Executive search firms are now being asked to recruit a new breed of
information officers to assist corporations address Sarbanes-Oxley compliance
requirements and to compete more effectively overall in the age of
Sarbanes-Oxley. Passed in response to major corporate scandals, The
Sarbanes-Oxley act also known as Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor
Protection Act of 2002 has redefined the role of the company CIO. Many of the
most progressive corporations have successfully embraced the evolution of the
Chief Information Officer function from being narrowly focused on the day-to-day
maintenance and support of a company's information systems organization to a
much broader leadership and management role on the company's senior management
team.
Executive search firm Venerable Partners says that these forward thinking
corporations have empowered their CIOs to become vital business partners in
designing and executing the business strategy for their respective
organizations. Chief Executives who have supported this evolution have
undoubtedly experienced greater operational efficiencies, improved resource
utilization, and better returns on their technology investments.
According to Donald Law, Managing Director of Chicago based executive search
firm Venerable Partners , 'as a byproduct of this evolution, Chief Information
Officers have now become intimately involved in all of the critical business
processes that drive their companies. From supply chain management to production
systems, from customer fulfillment to billing systems, from human resource
management systems to compliance tracking, a corporation's information systems
organization has become inextricably linked to all significant business
processes within their company.'
It is critical for Chief Executives to appreciate the significance of this
linkage between an entity's information systems organization and the critical
business processes and safeguards required for Sarbanes-Oxley compliance.
According to executive search firm Venerable Partners, 'because it is not
practical for Chief Executives to understand the granular technical details of
the technology solutions that support an organization's business processes, the
relationship between the CEO and his/her CIO has to be stronger than ever. As an
executive search firm who partners with senior management, we have seen that
CEOs are now coming to expect that their CIOs become the guarantors of the
business processes implemented within their organizations.' However, in order to
allow one's CIO to become the guarantor of one's organizational business
processes, CEOs must recognize that they must now provide for a level of
transparency that their CIOs may not have been privileged to in the past. Such
open communication is
critical to an organization's ability to consistently satisfy the Sarbanes-Oxley
requirements and mitigate unforeseen exposure to essential business processes.
As Chief Executives go about assessing the leadership strengths of their
information officers and go about identifying senior information systems
executives who present the capacities to truly become the guarantors of one's
business processes, executive search firm Venerable Partners recommends that
CEOs (and their respective selection committees) work to identify information
systems executives who present the following essential qualifications:
1. Exceptionally strong general business acumen along with an astute level of
understanding of all critical business functions and their underlying processes.
2. Business process management skills, including an understanding of best
practice process documentation procedures.
3. Demonstrated success serving as a key business partner across all major
functional disciplines in delivering a comprehensive suite of information
technology solutions designed to advance the needs of the business.
4. Prior exposure to Sarbanes-Oxley reporting and compliance requirements.
5. The interpersonal and leadership skills required to establish a trusted
advisor relationship with the CEO.
6. Demonstrated experience as a senior leader of an information systems
organization, including a thorough understanding of the enabling infrastructure,
operations and applications solutions that underlie a world-class information
systems organization.
7. Familiarity with the emerging information technologies that are impacting
one's particular industrial sector and driving the major architectural,
econometric and customer-focused solutions.
Executive search firm Venerable Partners states that these are only general
guidelines intended to provide a basis from which to begin an assessment of
one's leadership strengths within the office of the information officer. A
company's specific business challenges and external market forces will also
dictate the ideal profile best suited to address an organization's specific
needs.
Donald Law of executive search firm Venerable Partners comments that 'each
client situation is unique' and that corporations should first engage one of the
leading executive search firms to provide a comprehensive assessment of the
leadership strengths and weakness within the office of the information officer
prior to making any decisions regarding one's personnel. By partnering with an
executive search firm like Venerable Partners to provide this type of
assessment, Law maintains that corporations will better mitigate compliance
related risks and also help ensure that adequate succession planning initiatives
are also in place within a corporation's IT organization.
Donald Law of Venerable Partners maintains that executive search firms can
provide a truly objective assessment and provide valuable recommendations.
For more information please visithttp://www.venerablepartners.com.