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The Buzz behind the Buzzwords

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Don Tapscott, CW columnist, 3/29/99. Trend Watch/The Network ... Network & Systems Engineers ($75-100k) Computerworld, 9/13/99 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Buzz behind the Buzzwords


1
Todays IT Leaders Shaping The Information
Agenda for 2000 and Beyond
Maryfran Johnson, Editor in Chief
2
A View from the CIOs Chair Trends to Watch
  • The Business
  • Look for a smaller IT departments trained for
    rapid response.
  • The Technology
  • Intelligent networks will drive virtual
    corporations for the exploding ranks of mobile
    workers
  • The People
  • Tomorrows IT Leaders will be business-people
    with an IT specialty

3


The IT shop will need to be managed by an IT
professional. To succeed, it will have to look
and act like a large consulting organization.

Francis Dramis, Exec VP/CIO, BellSouth Corp.
4
The Business
  • Greater enduser responsibility for IT work
  • IT working more seamlessly with business units
  • Centralized management of infrastructure

5
Say to yourself My business over the next five
years will change.
GartnerGroup CEO Manny Fernandez
6
Users Will Take More Responsibility for IT Work
  • IT functions -- including management -- will
    become an integral part of the business units
  • Companies will put line managers into big IT
    projects to ensure end users get what they need

7
Most companies have now faced the inevitable
Customers rule.
Jim Champy, Computerworld columnist and
chairman/consulting, Perot Systems Corp.
8
(No Transcript)
9
and eyes on the IT customers within your
companies, as well
10
Trend Watch/ Relationship Management
  • Frustration with IT and its poor relationship
    management causes users to work around it
  • Antidote Companies like W.B. Mason Inc. mandate
    that IT people do business stints (like taking
    customer orders)

11
Gee, Thanks, Y2K!
  • Year 2000 projects led to a deeper understanding
    of IT value to the business
  • IT leaders infiltrated the business units (and
    vice versa)

12
Fully 50 of 340 CIOs in a Korn/Ferry study saw
Y2K as a blessing in disguise -- drawing
attention to ITs importance to the company
13
Y2K 100 Days and Counting...
  • No significant business risk say 8 out of 10
    execs
  • 56 expect critical systems to be totally
    compliant
  • 38 expect to have 76-99 of their systems
    compliant

Cap Gemini survey, 156 large companies, Sept. 1999
14
Post Y2K More Scrutiny for New IT Projects
  • An estimated 42 of all tech projects are
    abandoned before completion
  • Bad project management increases IT staff
    turnover
  • Crying need for joint, upfront planning by
    business and IT staffers

15
The Technology
  • Smaller, simpler, smarter devices
  • Net-enabled applications tied to business
    success
  • Computing becomes increasingly mobile and
    pervasive

16
Trend Watch/E-Commerce
  • Sites like eBay combat Wild Wild West
    reputation crack down on fraud
  • Instant chat becomes a business tool in customer
    service
  • New IT priority Take more time and do the site
    right!

17
Focus your strategy on customer retention
Michelle Banaugh, senior VP of E-commerce, Wells
Fargo
18
Trend Watch/The Web
  • Personalization, customization
  • Intelligent networks (Java/Jini)
  • Open source providing real business value (Linux)
  • Technology standards matter again

19
The Internet changes everything... You may not
like the direction its taking your company or
industry, but denial wont stop it
Don Tapscott, CW columnist, 3/29/99
20
Trend Watch/The Network
  • Enterprise-wide network connections become as
    vital as the network itself
  • Application-aware networking and smart
    networks will prioritize data

21
Trend Watch/Applications
  • Critical tools Middleware, collaboration, object
    development
  • The virtual corporation struggles to support
    mobile users and telecommuters

22
Trend Watch/Mobile Workers
  • In the next five years, 90 of the U.S. will have
    access to a high-speed dial-up option
  • By 2003, one-third of U.S. workers will access
    servers remotely (1/2 will still use dial up
    connections)
  • Copper-based Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) and
    cable modem technologies will see the most
    expansion

23
100 Million PCs Today
600 Million Smart Devices and Info Appliances
by 2003?
24
The PC era is overit has been supplanted by the
network
IBM CEO Lou Gerstner, letter to investors, 3/99
25
Trend Watch/Consumer Information Appliances
  • By 2003, International Data Corp estimates there
    will be
  • 600 Million PCs Accessing the Net
  • 300 Million Internet appliances
  • 2 Billion Consumer Devices
  • 50 Million Vehicles with Net Access

