CIO-plus

CIO-Plus is a movement which is coined by Peter High, a columnist for Forbes and author of the book World Class IT, which signifies the growing trend that chief information officers, usually the heads of the IT function of companies, are increasingly taking on titles in addition to "chief information officer", such as "chief innovation officer", "chief improvement officer", "head of business transformation" and "Senior Vice President – Technology, Logistics and Customer Service".

Examples of the CIO-Plus

The first mention of the term was in an article dated on November 14, 2012, titled "The Emergence of the CIO-Plus". In Peter High's column in Forbes, called Technovation, he has written articles on a significant number of examples of this documented business trend, including:

Vinnie Mirchandani in his DealArchitect.com article, notes additional examples of the CIO/CTO+:

Use of the CIO-Plus Term

This business movement has been documented by notable trade publications such as MindSpa, Accelerating IT Success a blog called Deal Architect, the University of New Hampshire, as well as on Twitter. In his blog, Vinnie Mirchandani points out that Chris Murphy, an editor of Information Week, has also covered this trend of the chief information officer role evolving into the "chief digital officer", another example of the CIO-plus, in which chief technology executives have to be concerned with, and avidly address, the needs of external customer of a business through the use of technology. The website Business 2 Community has also reflected on the trend of the CIO-plus, noting the synergies of leading IT and other functions, as has CIO.com's Enterprise CIO Forum.

Reasons for the trend of the CIO-Plus

The original article, and growing body of work and use of the term suggests four reasons for the movement known as "CIO-Plus":

See also

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.