It is
nearly two years now since I stopped being a full time CTO in a large
company, and this is the first in a series of Blogs I am writing in
and around "What makes a great CTO?". In those two years I have found
myself often in the role of CTO / advisor with many of the startups
or prospects that we are working with; I have also found that many of the
other skills I picked up along the way have been equally useful.
There
are 7 key capabilities not in order of importance that make a great CTO
based on my experience :-
1. Listening.
Listening is at the heart of innovation. If you lose the ability to
listen, people will stop speaking to you. Being deliberate in taking
time to listen to people even when you don't have time will allow you to
know things that others don't around what is actually happening in a
project, production environment etc.
2. Helicopter. The ability to see the big picture and take a
seemingly fragmented set of decisions happening across the IT
landscape, and draw the jigsaw puzzle box picture. Helicopter refers
specifically to the ability to talk an operate at any altitude from
10,000 to 1 foot and see and articulate the picture that connects these
together.
3. Communication.
The way you tell and represent the story and help others understand the
vision, how it is broken down, and what their role is in delivering
it, the more effectively you will be able to lead, delegate and expect
the message to be propagated.
4. Networking.
An often unappreciated skill and use of time, is sitting down
with peers, their teams, your team, the business, the support
functions and helping them understand a complex topic, giving tips on
how to be more personally effective with technology and so on.
Building a reputation as a person who helps people use and understand
technology will make it much easier to get your ideas accepted.
5.
Technical Ability. Often
mis-represented in job searches as a set of technical skills that a
candidate must possess. It is always more important to have the
ability to learn and to view learning as a critical part of what you do
with your time every day. Whatever you knew 5 years ago whilst it is
persistent and useful from analogy based understanding, will be
superseded by newer capabilities, methods and practices.
6. Teamwork. Architectural Arrogance (I'm
smarter than you are!) and ego are a massive barrier to being
effective. You need to work with peers as if they were brothers or
sisters, treat everyone with respect and use communication, networking
and listening to converge difficult dialogs onto solutions that teams
will take collective responsibility for.
7. Diversity. Hiring in your own image is
like Einstein's saying about Insanity ("doing the same thing over and
over again and expecting a different result"). It takes a lot of
maturity to hire people smarter than you, who think differently than
you, who come at problems differently from you, who have completely
different EQ than you, whose personality is completely different. Yet
every great team that has ever existed requires this diversity plus a
little bit of magic (often from the coach) to be that good.
Great post, Andy!
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