Thursday, May 22, 2014

17 Must-Haves for Your LinkedIn Profile [INFOGRAPHIC]

So you’ve got a LinkedIn profile, and you want it to be perfect – so what do you add?


This infographic by our friend Neal Schaffer at Maximize Social Business lists 17 things your profile must have.


Takeaways:


  • A serious profile picture is necessary on LinkedIn – you don’t want one that will turn people off you.

  • Be active – update your status regularly and share relevant content.

  • Make yourself contactable – add an email address, and links to Facebook/Twitter to the description.


via 17 Must-Haves for Your LinkedIn Profile [INFOGRAPHIC].


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17 Must-Haves for Your LinkedIn Profile [INFOGRAPHIC]

Can HR add value to its data and analytics?

When it comes to HR, is data and analytics just another passing fad? Although skepticism abounds around measurement, its ability to create useful insight should not be underestimated.


In 2008, Google took another step towards omniscience. The company claimed it could forecast outbreaks of flu, weeks before the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, by intelligently using search data. For a while, it succeeded. Google had authored yet another big data success story. But, earlier this year, researchers from Northeastern and Harvard universities uncovered a rather large problem with Google Flu Trends: it was no longer accurately predicting flu cases – overestimating the number of cases in the US for 100 of the previous 108 weeks, by up to twice as many.


And the reason for this inaccurate reporting? Google’s own search algorithm and its auto-suggest feature. Type ‘Do I have f’ into Google and it suggests ‘Do I have flu’, which may have led to people searching for flu when in fact they were interested in knowing if they had food poisoning or even fibromyalgia (a chronic condition that causes pain all over the body).


Google’s focus on correlation rather than causation (scientists are clear that “correlation does not imply causation”) led to what the researchers termed an embarrassing case of “big data hubris”. In other words, it forgot some of the core principles of statistics and mixed big and small data in a way that proved problematic.


Can business and, in particular, HR learn anything from the parable of Google Flu Trends? Of course, most HR departments are nowhere near as sophisticated in their use of data, but there’s no ignoring the steady march of HR analytics. The question is: is anyone actually getting it right? Or is the profession in its own small way following Google’s precarious path, seduced by the possibilities of oh-so-sexy big data and attempting to measure too much, collecting data on meaningless things or starting its explorations from the wrong place?


Time to talk about analytics


According to Laurence Collins, director of HR and workforce analytics at Deloitte, it’s time to reconsider HR’s relationship with data. “I’ve spent the past few months at conferences taking the temperature of HR around analytics,” he says. “It’s been hot for the past couple of years, but I’m not seeing any significant progress in the profession as a whole in terms of actually being able to do anything about it.”


Many HR directors would agree with this. “The measurement of the impact on people is the Holy Grail of HR,” believes Jeremy Campbell, HR director at HR and payroll specialist Ceridian. “I’ve read a lot of books and articles about the methodology. What I’ve not been able to find is the practical application. There’s a lot of hype. We get slightly seduced by the potential of what the data could tell you as opposed to the reality.”


“This is a really complex area and the minute you start talking about big data and HR analytics, everyone wants to get involved and there’s not much clarity around what you actually mean,” adds Jez Langhorn, SVP and chief people officer at McDonald’s.


Given HR’s fondness for fads, it’s easy to be cynical about breathless HR analytics chatter, often coming from the technology vendors with the most to gain. “Data is the new commercial,” sighs Neil Morrison, group HR director at Penguin Random House. “When HR had to be commercial, it was all about understanding this, that and the other. Now, it’s all about understanding data. But it’s not just data that’s going to help you. The gap for me is around intelligent use of data.”


Why data matters


It’s a confusing subject, and a sensitive one too. Why does it actually matter? “There’s a massive risk for HR [if it doesn’t engage with data],” says Edward Houghton, research adviser for human capital metrics at the CIPD, who is leading the Valuing Your Talent initiative (see p9 for more on the project). “We live in an environment of data everywhere. Running a business without understanding data is not how the 21st century works.”


Collins makes a similar point: “There is a culture of analytic rigour being applied to everything, from smart devices in your washing machine to the way we work. Structured and unstructured data is there for us to use. HR either embraces that or decides it wants to be replaced by finance. If HR doesn’t seize this opportunity to become more credible around measurement and the insight that comes from that, we will be replaced by functions that will.”


