TOP TEN CONCERNS > Infrastructure Refresh
Refreshing technology infrastructures and keeping the backbone of an organisation’s IT up to date was the tenth biggest concern for CIOs last year. Its movement up the table to fourth place seems to indicate that it now has a direct link to aligning IT with the business.
News
CIO News View: IE 8 beta asks IT to test for Microsoft
The pre-release software channel is broken
Linux Foundation plans user summit
You will have to apply for an invitation to attend...
Database vendors add Google's MapReduce
MapReduce boosts applicability and power
Firms flocking to 802.11n
Take-up of non-ratified standard 'unprecedented' says study
Small Business Server 2008 ready for release
Cougar sighting set for November
CIO News View: Microsoft’s new bits and bytes factory
Des Moines facility points the way forward
CIO News View: Gates to star with Seinfeld
But do ads for tech firms make sense anymore?
Salesforce.com treads fine line with InStranet buy
SaaS king dips into its own marketplace again
VMware changes mind on Microsoft support
Virtualisation giant joins rival's validation programme
A third of Vista PC buyers downgrade to XP
Researcher says XP still preferred by Windows users
The CIO 100
1. Ministry of Defence
It’s little wonder that, with global security high on the agenda, the UK defence budget is set to increase from £29.7 billion in 2004/05 to £33.4bn in 2007/08.
2. Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs
Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has faced a multitude of supplier and management-related IT challenges and the now famous data loss incident of last winter.
3. Royal Bank of Scotland Group
The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), the UK’s second largest banking group, in line with other players in the market, saw its profits rise again this year.
4. BT Group
BT’s IT function has ‘upskilled’ more than 5,000 IT professionals, so that now 3,100 are engaged in customer-facing, revenue-generating work rather than internal IT projects.
5. Department for Work & Pensions
The Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) IT systems may not always have been in the spotlight for all the right reasons, the department headed by Joe Harley has certainly been central to some major changes.
6. Royal Mail Group
With its market now open to competition, the Royal Mail Group still managed to cut 10 per cent from costs, while at the same time absorbing a range of new technologies and systems.
7. Lloyds TSB Group
Lloyds TSB is currently the fifth largest banking group in the UK, operating in England and Wales as Lloyds TSB; and in Scotland as Lloyds TSB Scotland.
8. HBOS
HBOS is the UK’s largest mortgage and savings provider and the number one provider of new investment products.
9. Unilever
Anglo-Dutch consumer goods giant Unilever produces 400 brands in 14 categories of food, home and personal care products.
10. BP
BP is one of the largest integrated oil companies in the world, with an estimated global market share of around 3%of oil and gas production in the major global markets.
Lead article
Organisational Skills to Implement SOA
Cultural issues can damage SOA plans, CIO UK explains how to avoid them
Recent Articles
A balanced relationship with vendors helps
A bit of give and take would help IT vendors and their customers understand each other better, says Andy Hayler
more expert advice»
NHS Records and payroll system is rare tech success story
Acting as a central procurement agency, the NHS has successfully overhauled its management of staff records and payroll. Dr Simon Willcock tells Mark Chillingworth why ESR is a public-sector success story
more features»
Galderma CIO Sean Burke on ERP growing pains
Galderma CIO Sean Burke has been planting the seeds of IT as a strategic resource for eight years, and the crop is about to bloom in the shape of a single-instance ERP
more features»
Randy Mott: overhauling legacy systems takes more than tweaking
When Randy Mott took the plunge and left Dell to join its rival HP, he knew that overhauling legacy systems would take more than just a bit of tweaking
more features»
Unified approach to rapid legal sector growth
Graeme Low of law firm Mills & Reeve explains how IT has enabled law firms to grow rapidly and improve cost control
more features»
Latest articles by top CIO concern
People Leadership > Fiat is alive and kicking thanks in part to tech policy
A recipe for success
Resource Management > High travel prices leading to more web, video conferencing
Flying could become a thing of the past as web and video technology finally takes off
Business Alignment > Business Analysts: A key to success
Make the most of your BA’s, they could open new doors for your enterprise
Managing Change > Social networking stands to benefit businesses
It’s not just Facebook
Compliance > The second age of e-discovery
Good governance – and the law – mandate that companies invest in e-discovery solutions for tracking down messages and files in the event of a probe
Infrastructure Refresh > Essential reading, books every CIO should have
Breaking down the walls
Security > How to embrace millennial’ workers
Generation games
Managing Customers > Watch worker activity to predict software demands
CIOs need to monitor the behaviour of employees to predict software requirements
Managing Budgets > The Customer Experience is Key to the Future for IT Support
Fix rates moved from 21 per cent in 2001 to 60 per cent in 2007
Board Politics > Interim CIOs are on the rise
Guns For Hire

About us
Contact us
RSS
Events
Newsletters
Magazine




Subscribe to CIO's RSS feeds









