Career accomplishment I'm most proud of: At last count, 13 individuals who worked for me have become CIOs at different companies. Many are still CIOs. Doesn't necessarily mean I helped them, but it does mean I didn't screw them up.
Decision I wish I could do over: Over the years, I've started three companies. One was consulting, one technology, one services. They were all successful in their day, not blowouts, but successful. I didn't hang long enough with them to see if they would've been blowouts.
Best advice for future CIOs: The job of CIO has always been about change and handling the pace of change, and that's picked up dramatically. Plan to eliminate 50% to 70% of what you have to do--outsource it, hand it over to others, find ways to use a SaaS model, and focus on strategic value.
Size of IT team: 50 to 75 people
Top three initiatives:
How I measure IT effectiveness: One metric is customer satisfaction, but at the senior executive level. It involves interaction with the executive committee, asking, "Are you getting what you need? Who in my organization is working with you?
Leisure activities: Running and backpacking
If I weren't a CIO, I'd be ... CEO of a Web 2.0 startup. I wouldn't rule this one out.
How long at current company: Four years
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Ken Harris
CIO And Senior VP Shaklee
Photo by Kim Kulish![]()
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