For Campbell, the purpose of his search for data that proves HR’s impact is to help him come up with “a clear articulation of the business case”. He says: “HR professionals do a fantastic job of helping people reach their potential, but I’m not sure how good a job we do of articulating the business impact of that.”


“If you really value people, how do you demonstrate that?” adds Houghton. “It’s about having a conversation. Sometimes metrics will allow you to have those conversations with those leaders. If you don’t have the measures behind you, you can’t have that argument.”


At PwC, for example, HR has worked with finance to “create advocates in the finance teams for HR reporting,” says Chris Weeks, strategic workforce planning leader. “If finance colleagues see the step change in the HR reporting, then they point people to HR for HR data, rather than provide it themselves.”


Paul Kearns, co-founder of the Institute for HR Maturity, who also chairs the British Standards Institution’s committee on professional HR standards, says his interest in metrics was formed when he worked as an in-house HRD at a manufacturing company. “What really bothered me as an executive HR guy was that I couldn’t convince my exec colleagues that HR was important,” he recalls. “To convince them, I first needed to convince myself by measuring what I did.”


Then there’s the move towards integrated reporting (IR), which HR magazine has covered in-depth and increasingly looks like being a matter of not if, but when, and the ongoing discussion over HR professional standards. IR requires reporting around people-related measures, particularly human, intellectual, social and relationship capital. It makes sense for HR to play a leading role in reporting on these – whether or not it will be able to do so is another matter.


Meaningless measures


Getting all this right is easier said than done. Kearns puts it bluntly: “Most HR people are not measuring anything meaningful. There’s this big game being played where HR measures its activity and tries to use that data to justify its existence. The problem is, it’s not impressing anyone.”


We all know the adages ‘You can’t manage what you don’t measure’ and ‘What gets measured gets done’. Maybe it’s worth coming up with a new one: pointless measurement leads to pointless data. “HR is under so much pressure to measure that people measure everything that moves and hope they hit the target,” believes Kearns. “People are running around like headless chickens and not producing anything of real value.”


Morrison expresses a similar sentiment. “There’s something in using quantitative information to gain insights, but everyone rushes out to do everything and produces a huge amount of information that isn’t very useful,” he says. “We stopped doing a lot of data reporting because it was meaningless. We were creating reports that no one read.”


Weeks agrees: “The temptation can be to develop a swathe of reports based on information that is easily accessible, but this sort of information can be of limited value and the volume of it can overwhelm and turn off business users.”


Campbell adds that he feels a lot of the numbers flying around are “HR for HR’s purpose as opposed to business purpose”. He says: “It is useful to run HR more efficiently by getting a headcount report or being able to do reward quicker, but that’s just making an HR team more efficient. That’s all well and good, but the real nugget that drives me forward is trying to figure out how to measure the impact of people on the business metrics. HR is about supporting the organization to be better, and the purpose of the organization is inevitably to hit business metrics.”


The simple fact is true value-add measures are harder to arrive at, which makes taking the easy route all too tempting. “It’s like that old joke about the drunk man only searching for his keys under the streetlight because the light is better there,” says Thomas Davenport, distinguished professor in management and information technology at Babson College and author of Big Data at Work. “People measure what is easy to measure.”


So, in HR terms, that means looking at cost per hire, hours spent on a training course or turnover and absenteeism. They all have their uses, but that doesn’t mean they offer much value. “These are just ‘same as’ measures,” says Collins. “You have the data, so you report on it. But if you stopped producing those metrics, what would the result be? Why measure cost per hire? What about cost per effective hire? Would you pay 5% more for someone who was going to be a good performer and stay longer, or would you rather take a chance on someone who might stay for three months?”


David Bowes, chief people officer at managed services provider WDS, is trying to use data to come up with “a more balanced view of how effective a recruitment function can be”, looking beyond time and cost to quality of hire. “I look at how successful people are in the business and in the role they were hired for,” he explains. “That’s a measure I want the recruitment people to take on board. If we are hiring people poorly, if people aren’t staying or they are not successful, that is a recruitment issue. I want to hold recruitment people accountable. That’s a more sustainable model.”


