New professional body to represent IT execs

Nov 28, 2006 12:33 PM
Filed under Training & Development

A new professional body, the CIO Institute of Australia, has launched to promote the professional development, training and certification, business alignment and executive development of senior IT executives.

A new professional body, the CIO Institute of Australia, has launched to promote the professional development, training and certification, business alignment and executive development of senior IT executives.

The body launches its Victoria chapter today, with Sydney to follow on 30 November.

Professor Michael Vitale, formerly dean of the Australian Graduate School of Management has accepted nomination to the Institute's Board of Governors, which will oversee the integrity and accountability of the CIO Institute’s ongoing operations.

Members of the inaugural working committees include Jurek Kubiena, the former CIO of NAB retail financial services in Australia, Greg Embleton, former CIO of Sensis, John Lovell, current CIO of the Parliament of Victoria, Frank O’Connor, CIO Group Executive Corporate Services of Australian Unity and Jeff Smith, Telstra’s former CIO.

CIO Institute executive director, Danny Davis, said the new professional organisation would provide IT executives the tools, environment and learning experiences needed to achieve effective operational control and extend executive management skills.

“It is imperative that today’s CIO understands the tightening connection between enterprise and technology priorities. CIOs need to take on an enabling role and work ‘in’ the business by concentrating on executing and improving the business's current capabilities,” he said in a statement.
 
Follow us on Facebook and Twitter
 
New professional body to represent IT execs
 
 
 
 
 
Top Stories
Five companies courting controversy this week
For the week ending May 18, CRN looks at five companies making headlines for the wrong reasons.
 
HP announces mass lay-offs
Over 10 percent of global workforce to go.
 
Inside Acer's Australian computer facility
Local HQ where desktops and laptops are repaired, tested and assembled.
 
Sign up to receive CRN email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...
Latest Comments
Polls
Will Windows 8 snatch Microsoft a large chunk of the tablet market?

   |   View results
Yes
  39%
 
No
  61%
TOTAL VOTES: 54

Vote now
CRN Magazine

Issue: 303 | May

CRN Magazine looks in-depth at the emerging issues and developments for the channel, and provides insight, analysis and strategic information to help resellers better run their businesses.