framework which has enabled us to be more consistent with what and how we deliver. I thought we really would've excelled in this space. I'm disappointed in my performance here.  If you measure our consistent framework on the same scale with CMMI, we do very well. Our delivery rates are in the mid to high 90's as far as scope, schedule, and budget. We've driven a lot of cost out of it to be more effective. We're still relying too much on brute force and too many heroes. However, I appreciate what the employees are doing in that space.

 

I measure our credibility based on how well we're delivering what the chairman wants. Is it giving us the ability to do things to help the company innovate? Are we able to take on large projects which would move us beyond the realm of IT? Our credibility is very good. However, I'm concerned that as I stretch my team to take on more things outside of the pure IT umbrella, my delivery framework isn't as rock sold as I 'd like it to be. I've started to stress that.

 

EL: How do you plan to solve this problem?

 

JG: The owners of the various processes need to make sure they really do have a comprehensive set of measures around those processes. We're very good at the global level. If you look at our scorecard, you'll see that our utilization, our cost of transactions, and the split between maintenance and development all have good numbers. People talk a lot about agile development. Our problem is agile development hitting the big time. We're pretty good at agile development on $5 million projects. When it comes to agile development on a $100 million project, I don't know of many organizations that are really good at it. As you begin to scale, people seem to get less disciplined and less agile. We can't do that. Our challenge is how do we be agile but disciplined on a larger project scale? Each of the process owners has to be able to work together to make sure they understand the new demands and new expectations. Can they scale it? It's not a resource issue, but a process issue.

 

EL: What increases have you made to your budget for new projects, and what new projects are on your drawing board?

 

JG: Between 2001 to 2005, our IT budget decreased each year. From 2005 to 2006, 2007, and going into 2008, our IT budget has been growing to support new initiatives. So, we've drastically been increasing what we spend on the business.  For 2006, we'll spend, on a cash basis, more than 50 percent of the budget on new work.

 

Our new projects for claims and underwriting will greatly transform our business. In underwriting, we're completing our work in small business and attacking the middle market. We've had a lot of work going on in predictive modeling and capital modeling. We have a major financial systems roadmap imitative which will take our information management system, called Merlin, to the next level.

 

EL: How does your IT organization work with the business units?

 

JG: Some people would call it a federated model, but I wouldn't give it that definition. For investments of several million dollars, I have a team of directors who deal with leaders from each line of business. The goal is to manage those investments and to help these leaders make good investment decisions. We give the leaders the allocations.  That's the day-to-day stuff. I don't monitor those decisions daily. I do expect to see a certain return from each investment.

 

EL: What is your corporate governance model for IT?

 

JG: The chairman, the CFO, the head of our property casualty business, and me make our major investment decisions, which comprise the bulk of our money. The various business units present their investment ideas to us. We decide how we want to make those investments, which aren't seen as IT projects, but as investments in CNA. They deal with process transformation, the technology piece, and any organizational components.

 

EL: Can you talk what's happening with Merlin, CNA's business information dashboard?

 

JG: Merlin, which is built on Oracle and a Business Objects,  is a scorecard of standard metrics for the business. It's clearly the information repository at CNA which helps us to determine where the business goes. We create and we align around a given metrics. The production data in Merlin helps the management at CNA to measure how our field operations are performing based their production targets.

 

The third generation of Merlin will be available in 2008.  It will have an additional complement of financial metrics, and operational metrics which can provide the cost per transaction. We've been building and maturing those metrics. Once the metrics reach a level of maturity, we put them into Merlin.

 

EL: How do you evaluate senior IT professionals to determine if they are a good fit for CNA?

 

JG: I measure people on capability, character, and chemistry. The first is usually a given. We place a lot of emphasis on ethics starting from the chairman on down. Chemistry is something we've started to focus now. We did a major turnover in the marketplace between 2000 and 2003. Now that we've proven ourselves, we can more selective about the chemistry rapport we want from our employees.

 

CNA is all about teamwork.  To evaluate my direct reports, I enlist the help of an outside psychologist to conduct behavioral interviews and to assess the fit with CNA based on those interviews. My goal is to hire people who understand the values that are important to CNA and who understand how things get done at CNA.

 

EL: Do you have a formal process for driving innovation?

 

JG: CNA is a conservative company. We don't get wrapped up in having a chief innovation officer. Of course, innovation is critical to what we're doing here. We do put a premium on it. We believe we've been innovating all along. CNA has gone through the fix, build, and lead phase. We're now building some core competencies so we can lead. Our goal is to differentiate ourselves from our competitors. Our leadership team faces the challenge of how do we bring out those good ideas to move the company forward?