Does HR have the skills?


Tellingly, Bowes adds that he has had to change his HR team in his determination to make more intelligent use of HR data. And at every conference I’ve attended on HR analytics this year (and there have been a lot), most of the speakers have moved from other, more data-driven functions into HR in order to help HR harness the power of analytics. Many speakers have also alluded to the ‘pushback’ and reluctance they have had to deal with from existing HR professionals.


According to Deloitte’s 2014 Human Capital Trends survey, 86% of companies reported no analytics capabilities in HR and 67% rated themselves ‘weak’ at using HR data to predict workforce performance and improvement. “Very few people went into HR to work with numbers,” says Davenport, but he adds this is “not unique to HR; it’s true of marketing too” – and the marketing department is often held up as the beacon of analytics good practice.


Collins believes there are two main issues HR needs to tackle. One is “endemic” in the profession, the belief that people are not a number. “We have senior HR professionals who have been schooled in the world of talking about intangibles, the value of people and the value in individual capabilities without looking at it through a commercial lens,” he says. “The second is we haven’t attracted the more numerate and statistically minded graduates and young professionals.”


But should HR become net importers of these skills from outside the profession? It could be an unsustainable approach. “You can’t remove the function of HR from the algorithm completely,” acknowledges Collins. “To operate analytics without that level of understanding and context creates a risk. That said, there needs to be an injection of analytic capability, and maybe that means bringing people in with those skills and developing their understanding of HR over time.”


Of course, tarring all HR professionals with the ‘bad at numbers’ brush is reductive, and implying that an understanding of numbers is all they need is false. “There are HR people who are really good at numbers, and there are those who aren’t,” says Stevan Rolls, UK head of HR at Deloitte, who adds that his background in occupational psychology gives him a great statistical grounding: “It’s good to have that as statistical people always assume HR won’t know what they’re talking about.”


And whether or not an HR person is good at numbers, Rolls points out “the kind of value you get from analytics requires specialist help”, adding: “Analytics can be really helpful, but the stats behind it are often so complex, you have to be a statistician to work it. From an HR point of view, it’s having the people around who know enough to question the data.”


Morrison points out that data is “only as good as the person who uses it”. “And that’s why we’ve got to be careful,” he adds. “If we’re serious about this, we need some really different skillsets, not just to be more commercially aware. Marketing has consumer insight teams doing this work properly.”


Big insight, not big data


The real value comes not just from data, but from insight, and knowing enough not to fall into traps like Google Flu Trend’s misstep. “If you rely overly on qualitative or quantitative insight, you won’t get to the best of either,” says Rolls. “Some things you only get to by speaking to people: it’s hidden away in the relationships.” But he concedes that being able to achieve meaningful insight is “a scarce skillset”. “It’s trying to get HR out of producing MI and more about delivering insights. Too often HR is asked to manipulate spreadsheets. You need commercial and numerate people, but you don’t go into HR to be a spreadsheet jockey. The focus needs to be on the understanding.”


McDonald’s Langhorn, whose HR department is successfully experimenting with analytics, agrees. “People talk about big data, but for me it’s about big insights that come from data, and putting the information in the hands of the right people at the right time. You often get report after report, when what I want is a report that tells me what I need to know and the areas to look at further.”


Kearns believes the concept of big data has actually made HR measurement worse as people are overcomplicating things, and Collins agrees the “analytics game for HR is about trying to get much more from less”. It’s insight that matters, and that insight comes from much more than filling in a spreadsheet or implementing the latest piece of technology. It comes from understanding narrative, context and matching qualitative and quantitative information from multiple data sets. It comes from understanding the meaning of correlation versus causation, and really knowing the culture and history of an organization. After all, as Langhorn puts it: “There is a head and a heart element to people. There’s science and there’s art.” And one cannot work without the other.

- See more at: http://www.hrmagazine.co.uk/hr/features/1144056/hr-add-value-analytics#sthash.53uoSSzj.dpuf


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Can HR add value to its data and analytics?

