Grooming a Successor CIO
Since 2008 or even before, few organizations have seen fit to include succession planning into their IT group. This seems especially true when it comes to the position of CIO. CIOs, like CEOs, create a culture for the organization they lead. If that culture is working, the last thing CEOs need is to find themselves in need of a replacement CIO due to the current CIOs retirement or resignation.
Recruiting viable CIOs is expensive and can create a disruptive void in the IT organization—and cause a material reduction in IT service levels as well. On the other hand, grooming a successor CIO can also create ripples in a tightly cost-controlled budget and make procrastination appear to be attractive options.
Over the past few years, many have weighed in on the challenges CIOs face when trying to identify and groom their successors. (In her article “The Replacements: Why a CIO Needs a Succession Plan,” Joan Indiana Rigdon provides excellent insights regarding those challenges.)
Having been a CIO who had to plan for a successor in order to pave the way for a much-wanted promotion, I found that the effort is daunting at best. I had spent about four years rebuilding a failed IT organization and function. To say the least, I was invested in the IT organization I lead. Finding someone to leave my “baby” to was no easy task; it required me to take an
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