By Jo Best, 4 May 2005 10:15
NEWS CIOs are more scared of hackers than they are of their own bosses, according to Cisco CEO John Chambers.
Speaking at the Networld + Interop conference today in Las Vegas, the Cisco head said that from his questioning of IT heads, network security is higher up CIOs' list of priorities than hitting the boss' targets.
"When you look at CIOs, what they're saying is on their minds is wireless and security," he said. "What's top of mind is security - it's not the CEO's revenue growth."
A recent survey of silicon.com's CIO Jury agreed - finding security still topping off the IT head's shopping list. However, despite the ever-growing importance of keeping corporate security locked down, according to Chambers, CIOs still have to be aware that their main responsibilities will put business goals before pure technology goals.
"You can't predict what will be your major application in three to four years [but] you can project when your CEO wants to move, you need to move pretty fast," he said.
While evidence of the CIO-CEO disconnect is manifest, according to the Cisco boss more stringent targets on the boardroom cab may actually be a mixed blessing.
"There's never been more pressure on executives [and] that can be both good and bad for our industry," he said.
Despite the pressure on the board, CIOs aren't down at heel about the transformational role of IT in the enterprise.
"If I were to survey CEOs and CIOs [few] would have productivity goals over five per cent five years ago," he said. "Now 75 per cent of the CIOs I polled said five per cent or more."
In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.
Log in or create your silicon.com account below