CIOs Talk Hiring and How to Win the "War for Talent" - CIO.com

Surrounded by sexy tech job destinations such as Twitter, Salesforce and Dropbox, near San Francisco’s Union Square, Chris Morgan, an executive coach and founding principal at Morgan Alexander, asked a roomful of CIOs a challenging question: How do you get top-notch tech talent amidst competition from tech giants?


“The war for talent is mission critical,” Morgan says.


The CIOs gathered at San Francisco’s Hotel Nikko for a one-day CIO Perspectives event, organized by the publisher of CIO.com, to discuss the pressing issues of the day, including recruiting and managing tech talent. Many CIOs, especially those outside of tech, said they simply cannot compete with the Googles of the world and are having a tough time finding and retaining tech talent. Yet there are ways to discover diamonds in the rough and get the most out of the people you already have.


 


IT hiring

 


Make no mistake, there’s a tech talent war underway on a scale unseen since the dot-com boom. Earlier this year, for instance, a Silicon Valley startup tried to woo a Google programmer away by offering a $500,000 salary, but the programmer refused and said he was making $3 million annually in cash and restricted stock units. Yahoo decided to give free food to employees as a recruiting and retaining perk at a cost of $14 million, Morgan says.


Demand is up for network engineers, software engineers and Web developers. Tech workers with “sweet spot” skills such as .Net, Java J2EE, PHP, SharePoint and mobile are getting multiple offers, according to David Knapp, metro market manager at staffing firm Robert Half Technology in San Francisco.


 


When recruiting tech talent, Morgan says, the key is to focus on individuals who want to quickly grow their skills and influence, and who may even look at their technical work as a kind of art form that requires a lifetime of improvement. It’s not about winning, he says, rather it’s really about working toward personal perfection.


“Recruit for attitude, not for skill,” Morgan says. “You’re trying to get raw material.”


That’s an instinct CIOs on the fringes of Silicon Valley’s starlit tech scene will need to tap if they want to recruit successfully. When B. Lee Jones, director of IT for the office of Mark Church at the County of San Mateo, ran across a stellar resume, he knew he had to appeal to the applicant’s lofty aspirations. He told her that she would be working directly with the head of the department, who was a year away from retirement, and thus she would be groomed to take over.


“That was the deal closer,” Lee Jones said at the CIO Perspectives event.


Given the recruitment challenges in Silicon Valley, CIOs might be better off coaching up their existing employees and inspiring them to pursue perfection. Unfortunately, CIOs give coaching short shrift, Morgan says. In a landmark study, three out of four companies said coaching is critical and should be someone’s dedicated job, yet only a tiny percent actually practice what they preach, according to Morgan.


One CIO attendee said he was able to inspire staff by letting go of a manager who would often shoot down ideas. The new manager now helps employees get excited about their work by showing them that he is excited about their ideas. “Want to fire people up? Fire somebody,” the CIO says.


Praising employees can inspire them to pursue perfection in their work, but CIOs need to praise the right way, warns Morgan. If you praise an employee for being smart, for instance, he might think he’s doing all that is expected and might not work as hard in the future. Or he might lie when he screws up, in an effort to maintain his super-smart status.


Instead, Morgan advises CIOs to recognize and reward employees’ pursuit of perfection, not the end product.


“Don’t praise or encourage intellect and talent,” Morgan says. “Do praise for their effort.”


via CIOs Talk Hiring and How to Win the ‘War for Talent’ – CIO.com.


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CIOs Talk Hiring and How to Win the "War for Talent" - CIO.com

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

The Power (And Peril) of Predictive Hiring Analytics

According to a new study, a growing number of new hires — as well as top-performing employees — are choosing not to stick around for long.


The 2014 PwC Saratoga U.S. Human Capital Effectiveness Report, which is based on a survey of 375 employers, finds the percentage of employee headcount for new external hires increased by nearly 40 percent from 2010 to 2013. Unfortunately, more of those new hires are leaving before their one-year anniversary: The report finds that first-year-of-service turnover increased for the second consecutive year, from 22.6 percent in 2012 to 34.1 percent in 2013. It also finds the separation rate among high-performing employees has risen to its highest level in 10 years, from 5 percent in 2012 to 6 percent last year.


The report finds that some organizations are turning to predictive analytics to boost their “quality of hire,” and thus reduce the likelihood of first-year turnover by ensuring a better fit between job candidates and open positions, says Ranjan Dutta, a director of PwC Saratoga and an author of the report.