 

In IT, we use Six Sigma and the IT Infrastructure Library. Unlike some companies, we don't have a dedicated team of Six Sigma Black Belts who we call upon collectively for projects.  Instead, we've distributed our certified professionals throughout the IT organization. For example, when we began our claims transformation projects, we asked one of our Six Sigma Black Belts to lead the effort.

 

EL: What do you get out of your involvement with the Executive Club of Chicago's Technology Group?

 

JG: I've gotten many things from being involved with this organization. It allows my staff to learn new things by attending the 90-minute talk sessions. I get to help set the agenda for these sessions, as well as other technology things we do. CNA also gets a lot of recognition in the market place. It's also a great recruiting tool for me. It helps me to network with other Chicago CIOs, who want to promote the marketing of IT in Chicago.

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Elizabeth M. Ferrarini is a writer from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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Many CIOs have faced the challenge of how to align their technology investments with overall corporate strategy. eBay, the world's largest e-commerce auction site, faced a different type of challenge. From day one,  eBay had to create its own world to be successful. Technology plays an integral part in shaping the direction and the growth of eBay's business. One could favorably argue that eBay is about technology. Because of its business model, eBay had to build its architecture from scratch and to devise new best practices to support it. James Barrese, eBay's vice president systems and architecture, says that building many key components can create new problems that must be addressed without the legacy safety net to fall back on. enterpriseleadership.org recently sat down with Barrese to talk about how his group maintains eBay's agile architecture and scalability to support a 223 million user base, which grows by 130,000 new users each day. Here's what he had to say:

 

EL: Can you describe what your organization  does?

 

JB: The architecture team works on the OS for eBay. You can imagine that we have many applications that serve different purposes for the communities. We also have a large and sophisticated operational environment.  The systems team builds the eBay OS, which comprises security, kernal layers, management, infrastructure, and logging.  The entire reusable software infrastructure makes it easier and faster to develop applications.

EL: How do you align with IT?

 

JB: We're part of eBay's product development organization. eBay differs from most e-commerce organizations because the software we create becomes the business. We align in multiple respects with the strategic roadmaps. We, however, run a separate technology strategy, which aligns with both the business and the needs of the product development organization, as well as the needs of the operations teams. Every year we bubble up a few major initiatives that become the strategic enhancements we need.

 

EL: Do you have a formal process for  driving sustainable innovation?

 

JB: Absolutely! We've done that across several different dimensions. On one hand, we have very far-reaching breakthrough types of innovation. These things come out of our eBay research lab. We have a separate bucket of technology investments, which we call our headroom process. It's a combination of making investments in new technologies, but it's also about going through and improving our infrastructure where we know we're going to need scaling. We've done that process to drive up the eBay infrastructure. Every year we have a certain amount for our software development budget. We carve out funds for infrastructure investment, which we then use to innovate on our platform.

 

EL: Can you describe your architecture platform, which provides SOA components, security management, as well as other technologies?

 

JB: Those are a few big areas. We've created a very nice, zone infrastructure. It's a full application and architecture for making it easy to create services within services. It also makes it possible to plug things in, so we aren't wedded to one particular appliance or protocol. That's  going to be a major enabler of the business going forward.

 

We have  many dimensions to security management, everything from writing the professional rosters to locking the front doors. eBay, being one of the largest Web sites in the world, gets targeted constantly. Over the years, we've hardened our system to be able to handle everything that has come at us. As for analytics, we've one of the world's leading data marts and analytics infrastructure. It enables us to process data, to have insight into actions, and to be able to drive business strategies from the data we're saving

 

EL: Any other technologies that are part of the  architecture?

 

JB: We use a lot of Solaris. We built our own search subsystem. We use Java very heavily. We built a whole Java framework on top of hung Java. We work with IBM. We have some Cisco in the shop. We have a lot of enterprise tools. Where there are limits to those tools, we've built up additional layers of infrastructure that really solve many of the problems we have at our scale. Two of our other vendors include Oracle and Hitachi.

EL: Can you describe how your group works with  third-party developers?

 

JB: That program is in my systems group. With the new Web generation, we want to strike the right balance between being open and encouraging entrepreneurship, while having oversight to ensure quality. For example, we have an online directory of different applications people have built. We allow the open community to rate those applications. We then raise visibility or lower visibility based on feedback. It's an inherent built-in mechanism for those third-party developers to create quality.  It's very much like any community-driven process where we try to get away from business-oriented regulation and, instead, to embrace the community to both reward great applications. However, we also make sure we limit our quality products. We find it's a better and a more scalable mechanism for an environment like ours, which is in constant flux. It's a better oversight method than any other rigid process that we might have invented.

EL: Do you use  any quality practices such as Six Sigma or COBIT?

