About InfoWorld : Advertise : Subscribe : Contact Us : Awards : Events : Store
InfoWorld HomeNewsTest CenterOpinionsProduct GuideTechIndex
 COLUMN ARCHIVE  FORUMS
 

COLUMN

 
CTO Advisor
Dan Woods

A CTO’s key charter should be great hires and dynamic teams

Hiring good people and building productive teams are the most important tasks for the CTO. Failure to accomplish these two goals will limit the possibilities of what your team can achieve. But success in these areas drives your business risks way down.

   ADVERTISEMENT
  

Free IT resource

Virtualization Insights from Top Experts - Learn how virtualization gets real!

Sponsored by Dell

Free IT resource

TechNet: More ways to know it, share it, and keep it running.

Sponsored by Microsoft

RELATED LINKS
»  AT&T buys high-speed wireless spectrum for $2.5 billion
»  Update: Sprint chief Forsee resigns
»  IT trainer offers master's degree for hackers
»  Wireless RSS feed 

IDG ENTERPRISE NETWORK
More Network LAN/WAN News...  (ComputerWorld)
Wireless EV-DO on board  (ComputerWorld)

TOP NEWS 


IT SOLUTION SEARCH

Like most leadership issues, effective techniques for hiring and team-building are highly idiosyncratic: They must be matched to the personality of the CTO employing them. My personal playbook is based on finding creative people and empowering them to take the ball and run with it.




Here's how I go about evaluating the people I meet through headhunters, referrals, and by just hanging around:

When interviewing a candidate, I try to get a sense of the person along four dimensions: personal security (or self-assurance), intelligence, an understanding of the role technology plays in business, and domain knowledge. If I can find someone who has high marks in all of these areas, I probably have a star on my hands.

I believe personal security is the foundation of a team player. This characteristic is found in people who are sure of their value and intellect and are not constantly seeking reinforcement by comparing themselves to others. They are not bullies. They are quietly strong.

Frequently, the most secure people are the most humble. They will mumble that they really don't know much about Linux and then explain how they just fixed a major bug in the kernel and got a thank-you note from Linus. These people listen and evaluate before forming an opinion and try hard to see things from every point of view before making a judgment.

Experience matters to people who are secure. They will readily change their mind in the face of evidence contrary to their opinion. Self-confident people see the bigger picture and their role in it -- and they are willing to do what's necessary to make the team successful.

Understanding the role of technology in a business is the next most important characteristic of a great hire. What I look for in a candidate is the understanding that technology is a tool to make a business successful. It doesn't matter if you are in a technology company or an IT shop of a large corporation. If you start thinking that the technology somehow has value outside of the context of an organization's goals, you are part of the problem. I love technology and will only hire people who are also passionate about it. But their passion must be focused on winning the battle at hand -- not on using the latest cool stuff.

Intelligence is an important attribute required for members of my teams -- but not at the expense of the first two qualities. Hiring someone who is smart but not secure or mature about the role of technology is inviting a corrosive force into your organization. Don't do it -- no matter how dazzling that person's intellect is.

Domain knowledge is down here at the bottom of the list because if someone has the first three qualities, he or she is likely to be a quick study. That said, the more one knows about the technology at hand or the business domain, the better.

One popular and expected feature is missing from my list: Communication skills. To me, it is too much to ask that the team be full of great communicators. The leadership of the technology department must take responsibility for successful communication.

When you apply these criteria to your hiring, like-minded individuals attract each other: Technical people love coming into an environment in which they can learn from their peers and don't have to watch their back. My teams are like that.

As far as team-building goes, I am an admiring student of Tom DeMarco, author of many books on team-building for software development, including Peopleware and, my personal favorite, Deadline, a novel about managing software development. These books stress empowerment and repeat a lesson I learned long ago from my father, a fabulous manager and leader. I leave you with his advice: If you want the best out of people, you have to let them screw it up.


Dan Woods is CTO of CapitalThinking, an ASP (application service provider) for the commercial real estate industry in New York. He is co-author of The Developer's Guide to the Java Web Server and was previously with TheStreet.com and Time New Media.




RELATED SUBJECTS

E-Commerce


SPONSORED WHITE PAPERS
EMC - Lower costs and improve reliability-Get the EMC CLARiiON white paper!
Ciphertrust - Are you ready for Sobig.G? Learn how to protect your email systems.
CDW - Personal attention. CDW. The Right Technology. Right Away.
EMC - Explore key performance features and capabilities of EMC ControlCenter 5.1.1.
Intel - Free Intel white paper shows you how to deploy a secure wireless LAN
Cisco - FREE WHITE PAPER: BLUEPRINT to design and implement secure VPNs
Verity, Inc. - "Mass Consolidation Hits the Web-Search Market"
McDATA - Download a FREE storage consolidation white paper from McDATA(R).
Lucent Technologies - Overcoming Common Firewall Limitations
Lucent Technologies - Leverage Your Mobile High Speed Data Access. Download Free White Paper!
Nokia - Get the scoop! Mobilizing business white papers & case studies.
BMC Software - Maximize the Potential of Enterprise Data: Free white paper!
Network Associates - Free white paper - Strategies for Optimizing Network Costs and Benefits
Entrust - Manage identities across applications. Improve productivity.
Stalker Software - CommuniGate Pro - Transform your Email and Calendaring
Remedy - A NEW Gartner Research Note:Producing Quality IT Services

Search the IDG White Paper Library:


SPONSORED LINKS

INFOWORLD MARKETPLACE


» Hot Stock Alert (TMDI)
Telemedicus - Medical Communication Top Telemedicine Technology
» Apply BPM and ITIL at your IT Help Desk
ServiceWise brings BPM to complete IT service while eliminating integration cost. Learn more here.
» EMC delivers high-speed image capture, storage
Learn how you can quickly capture, organize, and deliver information with EMC ApplicationXtender.
» Register for your free VMWare Virtualization kit!
VMware virtualization takes the cost and complexity out of IT  Download this free kit to learn how.
» FREE Sophos Threat Detection Test
Is your AV catching everything it should? Free virus, spyware and adware scan.




 HOME  NEWS  TEST CENTER  OPINIONS  PRODUCT GUIDE  TECHINDEX   About : Advertise : Subscribe : Contact Us : Awards : Events 

Copyright © 2008, Reprints, Permissions, Licensing, IDG Network, Privacy Policy

All Rights reserved. InfoWorld is a leading publisher of technology information and product reviews on topics including viruses, phishing, worms, firewalls, security, servers, storage, networking, wireless, databases, and web services.

Computerworld :: Network World :: CIO :: PC World :: Darwin :: CMO :: CSO
IT Careers :: JavaWorld :: Macworld :: Mac Central :: Playlist :: GamePro :: GameStar :: Gamerhelp
ITWorld Canada :: Computerwoche :: Techworld UK :: tecChannel :: IDG.se :: IDG.no