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Few other departments face as much pressure as the IT team. After all, the entire company’s business operations and infrastructure isn’t reliant on marketing. It’s up to the IT department to be proactive and stop technological difficulties before they happen, with contingency plans in place just in case disaster strikes. From the unexpected, like cyberattacks, to chronic talent retention issues, here are the top eight CIO challenges in IT.
A majority of CIOs face steep competition for tech talent and fear being able to hold on to the workers they have. Even with an influx of IT professionals from three million today to an expected six million by 2032, companies can’t afford high turnover and the cost of training new employees.
Job dissatisfaction, poor work-life balance, few opportunities for advancement, and compensation are why IT professionals may leave a role. These factors, plus burnout from a demanding job, place a financial strain on organizations.
While it may be impossible to prevent turnover, as proven by younger workers in the Big Quit of 2023, one way to help minimize it is to augment internal IT teams with external support. Additional support can be a proactive measure to prevent turnover or used to mitigate its impact on remaining team members when it does happen. Supplemental IT support tech companies allow employees to offload tasks that create dissatisfaction with their role and lower morale.
Companies must spend a little money augmenting their current IT teams or stand to lose a lot more due to turnover.
IT teams are faced with supporting many more remote employees following the COVID-19 pandemic. CIOs learned to navigate sudden, unprecedented challenges and adapt to a new way of working. COVID-19 fast-tracked the remote workplace movement and intensified tech industry workloads already coping with an uptick in cybercrime and ongoing evolutions in the technology industry, including artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things.
IT workers reported unsustainable stress levels due to the demands of supporting an increasingly distributed workforce.
Supplemental support on an ongoing basis allows companies to respond promptly to demand.
Investing in scalable supplemental IT support can help fill in the gaps for IT teams regardless of how IT needs ebb and flow for an organization.
In an industry that changes as quickly as information technology, it’s easy for established IT workers to fall behind in skill development, restricting their ability to advance in their careers. A lack of advancement opportunities can lead to a higher turnover rate as employees go to a company that promises career advancement and all of the perks that come with it.
The result?
Companies lose valuable employees, creating even more skill gaps within IT teams. Given the rapid development of digital technologies, plan for those inevitable skill gaps and provide employees with opportunities to fill them. You’ll avoid more problems and expenses down the road.
It’s essential to fill skill gaps within your department. The best way to do that is to provide upskilling opportunities to those interested in advancement and new skills. While that is underway, supplemental IT services maintain day-to-day operations. While they can certainly be a long-term solution to the issue (and often are), utilizing these external IT professionals in the short term while employees grow into a new role can minimize the risks of widening those gaps due to employees leaving for organizations that can offer what yours isn’t.
Pre-COVID, a robust IT budget was an unnecessary luxury in a strong economy and companies could get by on legacy systems. Today, it is a strategic necessity for the outlook of the organization. Companies are increasing their IT budgets by an average of 5%, according to consulting firm Avasant. When organizations fail to keep up with technological advancements, the result is a dangerous and costly decrease in revenue, a drop in morale, and a rise in turnover.
While it may seem counterintuitive to spend money on supplemental IT support to save money, consider this example:
A company only has a few computer desktop support professionals, systems, and network engineers. These employees are on-call to respond to emergencies or security breaches. Shuttling personnel from site to site has the upfront costs of travel, hotel fare, and other related expenses, in addition to the time it takes to deploy that specialist. These specialists may require a higher rate to compensate for on-call services and pose a higher risk of turnover due to stress.
Local, on-demand and on-site IT support can resolve emergencies and provide data protection in the event of a breach. Ultimately, on-site support is a cost-efficient solution that has benefits beyond mitigating network instability and data loss.
On the surface, opaque job roles may seem advantageous. With small organizations, this may even be standard due to the startup “everyone does a little of everything” mindset.
For larger organizations, this shouldn’t apply. Employees expect clear boundaries and expectations with their role, a title that reflects their responsibilities, and competitive compensation. Failure to provide job clarity again risks finding and keeping talent.
CIOs should take the time to define the responsibilities of every role in their IT team. IT leaders should follow a multi-step process:
Effective leaders understand that they must remain agile and adaptable to the needs of their teams. In switching to a servant leadership model, “The days of command and control and leading from a position of authority were over,” writes author Chris Cebollero.
Embracing change and clear and concise communication helps organizations achieve their desired results.
Just as leaders should help their team upskill to fill in skill gaps, managers should also identify gaps in their own leadership skills. From the C suite to site managers, each has responsibilities to the organization’s IT infrastructure, software, applications, and resources.
Burnout is a phrase that is instantly recognizable across all industries and at every level. The World Health Organization defines burnout as an occupational phenomenon that results from “chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed.”
As IT departments continue to deal with the aftermath of the pandemic, CIO challenges include employee burnout and low morale. Exhausted, unhappy, and unmotivated workers can quickly equal a loss in revenue.
Some factors impact employee burnout and morale outside of an IT manager’s control. However, one solution within a manager’s power is utilizing supplemental IT services. Techmate is an example of a provider that can provide supplemental help to overstressed, understaffed IT teams on a short- or long-term basis.
Lastly, cybersecurity is an ever-present and looming concern for IT leaders and a constantly advancing challenge for IT teams. Sensitive information can be shared over numerous devices and networks, providing employees and customers alike unprecedented access to information and services. It also offers ample opportunity for those with malicious intent.
With different legislation on a regional, national, and global level, it can be difficult for companies to remain compliant at all times, in all places. Companies with operations in Europe, for example, must adhere to the privacy rules of the GDPR or risk fines of up to 20 million euros.
Because there is numerous legislation on a global, national, and even regional level, having IT support tailored to specific regions is essential to safeguarding organizations against costly violations.
Contact Techmate today to learn more about our on-site IT solutions that provide local support from highly-vetted technicians.
Developing a partnership with an on-demand service provider that can adapt to your unique needs and stay up to date with evolving technologies and legislation isn’t only the answer to looming challenges plaguing CIOs today, but it’s the foundation of a long-term relationship that can give companies a competitive edge.