 

JB: We've integrated the best parts of those two methodologies and created an eBay product development lifecycle (PDLC). We have a very structured process where we have requirements, scopes, projects, and everything for QA. Because we built this eBay OS, we have invested heavily in automating our entire development and rollout process. We can easily manage 100s and 100s of developers, and 100s and 100s of projects going through the same PDLC. We can allow a small one- or two-person development team to go through the same process and tools as a 50- person development team. It scales. We've tried to take a lot of the redundant human element out of it. As a result, we really enforce those best practices and those standards around development and quality, and management of our release process, as well.

 

EL: How often do you release your  OS?

 

JB: We roll out our entire site every two weeks. One week we roll out our North American site, and the following week, we roll out all the international sites.  We constantly re-roll our entire stack. Every single one of those releases has features, additional functions, and new applications going out.

EL: Because you're mostly a build versus a by shop, what advice what you would give to IT shops steeped in integrating custom products with third-party solutions?

 

JB: I'd tell them to be careful not to be a fast food order taker and just to build what you hear the business asking for. When you're building custom software, you're making a big decision and a very significant investment in this process. It has to be long lived. Don't deliver what you hear. You need to be a partner and to craft solutions that meet the heart of what the business is after. On the other hand, you have to balance the costs of custom development to make sure you're hitting that core strategic need of the business. You also have to craft that solution with them and strike the right balance.

EL: While eBay continues to scale,  how do you remain agile?

 

JB: We've been investing in a program called Nexus. It's an infrastructure that has a lightweight, satellite component. This eBox allows a very small team to be very rapid and nimble. Likewise, it's the same software stack and infrastructure that we can build an application that is serving 100 million users. This vehicle enables a small innovation team to crank out something, such as a marketing application, very quickly. If you do a 100 of these, then a few of them are going to be wildly successful. You're going to need to scale them. Rather than rewriting them, we're putting them on an infrastructure, or the eBay platform, which is going to allow us to scale to an enterprise class, 24 by 7 highly available system.  We've completed a few releases of this. A team of PHP developers Germany came in fresh to our technologies. They had rapidly learned ebox, We developed an application faster than we could previously. It was very successful. That's how we've extended our infrastructure for rapid innovation and very mature high quality applications as well.

EL: What kind of a development  program do you have for your staff to continue to innovate?

 

JB: We do a few things. A lot of our projects involve trying to solve problems related to our scale. It's a job of making it better.  We have people who find  fixes to low-level operating system issues and JBM's. They're contributing their fixes back to the open source community, as well as pushing vendors to improve their solutions.

 

I can't tell you how many times our junior-level engineers find solutions to a major vendor's product. On the job, you have to be an innovator. You have to continue learning and extending your skills. eBay also has a development program for tuition reimbursement for education. We also run internal training programs.

 

We run all kinds of innovation programs. We call them Innovation Days and Skunkworks programs. I'm on the scoring committee for the next one we're going to do. We allow people to create any kind of idea or wildly creative solution they might've thought of. Typically, they build it on the eBay APIs. We reward and promote those different applications. One of these applications went live on the site. For example, a product, called eBay Countdown, came out of Skunkworks.  It's a Web 2.0 Flash-based application that let's our community watch items as the auction counts down. That's an example that went from concept to live on the site quickly. eBay To Go, which is another one of our most popular widgets, is another example of an innovation.

EL:  What are you doing to help large sellers become  more efficient?

 

JB: We focus constantly on seller efficiency. If you think about the entire developer's program, we have more than 55 percent of our eBay listings coming through the APIs. We've built an entire set of software, infrastructure, and APIs to allow sellers to automate their businesses. You can see just by the volume over the years. The sellers are more efficient.

 

EL: How transparent is your technology to your  constituents?

 

JB: We're very transparent in what we do. We're clear on the levels of the investments we made in business projects, in our infrastructure, and our research and development lab.  Even within those infrastructure investments, we have transparency about what we're doing. It has to be aligned with what the business wants.  The Nexus program drives both innovation and flexibility. It as much a technology need as it is a business need.  How do we innovate faster? How do we have shorter time to market? How do we lower costs? Any business person is going to be excited about any solution that can do these things.

 

EL: Have you gone to server  virtualization or grid computing?

 

JB: We are doing a lot in virtualization with a few different virtualization technologies.  Some parts of our system are running in a virtualized environment.  Our quality assurance has seen dramatic benefits from virtualization. Not all of our product environments will benefit from virtualization.

 

We've invested heavily in grid computing. For example, we've automated our entire release process. When a software developer checks in his or her code, an entire workflow gets merged to the main system, and then goes through regression testing on QA. We have an automated environment that rolls it out and distributes it to our site. On top of that, we have all types of analytics and problem detection. We can see from release to release if there is a dramatic variation in how long a process is taking. That will flag problems for us. A number of automated tools help us to triage and to influence what the problem is.

