| | November 20189CIOReview3PL's and Supply Chains are on the cusp of many disruptive technologies. Real time updates, simplifying customer experiences, routing decisions, asset management and utilization are driving investments in AI, IoT and Block Chain. Disruption will transform business models and test organizational agility. At The Pasha Group, we are experimenting with many platforms to improve operational effectiveness and customer value. This category is not necessarily about aligning with strategy but rather inventing the strategy.Disruptive investments can be costly because they require attention and nurturing. The CIO cannot outsource their management and oversight. They are generally not self-propelling but instead need IT vision and active engagement. Avoid the TrapA common fatal trap of portfolio management is the peanut butter approach, where technology investments are spread evenly across an enterprise. Often this approach is branded continuous second language. As an example, the Service Cloud deployment is represented as an investment in our Servicing Customer capability. When I present from a Business Capability perspective, my peers appreciate the scope of IT engagement and `why' technology investments are prioritized. Modeling the enterprise with capabilities and layering technology investments, allows executive leadership and the business to directly connect their work with IT investments. Once the strategic direction is understood, CIO's can actively design plans based on the intended end state. Plans will drive investments, resource allocation and business outcome metrics. Plans are further leveraged to define organization structure, talent and sourcing strategies. Bottom-Up InnovationThe Bottom-Up portfolio investment is the high risk/high reward category. In this investment category, the CIO leverages disruptive technology to completely redesign processes or create new customer value opportunities. Often these technologies do not have a history of business deployments and your engagement may result in a pioneering business use case.When the CIO and business work in concert, smart and strategic investments can be made resulting in happier customers and a more successful businessimprovement or continuous delivery of enhancements--basically customizations. Spreading technology evenly saps resources and capital drawing resources from real value generators. This approach gives the impression of a balanced portfolio but in reality only appeases competing interests, quieting noise but reducing overall business results. Using a baseball analogy, the top end of the batting order is stacked with the best hitters, they get more swings and score more runs. Pick the big hitter initiatives and score!ConclusionClearly, the CIO is the Chief Investment Officer for technology. No other person in the company is better positioned to understand which technology will best meet the long term goals of the business. Understanding this is critical for business success. If the CIO is not informed of business objectives or if the CIO is a passive observer, poor investments will be made and the enterprise will waste resources on misaligned technology and lag behind competitors. On the other hand, when the CIO and business work in concert, smart and strategic investments can be made resulting in happier customers and a more successful business. David Beckerman
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