Harvey Nash / KPMG CIO Survey 2019: A Changing Perspective
Harvey Nash / KPMG CIO Survey 2019: A Changing Perspect
Digital leaders tend to be more effective at collaborating with other parts of the business to put technology in the hands of value creators. They also recognize the power of data, and have a relentless focus on speed and agility.
Carried out for over 20 years now, the Harvey Nash / KPMG CIO Survey 2019 is the largest IT leadership survey in the world, with over 3,600 responses from CIOs and technology executives across 108 countries.
The survey provides direct insight into the priorities, strategies and careers of senior technology leaders around the world. In our digital age, it is no surprise to find that more IT leaders are reporting budget increases than at any other time in the last 15 years - but what are they using this for? How are they managing the balance between the huge opportunities that disruptive technologies such as AI bring and the risks of cyber security, data privacy and regulation?
A clear set of Digital Leaders1 are differentiating themselves from the pack and delivering real business results in nearly every measure. We take a closer look at these, finding that, on average, their time to market is better, their customer and employee experience is superior and their operational efficiency is higher. As a result, both revenue growth and profitability are higher too.
Digital Leaders work collaboratively with the business to put technology in the hands of value creators, clearly recognize the power of data and have a relentless focus on speed and agility.
Download the full 2019 CIO Survey report (PDF 1.4 MB)
Other key findings from the survey include:
- Almost half (44%) of organizations expect to change their product / service offering or business model fundamentally in the next three years;
- A third plan to replace more than 20% of roles with AI/automation within 5 years but the majority (69%) believe new job roles will compensate for those lost;
- Almost two-thirds (63%) of organizations now allow `business-managed IT' spend, creating opportunities as well as increased privacy and security risks where the IT team is not involved;
- Skills shortages are at an all-time high with 67% struggling to find the right talent. The top three scarcest skills are big data/analytics, cyber security and AI;
- Fewer CIOs now sit on the board - dropping from 71% to 58% in 2 years but CIO influence remains intact (66% see the role gaining influence compared to 65% in 2018);
- The relentless rise of cyber-crime may be levelling out with 32% experiencing a major cyber attack in the last 2 years (33% last year) and confidence in dealing with the threat appears to be improving;
- Almost half (44%) have large-scale adoption of Cloud and at least one fifth have at least small-scale implementation of IoT, on-demand platforms, RPA and AI;
- First signs of quantum computing - although at a very early stage, 4% have implemented quantum computing to at least some degree.
Read the Executive Summary (PDF 52.2 KB)
View the CIO Survey Infographic (PDF 4.4 MB)
Footnote
1Organizations identified in the survey as being very or extremely effective at using digital technologies to advance their business strategy.
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