Only 17% of CIOs in APAC are involved in defining business strategies

CA Technologies’ global ‘The Future Role of the CIO; Digital Literacy’ report has revealed that 81% of the Asia Pacific CIOs interviewed believe that a lack of digital literacy amongst senior executives could be hampering business growth. Only 20% of Asian CIOs in the study felt that their management fully understand the capabilities and impact of new and emerging technologies. A total of nine Asian markets were involved in the global survey, including Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand.

The study showed that while business leaders may lack digital literacy, they largely do understand the role of technology in their organizations, where about 75% of Asian CIOs in the study felt their management team consider IT to be strategically important.

CIOs fear senior-level digital illiteracy is causing a lack of market responsiveness, missed business and investment opportunities, poor competitiveness and slower time to market. Further, almost one-fifth (19%) of the CIOs interviewed believe the C-suite does not understand the impact of new and emerging technologies.

“Asian business leaders today have largely accepted that IT has a role to play in enhancing the competitiveness of businesses. For IT to be truly transformational to businesses, leaders need to elevate the role of CIOs to be more strategic than operational,” said Lionel Lim, President, Asia Pacific & Japan, CA Technologies.

The report highlights that almost a quarter of CIOs believe senior executives see IT as a cost of doing business, rather than as a means to grow the organization, make processes more efficient and introduce greater agility and competitiveness.

As a result, it is not surprising that only 17% of CIOs are always involved in the strategic decision making process, impeding the digital strategic thinking of the senior leadership team.

Professor Joe Peppard, Director of the Information Systems Research Center at Cranfield School of Management, believed that senior managers had to acknowledge that the value from IT came not from technology but from the ability to manage and exploit information. “A lot of organizations wouldn’t be able to survive for long without their IT systems,” said Peppard.

“CIOs are transitioning into the role of brokers of IT services; they will also be orchestrators of decisions concerning the architecture of the enterprise, innovation with IT, compliance and policies, and will have closer involvement with line of business managers in realizing value from their digital strategies,” he added.

Peppard believes that by working in this way, both the IT organization and the CIO role would evolve and be able to lead discussions and education about how they could drive the business forward through IT innovation.

“CIOs are in a good position to become more involved in strategic discussions. This will enable them to demonstrate how a particular digital strategy or project can deliver value, and win the credibility to take it forward,” Peppard concluded.

“We regularly work with CIOs to help ensure they have the tools they need to communicate value effectively to the business. We see CIOs becoming more involved as a member of the business leadership team and communicating the value of technology more effectively. CIOs are much more in tune with their businesses than they were 10 or 20 years ago,” said Lim. “It is only when the potential of technology is fully embraced by the management team that the CIO’s role can be transformative.”

The complete research report is available from here.

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