“If employees join an organization and leave within the first year, whether it’s involuntary or not, it’s indicative of poor selection and poor onboarding,” he says.


Smart companies are turning to predictive analytics to do a better job of selecting candidates, says Dutta. Predictive analytics may help HR identify candidates who are most likely to stay (and thrive) with the company by identifying the characteristics of top performers who’ve held pivotal roles and then looking for those characteristics in candidates for those positions, according to the report. These tools can examine data from inside and outside the company, as well as input by the candidates via pre-hire assessments.


The use of predictive analytics for hiring is a natural occurrence, given the sheer amounts of data that technology has allowed companies to amass, says Jason Corsello, vice president of corporate development and strategy at Santa Monica, Calif.-based talent-management vendor Cornerstone OnDemand.


“Companies are sitting on more data than ever: They know who their people are, what skills they have, their educational backgrounds, their job performance,” says Corsello, who says Cornerstone is developing new applications that make use of predictive analytics. “The other part of the equation is that advances in technology mean that the cost of gathering all this data has gone way down.”


Companies’ use of predictive analytics in areas besides hiring has generated some controversy, however. In his 2012 bestselling book, The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business, New York Times reporter Charles Duhigg drew attention to the use of PA by major retailers such as Target to predict what their customers will buy. In some cases, Duhigg wrote, retail chains can tell when a customer is pregnant even before she does by analyzing her buying patterns.


“The use of big data such as predictive analytics can be very powerful in terms of predicting what someone’s going to do,” says David Walton, a shareholder at Cozen O’Connor in Philadelphia and vice chair of the law firm’s labor and employment group.


It can also be used for questionable purposes, he adds, citing a Belgian firm that uses big data to create credit profiles of potential bank customers. The firm uses correlations which it says have revealed that people whose Facebook friends tend to write posts in all caps are potential credit risks, for example, says Walton.


“If they can do that with credit monitoring, then what can they do with employment practices, and what are the potential implications? It’s scary and amazing at the same time.”


The use of PA to make hiring decisions could lead to discrimination if not used properly, says Dutta.


“Organizations need to be very careful in how they’re using this software,” he says. “You don’t want to end up with a model that tells you not to hire people of certain ethnicities, for example.”


None of the three employment-law attorneys interviewed for this story knew of any current or recent employment-discrimination litigation concerning the use of predictive analytics for hiring. However, all agreed that the potential for adverse impact exists.


“Yes, I absolutely think it’s a legitimate concern,” says Erin Schilling, a shareholder at the Polsinelli law firm in Kansas City. “[The use of predictive analytics] could have a disparate impact on minorities, women or any different kind of class of worker.”


To stay out of trouble, she says, companies should first perform an “adverse impact analysis,” or a statistical test, on the predictive analytics they use to determine whether it screens out particular groups.


“In theory, predictive analytics should — if applied properly — broaden the possibilities for applicants to get hired and, theoretically, should result in possibly a more diverse workforce than what might have otherwise come through the door based on standard hiring processes,” says Peter Gillespie, an employment attorney with Fisher & Phillips in Chicago. “But, there’s always the risk of testing bias, and we’ve certainly seen the EEOC pursuing concerns about potential bias in the hiring process.”


HR leaders should ensure they understand how the factors that are being considered were selected and how the process was developed, he says. Should they use an outside vendor, they should check with other clients to see whether they experienced any negative outcomes with respect to adverse impact, says Gillespie.


Proponents of predictive analytics say the software can actually dispel myths that often stand in the way of people with certain backgrounds getting hired.


Michael Housman, Evolv’s chief analytics officer, says the predictive analytics his firm provides to its clients — a number of them large employers with many hourly workers — allow them to “hire and promote in a data-driven way.”


The company takes the information applicants provide via online pre-hire assessments and uses it to rate them as green, yellow and red. “Green” applicants are those who are most likely to stay with the company longer, while those rated yellow or red are more likely to leave, he says. These are important factors to consider for companies concerned about high turnover rates, he adds.


“We’ve been able to dispel a lot of myths around what predicts success in these roles,” says Housman.