26
The People
  • IT leaders becoming business technologists
  • Acting as systems integrators, project managers,
    profit-enablers
  • Consultants crossing the IT fence in both
    directions

27
But who are these people? (Taking the plunge from
business into IT)
  • Enthusiastic, quick learners
  • Experienced business analysts, project managers
    operational staff
  • Communicators, problem solvers
  • Math whizzes, budget experts, logical thinkers

28
The Toughest IT Jobs to Fill
  • Customer Relationship Management (65-125k)
  • E-Commerce Architect (100-130k)
  • Java/Object-Oriented Engineers (85-150k)
  • Network Systems Engineers (75-100k)

Computerworld, 9/13/99
29
  • Information Security Specialists (70-110k)
  • Database Administrators (other than Oracle)
    (45-90k)
  • Client/Server Developers Architects (38-85k)
  • Project Managers (80-140k)

30
Good IT professionals can always find more money
elsewhere.
Robert Reeg, VP, systems development, MasterCard
Internatioal, Inc.
31
Get out the Prozac(and consider the market
pressures on IT hiring)
  • IT employment will grow 108 from 1996 to 2006
  • One in 5 staffers will leave every year through
    2002
  • Contractors make 30-100 more

32
IT Salaries in New England
  • CIO/VP of IT
  • Director of Networks
  • Network Admin
  • LAN Manager
  • Sr. Programmer/Analyst
  • Webmaster/Designer
  • PC Tech Support
  • 131,659
  • 80,150
  • 53,768
  • 56,200
  • 60,750
  • 43,808
  • 38,423

Computerworlds 13th Annual Salary Survey, 9/6/99
33
Trend Watch/Outsourcing
  • By 2003, 3 out of 5 large companies will
    outsource more than half of their IT activities
  • Business and IT management skills will make up
    65 of the internal skills, while most tech
    intensive skills will be bought

IT Unit
Partners
Gartner Group
34
Some of the best IT professionals in the future
may not come from technology at all.
Fred Matteson, EVP/ IT Services, Charles
Schwab
35
Trend Watch/CIO Status
  • CIOs role changes
  • from implementation to strategic development
  • CIOs resume changes
  • to include finance, marketing and planning
  • CIOs involvement changes
  • to greater involvement with external customer
    support

36
We want to be the people who know how everything
works, everywhere in the company.
Peter Dupre
CIO, W.B. Mason
37
Women in ITRounding Up The Usual Suspect
Statistics
38
Enrollments are dramatically increasing for
computer science degrees awarded to womenBut
the percentage of women seeking such degrees is
dropping
Computerworld, 1/18/99
39
In 1984, women earned 40 of bachelors degrees
in computer science.By 1996, that number was
27.5.
National Science Foundation, and U.S. Dept. of
Education
40
The percentage of women in IT has shrunk from 35
in the early 1990s to 29 today
U.S. Dept. of Labor statistics
41
In 1998, women programmers earned 81 cents for
every 1 men earned.And female IT workers got
smaller raises than men 10.2 vs. 12
Bureau of Labor Statistics, SANS Institute
Survey, 1998
42
But does all that matter anymore?
43
It used to be that if you wanted to advance as a
woman in technology, you needed to be a
scientist. You dont today.
Judy Estrin, CTO/Senior VP, Cisco Systems, July
1999
44
Female computer engineers are actually faring
better than men. They earn an average of 79,000
annually while men average 75,000
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
report, 6/99
45
Factors Increasing Job Satisfaction for Women and
Men
  • Salary increases (62 vs. 60)
  • Performance bonuses (57 vs. 49)
  • Training in new technologies (45 vs. 32)
  • Opportunities to advance (44 vs. 37)
  • Freedom to telecommute (44 vs. 25)

Computerworld Job Satisfaction Survey, April 1998
46
What makes people leave?
  • Assignment to a longterm project
  • Exhaustion and turmoil on a project team
  • Career/salary advancement
  • The fun factor is missing

Concours Group, study of 40 companies
47
What makes them stay?
  • Programs that focus on individual career
    development
  • Availability of training programs
  • Greater flexibility in project schedules

48
Finally, a few inspiring words from former Vice
President Dan Quayle
49
I am not part of the problem. I am a
Republican.
50
If we dont succeed, we run the risk of failure
51
The future will be better tomorrow
52
Public speaking is very easy.
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