Soft Skills: The Sign of a Savvy IT Pro Eau Claire WI

You’ve got the technical skills, but succeeding as an IT manager requires much more than that, writes CIOUpdate columnist Katherine Spencer Lee of Robert Half Technology.

Local Companies

Integral Consulting Group Inc
(715) 778-5085
N7971 County Road Cc
Spring Valley, WI
PA Consulting Group
(608) 827-7820
2711 Allen Blvd
Middleton, WI
Miller Consulting Group
(608) 883-6903
N6623 Lake Lorraine Rd
Delavan, WI
Marketwise Consulting Group Inc
(920) 735-4970
5601 Grande Market Dr
Appleton, WI
Heritage Consulting Group
(414) 220-5033
Milwaukee, WI

Soft Skills: The Sign of a Savvy IT Pro

provided by: 
Originally published at Internet.com


The best managers are defined by their ability to motivate teams and work and communicate effectively with other departments. And never has this been more important than in today's business world, where technology is integrated into all aspects of a company's operations. Firms seek IT leaders who can serve as business partners and true leaders. This need translates into a significant opportunity for managers who have strong business and interpersonal skills.

More From Katherine Spencer Lee on CIO Update

Employees Have Edge in Today's Job Market

The Great Baby Boomer Migration

Preventing Staff Burnout

Making Performance Reviews Positive

If you want to comment on these or any other articles you see on CIO Update, we'd like to hear from you in our IT Management Forum. Thanks for reading.

- Allen Bernard, Managing Editor.

FREE IT Management Newsletters

First Stop: Business Boot Camp

Perhaps more than anything, IT managers must understand a company's core processes and customers. The following suggestions can help get you up to speed:

Go back to school. One way to increase your business acumen is to enroll in relevant educational courses. It's not unusual for today's IT leaders to earn master's degrees of business administration, but even a weeklong seminar or single-session class targeting non-business managers can prove beneficial.

Know your field. A clothing retailer and a food distributor may rely on similar technology, but these businesses use it in different ways, based on thhe unique challenges and demands of their industries. That's why it's key to know your market. Who are your firm's main competitors? What trends are impacting the field? How will the industry be different five years from now?

You can find the answers to these types of questions by reading the business press, networking with other IT professionals, and participating in industry associations and events. Learn on the job. Many companies have programs designed to rotate promising managers through key departments and processes, providing a well-rounded view of the firm and a deep grounding in business skills. Even if your firm does not offer a formal program, you can gain a similar understanding by volunteering for committees, task forces and special initiatives. For example, you could offer to assist with the evaluation of a potential acquisition or expansion efforts into a new market.

Step Two: Polishing Your Social Skills

Just as important as knowing how to read a balance sheet, plan a budget or plot a five-year plan is being able to communicate and collaborate with colleagues throughout the company, including those to whom IT is foreign.

Strengthen your soft skills with these strategies:

Make the first move. Rather than waiting for other managers to come to you with requests, contact them for briefings on their department's goals, processes and challenges. Touching base can often reveal needs and technical solutions that were not immediately apparent. For example, the sales team may be having trouble tracking leads gained at industry conferences, and the group's manager may not realize a more robust CRM program could rectify this issue.

In short, the deeper your understanding of each business unit, the better positioned you'll be to generate increased value from existing processes or data and develop new tools that make the company more competitive. In addition, by talking to people outside your department, you'll begin to form valuable relationships and remain informed about new developments within the firm and industry.

Reverse the flow of information. At the same time, you must educate your business peers as to the value IT can bring. Tackle any lingering, negative stereotypes about your group. Also, reinforce the fact that IT can and does partner with business units to provide creative solutions by highlighting the strategic nature of your team's work and how it benefits the entire firm.

Talk the talk. Often, getting an idea across successfully has less to do with the idea itself than how it is presented. You may be convinced that the use of AJAX could make your company's website more user friendly. But if you talk to other executives about XML and Java, you're likely to lose your audience. Instead, speak in a language they understand-that interactive menus enhance the stickiness of the site and the number of inquires the business will receive about its services. Learning the lingo of the company, industry and business in general can help you position your ideas so they are understood and accepted by peers outside IT.

Mastering the basics of business thinking and relationship building make you a more active participant in your company's success. In addition, these skills can broaden your horizons. Learning about business can help you advance to a more senior position or even jump to a non-technical role. Knowing how to communicate your ideas and work with other managers to implement them enables you to keep pace with the changing nature of IT. And knowing both paves the way for your long-term success.

Katherine Spencer Lee is executive director of Robert Half Technology, a provider of IT professionals for initiatives ranging from e-business development and multi-platform systems integration to network engineering and technical support. Robert

Author: Katherine Spencer Lee

Read article at Internet.com site

Featured Local Company

Instigate, Inc.

An integrated approach to talent recruitment and management including RPO Services and Web-Based Employee Screening.

651-429-1131
4455 White Bear Parkway, Suite 600
Saint Paul, MN
www.instigateinc.com

Talent Recruitment Solutions - Transforming Talent Recruitment For Total Resource Effectiveness

Instigate was founded in 1999 by top recruiting and human capital management professionals to deliver best-in-class recruitmenet solutions. Our services include:

TalentAssist™ - Recruitment Process Outsourcing

Employee Skills Testing

Employee Assessments

Criminal Background Checks

Pre-Employment Drug Testing

Instigate offers an integrated approach to talent recruitment and management by providing a single source for Recruitment Process Outsourcing, Web-Based Employee Screening and Talent Management Solutions. This synergy results in cost-effective and efficient management of your workforce that positively impacts profitability and ensures future growth.

Our focus is to provide emerging and growth organizations the tools that allow them to be employers of choice in their markets. Instigate does this by focusing our efforts on managing the Talent Lifecycle: Plan - Acquire - Integrate - Retain - Rehire.

Rate Article
     
Articles Insider

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Engineering Home Services Retail & Consumer Services
Business Services Entertainment Industrial Goods & Services Software
Career Family Insurance Technology
Cars Financial Services Internet Telecommunications
Computer Hardware Food & Beverage Legal Transportation & Logistics
Construction Health Pets Travel
Education Home Electronics Real Estate Wedding