For example, Evolv has discovered that applicants with a history of “job hopping” in their previous experience ended up having a job tenure just as long as employees without such a history. It also found that people who had previously been unemployed for long periods performed just as well in their jobs as those with more traditional work histories, he says. 


Employees with criminal convictions on their records, says Housman, also ended up performing on the job just as well as colleagues with clean records.


“It’s not a matter of where you’ve been, but whether you’re a good fit for the job you’re applying for now, and the best way to assess that is to determine who you are as a person,” he says.


With respect to potential adverse impact, Housman points to Evolv’s recently issued workforce code of ethics.


“Any time we deploy an assessment, we conduct an adverse-impact study to ensure that it won’t screen out members of a protected class — if it does, then we don’t deploy that assessment,” he says.


“All the data we use is legally submitted — we’re not going around scraping people’s Twitter feeds without their permission,” says Housman.


Shaker Consulting Group, a Cleveland-based vendor, also creates predictive-analytic tools designed to help its clients make better hiring decisions. The firm performs a validation analysis with each client to ensure there are no disparate impacts, says Brian Stern, president of Shaker Consulting Group.


“You should be using big data to help you ask smarter questions to help inform your decision-making, as opposed to letting this data make decisions for you,” he says.


Similar to Evolv, Stern says predictive analytics has helped dispel myths that had previously been treated as rules of thumb by many recruiters.


“We found that financial institutions were weighting candidates that had a lot of cash-handling experience more heavily in the process, but in fact, once you have a little bit of cash-handling experience, having more of it doesn’t make a difference,” he says. 


Dutta suggests that companies interested in using PA in the hiring process begin with a pilot project first and evaluate the results carefully. HR should also keep in mind that the software should never play a dominant role, he says.


“Use the software as a tool, not as a decision-maker,” says Dutta.


Human Resource Executive Online | The Power (And Peril) of Predictive Analytics.


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The Power (And Peril) of Predictive Hiring Analytics

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Three Things CIOs Can Do To Improve Company Strategy

There’s a big shift going on among CIOs. By managing boxes and pipes, they make operations hum at top efficiency. They have these tasks down pat. Instead, increasingly, CIOs say their main job is setting strategy by helping their organizations craft new business models, tackle risks and forge closer relationships with customers.


This high-stakes evolution is the key finding of research we conducted with 1,600 CIOs around the world. Tech is shaping companies’ destinies and no one knows this better than the CIOs on the front lines.


Still, these tech leaders concede they have ground to cover before vaulting into this new role of strategy setter. Only 66 percent think their IT departments have mastered the basics of tech. More than 50 percent say that when it comes to performing complex activities, there’s room for improvement.


So what are CIOs doing to move forward? Our survey found three main steps that CIOs at the top-performing companies are taking. They all revolve around forging stronger ties with customers:


1) Engage digital savvy customers: First, smart CIOs are teaming up with Chief Marketing Officers (CMOs), who are also pushing the digital envelope. Next, instead of launching projects piecemeal for melding the physical and digital world to reach out to customers and create new products, they’re crafting broad, cohesive strategies.


Even more crucially, CIOs at top-performing businesses realize that to improve the client experience, they have to know customers better. Many companies have plenty of data — carefully collected from social networks, apps, Web sites, supply chains — but what they lack is actionable insight. That’s why so many respondents want to invest in new technologies for crunching all those bytes with two goals in mind:


Using sentiment mining and social network analysis to identify behavioral patterns and predict trends before the rest of the market.


Using analytics to quickly and effectively analyze the profitability of products and services so they can change their offerings on a dime.


2) Shine at the basics: of data centers, office automation, architectural standards and policy framework. CIOs have to get the basics right before turning their focus to business strategy. Yet, more than 50 percent of the CIOs we spoke with say their big data platforms, which underpin their businesses, aren’t scalable or extensible.


By comparison, outperforming companies were 42 percent more likely to have exactly this kind of platform in place. This can be a very costly difference. Keeping servers running typically gobbles up 65 percent of an IT budget in a company with a basic data center, but only 47 percent in a corporation with a highly efficient one, according to a separate survey by IBM and researcher IDC.


