Avoiding The Savior Complex: How CIOs Help Leaders Of Business Face Reality With Three Powerful Questions
Scott Smeester
Founder of CIO Mastermind ?? The Source for Exceptional Leadership in Business Technology, Transformation and Innovation ?? Geek with CEO Tendencies
Jack Welch was once named by Fortune magazine as Manager of the Century. His first rule of business as Chair and CEO of GE was “Face reality.”
CIOs work with leaders. Those leaders generate a lot of activity: departments, strategies, plans, and actions. IT plays a role in every aspect of a business line’s activity.?
Business generates more business; action produces more action. Inevitably, unless consciously addressed, a business becomes top-heavy.?
Leaders are often tough and optimistic, able to bear great loads and to continue to inspire work. Until they can’t. Not everything can be reasonably sustained. Eventually, they realize something must be done. And usually that something that must be done is to turn to you.
The good news is that leaders believe that technology can help them be more efficient. The bad news is the same. And it’s bad news because they believe that being efficient will help them be more effective. And that’s where they get it wrong.
The greatest gifts a leader has are hope and hopelessness. Leaders excel in hope; they rarely embrace hopeless. You are there to help leaders be hopeless, to face reality. Reality is, some things must go for the rest to be sustained.
Leaders operate with a false belief that technology can pick up the slack of methodology; they live with the false notion that a problem within the business can be solved by an IT solution to the business.?
You know that is not true. They look at IT as the Savior. As in “If only we had the technology that could…” etc.?
But you know better. IT can work miracles, but it doesn’t make you the Savior.?
Leaders are often trying to solve for one of three areas: what is good but not great, what is dysfunctional and unlikely to be turned, and what is dead and taking up space (I recommend the book Necessary Endings by Dr. Henry Cloud for more on this).
For any number of reasons, leaders avoid bringing these areas to an end. So they turn to you. Instead of facing reality, they are trying to redefine reality with you as the shining knight, etc. (And who gets blamed when the battle is finally lost)?
Getting Leaders To Embrace Healthy Hopelessness
It’s not that IT doesn’t want to save the day. It’s that you only have so many days you can save. That’s the key: Help leaders discern what in their business needs more resources versus what in their business is draining resources.
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Three Questions To Ask Every Leader?
What in your business is good but not great?
What in your business is dysfunctional and unlikely to be fixed?
What is dead and taking up space?
You are a CIO. Of all people, you know the power of technology. You are a leader. Of all people, you know the limitations of technology.?
You don’t have a Savior Complex. But people regard you as a Savior. Those are two drastically different things, and both spell disaster for you.
Get ahead of it by being actively involved with leaders of the business you serve. Simple, powerful questions will help them determine what and what not to bring to you.?
Then work your miracle.
I'm here to help.
Thanks for this great article! This is perfect for the influx of new technology leaders, but even more critical for the rest of the C-suite to understand. Jim Collins promotes “people before things” and it’s our job to promote/ensure “process before technology” and have the hard/critical conversations.
Really solid article, especially for new technology leaders at many organizations (which seem to be everywhere based on the number of announcements the last few months).
Retired Healthcare CIO
2 年Should be "Three Difficult Questions To Ask Every Leader", as they force a reality check. Solutions or systems are made up of tools/technologies; processes/methods; and most critical people and their culture (directly or indirectly.) I still believe in miracles. ??
"Of all people, you know the limitations of technology." - Yes! Technology is a tool, but new tech isn't automatically a SOLUTION.