Читать книгу Fostering Innovation. How to Build an Amazing IT Team онлайн
11 страница из 44
Build Your Skillset
An essential parenting skill is to remember when you were your kid's age. As much as the world has changed, remembering what you did, thought, and felt in middle school and high school will make you a more empathetic parent. This concept applies directly to leadership. I started as a programmer/analyst, an old term for developer. I moved my way up to senior programmer analyst, manager, senior manager, director, and then VP of applications. In each of those roles, I paid close attention to my leaders and, frankly, judged their behavior. There were some behaviors I despised, some I loved, and some I didn't understand. By remembering what it's like to be in the trenches, you'll hopefully be a better General to your troops.
If you didn't work your way up to CIO and instead came through a different path, there's still hope for you. If your path was a boarding school, Harvard, McKinsey, and now CIO (congrats, that's impressive), you must put in extra time and energy to get honest input from the rank and file. If your path to CIO was from a business function, read The Adventures of an IT Leader by Robert D. Austin.1 In that book, a functional leader complains so much about IT that the CEO puts him in charge of it. There are a lot of good insights in that book. The most important insight is understanding why the prior CIO got fired.