Meantime, when it comes to handling nuts and bolts, few CIOs have mastered the challenge of managing IT risk. On average, a company is pelted each week with 1,400 security attacks. That’s going to get worse as organizations rack up more information about customers and open up corporate networks with the rise of mobile devices and the cloud. Which is why CIOs at top companies are getting aggressive about improving their defenses. They’re 60 percent more likely to invest in more sophisticated tools for measuring and managing risk.


3) Boost collaboration inside and out: It’s not just what people know that makes them valuable, it’s what they share. When employees, suppliers, and partners cooperate, they’re more productive and innovative. Some 70 percent of CIOs expect to work with a broader group of partners in the future — not to boost efficiency or cut costs, but to bolster strategy. Which is why 82 percent of CIOs at leading organizations are putting in tools to improve collaboration, compared with just 69 percent at under-performing enterprises.


Mobile plays a big part in these plans, with more than 50 percent of the most successful companies reporting that they’re now equipped to do business anywhere, via any device. Still, CIOs struggle to address legal, security and privacy issues with employees who want to bring their own devices (BYOD) to work. More than 25 percent of the CIOs we spoke with report they’re holding off on BYOD, though ultimately they may have little choice but to consent.


Over time, playing a strategic role will come down to another fundamental kind of collaboration: working with the rest of the C-Suite including “new” IT buyers such as CMOs, Chief Financial Officers and HR. Part of managing the expectations that companies are placing on CIOs will mean getting buy in. This comes down to crafting partnerships at the top. Over time, every aspect of a company’s business will depend in one way or another on technology — and the CIO.


via IBM Smarter PlanetVoice: Three Things CIOs Can Do To Improve Company Strategy – Forbes.


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Three Things CIOs Can Do To Improve Company Strategy

Why Your Thumbs Could Hurt on Your Next Job Interview

I’ve known about gaming applications as a hiring tool for some time now, but this new article over on the NY Times shows the serious investment being made in the development of video games to help hiring managers choose talent.


In short, more and more people will be using their thumbs to help them land the job. (My hands are aching just thinking about it!)


What If You Aren’t a Gamer?!


Okay, so if you’re reading this article and thinking, “Crud. I stink at video games. My 5 year old son, nephew, neighbor, etc. kicks my butt every time we play.” Or, “Dang. I was good at Ms. PacMan, but it’s been awhile,” then you’re not alone. Millions of job seekers aren’t gamers – and that’s okay. You’ll just need to leverage your other assets – and I’m not talking about your good looks or college degree. (Here’s an article on why college degrees don’t get you hired, passion does.)


Personality, Aptitude & Experience – They’ll Still Count For Something


While using video games might help a company identify traits in a candidate that aren’t easily recognized in an interview, they will still need to make sure that you have the:


A) Personality type that will mesh with the rest of the team. If you can’t communicate and get along with your peers, you’ll negatively impact the office environment and team productivity.


B) Aptitude to adapt to change without getting flustered. Yes, the game might be able to test that to some degree, but they’ll still want to see how you physically handle the stress. They need to ensure you are able to stay positive in your thoughts and communication style enough keep it in check and not let it affect your teammates.


C) Experience needed to maintain a certain level of professionalism. Being “professional” is learned. You spend time in an environment and come to understand the unwritten rules of proper business etiquette and teamwork requirements. Even if you were the top scorer on the video hiring game, if you can’t act like a proper professional, you won’t be selected.


Want to Skip the Games? Become a Super-Connector


I do think even when these video games become mainstream in hiring, there will still be a way to bypass this part of the process: just be a super-connector. Those that recognize their network is their net worth know building powerful relationships will always be the best way to find work. (Here’s the Ultimate Cheat Sheet on Becoming a Super-Connector.)


Super-Connectors Don’t Play Games…They’re Game-Changers!


The definition of a super-connector is someone who focuses on helping their network with their career goals. They serve their network, and in return, their network rewards them by referring them to employers looking for their type of talent. There’s a reason 80% of all jobs are gotten today via referral – it works. So, while it might not be a bad idea to pick up a video game from time to time so your eye-hand coordination stays current, I’d spend more time picking up the phone, inviting people to coffee, attending networking events, and making professional introductions for others so you can build and maintain the quality relationships needed to get doors opened for you in the future.