 

Author: Elizabeth M. Ferrarini -- She is a technology writer  from Boston, Massachusetts. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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In 2002, Michael Davidson, the chief information officer at Apotex, Canada's largest pharmaceutical company, was done with wasting time and money trying to back up one-half terabyte of data residing on dozens of servers with different operating systems. Instead, he decided to go with the emerging trend of disk-to-disk backup. Davidson put in two storage area networks (SANs) and licensed software from a managed back-up service. The two SANs backed up the servers across the company's three campuses, providing better protection than ever before and eliminating the $250,000 yearly cost of tape media.

To build growth within the overall business at the privately held Apotex, Davidson practices the philosophy of researching innovative practices that best fit with the company, and buying solutions that complement those practices. Recently, Enterpriseleadership.org sat done with Davidson to discuss the way he selects products, the strategic planning and governance model at Apotex, and some of the key best practices and products he has in place. Here's what he had to say.

EL: You've had the IT Infrastructure Library in place at Apotex since 2002. What components of it have you carried out?

MD: Right now, we have change management, configuration management, and we're moving ahead with problem management and release management. We've had a service desk for more than 10 years. We gave the service desk an ITIL framework when we first migrated to ITIL. We also use the ITIL framework for service level agreements.

EL: Which service support ITIL component has helped you the most?

MD: Change management has had the biggest effect on us by reducing the number of incidences that have actually occurred. We've also been very careful about the changes we've made. To this end, we've been able to show better cost effectiveness and cost reductions by going in this direction.

Today, a lot of IT shops still haven't looked at ITIL or are just starting to put it in place. When Deloitte, the auditing firm that audits our IT structure frequently, looked at us two years ago, it said not too many companies had actually put in a change management process, let alone try to hook it to configuration management. It was an interesting part of Deloitte's financial audit.

EL: What lessons did you learn about going with configuration management?

MD: We have the federated model for configuration management database. It does reasonably well for us. We had configuration management centralized at one point, but we quickly realized that as you get more and more assets in your configuration management database, you need to roll some of those assets into other federated databases. Otherwise, you'll run into some performance problems.

EL: What lessons have you learned about deploying ITIL?

MD: You can't fix something so that it works effectively and efficiently unless you know what you're doing, what you're changing, and what effect the change is going to have. That's the reason for ITIL.

EL: What new things are you doing in storage?

MD: We have room for a couple of hundred terabytes. The service we use migrated the software to other operating systems, and we've been able to include our UNIX backups. It's interesting to see just how many people are now going to near line disk storage for backups instead of putting them on tape.

Information lifecycle management is one of the storage programs we're running right now. We're spending a lot of time on archival data.

EL: You're an early adopter of many products. How do you select them so you won't get burned?

MD: We have people who build a few small things. We do, however, primarily buy software as opposed to building systems, and we do a lot of internal research before we make any decisions. We look at the longevity of the vendor and whether we think that it can meet our requirements. We also looked at where the vendor is going to fit within our plan during the next three, to five years. Is the vendor a good acquisition candidate? We take all of these things into account during our evaluation process.

EL: How do you work with executive management to make technology decisions?

MD: I chair a steering committee comprised of senior executives. Each month, we review our strategic plans and vision. We also get input from our program management system. We have projects linked to our program management system -- the program will actually go across the different silos of the business and bring together projects that are associated with that program. From there, some of the steering committee executives provide input across inter-business or divisional silos, and we can coordinate between the different business units on our overall planning. We can prioritize the various projects associated with each program. It has worked out well for us.

EL: How are you handling the tactical side of things?

MD: For the past 10 years, we've also been doing tactical planning based on our quarterly tactical plan for one year. Each time we meet, we extend the plan by one year. Our rolling strategic plan, which is updated yearly, drives our tactical plan; the two plans exist as two concentric wheels feeding each other on a continuous cycle. The strategic plan has a three-year horizon. It establishes our environment for the continuous planning to take place, and it also becomes a reference document that is linked to the business value drivers, set by the business.

On the tactical side, we're continually pulling pieces out of the strategic plan, and updating them. This process helps Information Services (IS) make management decisions more quickly. By accepting projects a quarter out, we can change the target date, unless there is a major business process we have to do. Either way, we generally don't get any major surprises.

EL: Do you have formal vehicles for performance metrics?

MD: We aren't using a balanced scorecard now. We have a scorecard for the business and each divisional business unit. We have core strategies in various areas, such as first to market with key products, excellence in customer service, operating efficiency and effectiveness, and aligned and engaged employees and business and finance management. IS maps this vision to the business value drivers and the IS services in place. IS then maps to the goals we have in place, such as business alignment, continuous business planning, and flexible and agile organization.

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Additional Reading - Sponsor Link:  Can You Really Get ITIL Out of the Box?

 

Elizabeth M. Ferrarini is a free-lance technology writer from Boston , MA. Reach her at elizabethferrarini@yahoo.com.

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