Many candidates have a
Master of Business Administration degree or a
Master of Science in Management degree. More recently, CIOs' leadership capabilities, business acumen, and strategic perspectives have taken precedence over technical skills. It is now quite common for CIOs to be appointed from the business side of the organization, especially if they have
project management skills. Despite the strategic nature of the role, a 2017 survey, conducted by
Logicalis, of 890 CIOs across 23 countries found that 62% of CIOs spend 60% or more of their time on day to day IT activities. In 2012,
Gartner Executive Programs conducted a global CIO survey and received responses from 2,053 CIOs from 41 countries and 36 industries. Gartner reported that survey results indicated that the top ten technology priorities for CIOs for 2013 were
analytics and
business intelligence,
mobile technologies,
cloud computing,
collaboration technologies,
legacy modernization,
IT management,
customer relationship management,
virtualization,
security, and
enterprise resource planning.
CIO magazine's "State of the CIO 2008" survey asked 558 IT leaders whom they report to, and the results were:
CEO (41%),
CFO (23%),
COO (16%), corporate CIO (7%) and other (13%). Typically, the CIO is involved with driving the analysis and re-engineering of existing business processes, identifying and developing the capability to use new tools, reshaping the enterprise's physical infrastructure and network access, and identifying and exploiting the enterprise's knowledge resources. Many CIOs head the enterprise's efforts to integrate the Internet into both its long-term strategy and its immediate business plans. CIOs are often tasked with either driving or heading up crucial IT projects that are essential to the strategic and operational objectives of an organization. A good example of this would be the implementation of an
enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, which typically has wide-ranging implications for most organizations. Another way that the CIO role has changed is an increasing focus on service management. As
SaaS,
IaaS,
BPO and other flexible delivery techniques are brought into organizations the CIO usually manages these 3rd party services. In essence, a CIO in the modern organization needs business skills and the ability to relate to the organization as a whole, as opposed to being a technological expert with limited functional business expertise. The CIO position is as much about anticipating technology and usage trends in the market place as it is about ensuring that the business navigates these trends with expert guidance and strategic planning aligned to the corporate strategy. ==Distinction between CIO, CDO, and CTO==