Humans Hire Humans to Play the Work Game Together


My advice to anyone worrying about the video game hiring trend is to remember the best companies create cultures where the employees feel like they are on the same team. Humans hire humans so they can play the work game together. Not every employer is going to use this type of hiring tool. There will always be plenty of employers out there for you to land a position with that won’t make you hurt your thumbs to get the job offer.


via Why Your Thumbs Could Hurt on Your Next Job Interview | LinkedIn.


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Why Your Thumbs Could Hurt on Your Next Job Interview

CIOs Must Adapt or Risk Being Replaced

Consumer tech and cloud services empower line-of-business managers to go around IT in greater numbers than ever before. It’s shaking up the role of CIOs, forcing them to shift from tech gatekeeper to tech enabler.


Michael Keithley at Creative Artists Agency in Hollywood, Calif., calls this shift the biggest he’s seen in his more than two decades serving as a CIO. He also says he fears many of his peers will struggle to make this shift and some may even lose their jobs.


CIO.com sat down with Keithley to talk about the new role of the CIO.


CIO.com: You’ve been a CIO for more than two decades. How would you characterize this change? How big is it?


Michael Keithley: We’re at a unique time in the history of this industry. There’s more change going on now than there ever has, at least from what I can remember. It’s really significant, a big tipping point. The pace of change is also really accelerating. It’s exciting for me.


After years and years of traditional IT — standardizing on Windows desktops with Dell or Hewlett-Packard, and BlackBerry as the mobile device, everything locked down in a very command-and-control kind of way — recently the forces of cloud and mobile and consumerization have changed the game completely. I went from that traditional shop to one of wide-open enablement, where I allow users to use whatever tools, devices or technologies they need to get their job done.


It’s a sea change for how IT thinks about things.


CIO.com: You’ve used the term ‘chief enabler’ to describe the CIO’s new role. I’ve also heard ‘cloud broker.’ What exactly are the demands of this new role?


Keithley: Pretty much everything changes. We’re a global organization, so I have data centers strewn around the world, yet I’m actively trying to get out of the data center business. The primary way I’m doing that is aggressively migrating to the cloud. You get wonderful benefits, but it also completely changes how you have to access risk. Security and compliance are things every CIO has to deal with.


Historically, we’ve had the concept of the corporate LAN or WAN and the wild Internet. The firewall was the choke point where you could implement all your security stuff. Now, on the cloud or mobile devices, I’m rarely coming back to the corporate LAN. And so you have to approach security in a completely different way.


Certainly one of the biggest areas where CIOs can provide value and leadership is in contract negotiations, especially with SaaS vendors. If you’re a CMO or line-of-business manager, you’re thinking very tactically about the problem you’re trying to solve. But the reality is that none of the historical things around data integrity, security and compliance, creating silos and master data — all the things that IT is really good at — are still there.


I think CIOs can be that coach, that mentor and lead in this area.


CIO.com: Sounds like a vastly different skill set from the those of the traditional CIO. Will your peers be able to transition to this role?


Keithley: It’s challenging on a bunch of levels. We’ve always talked about aligning with the business. But this is much deeper than that. You really have to understand the business, speak in their language, understand the problems they’re trying to solve, what their challenges are, etc. You’ve got to get out of the office. You have to have excellent inter-personal communication skills. It’ll push and stretch CIOs, especially those comfortable resting on their technical laurels.


And it’s not just dealing with the CMO, director of HR, CFOs and other corporate officers, I think the cloud in general is really threatening to a lot of CIOs. It’s change, not something they’re comfortable with. And so I see a lot of CIOs reverting back to, ‘Well, we can’t do it because of security or compliance.’


In effect, you can, you should and you have to if you really want a future in this profession of being a CIO. The cloud is an unstoppable force, and the users are going to do it whether you like it or not. Lines-of-business [managers] or pretty much anybody with a credit card can go around IT and procure cloud services.


To put your head in the sand and say, ‘I’m not going to go down the cloud path’ or ‘I’m not going to make the investment to be able to relate to my C-level peers’ is just a prescription for being replaced.


via CIOs Must Adapt or Risk Being Replaced – CIO.com.


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CIOs Must Adapt or Risk Being Replaced