20 ways to kill your IT career (without knowing it)

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.

CIO

CIO Daily

Jul 18, 2018
Featured Image
INSIDER

How AI will revolutionize DevOps

AI’s self-learning, prediction and automation capabilities will enable accelerated development of more resilient, feature-rich applications. Read More

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn

Your Must-Read Stories

20 ways to kill your IT career (without knowing it)
$29 For Two Etekcity Smart Plugs With Alexa Compatibility - Deal Alert
Why digital transformations are lagging
Digital transformation in food processing? Think automated audits
6 secrets of revenue-generating CIOs
At GM, self-service analytics drives business results

Video/Webcast: NTT DATA

Digital Disruption: Is Your Health Plan Ready for the Age of Amazon?

Consumers have rising expectations for the quality of the experience in their interactions with healthcare organizations, and their choices will be driven by how well you meet those expectations. What steps can your health plan take to bring a customer-obsessed mindset to your member relationships - and how will you measure these results? Read More

Thumbnail Image
INSIDER

20 ways to kill your IT career (without knowing it)

In the fast-paced world of technology, complacency can be a career killer. So too can any number of hidden hazards that quietly put your career on shaky ground — from not knowing your true worth to thinking you’ve finally made it. Read More

Thumbnail Image
DealPost

$29 For Two Etekcity Smart Plugs With Alexa Compatibility - Deal Alert

Turn your appliances on/off remotely from your mobile device, or with your voice via Alexa. Or automate with a schedule. The plug also monitors and helps control energy usage, and the slow drain that occurs even when devices aren't in use. Read More

Thumbnail Image
INSIDER

Why digital transformations are lagging

Executive confidence in digital transformations is waning, thanks to shaky leadership, IT-business disconnect and a failure to stoke true organizational change. Read More

Thumbnail Image
INSIDER

Digital transformation in food processing? Think automated audits

Food processing is still a highly manual industry, but packaging company Sealed Air is helping its customers improve yield and reduce waste with automated audits. Read More

Thumbnail Image
INSIDER

6 secrets of revenue-generating CIOs

Business-minded CIOs are overhauling their strategies and workplace cultures to transform IT into a profit center. Read More

Thumbnail Image
INSIDER

At GM, self-service analytics drives business results

The automotive giant built a predictive analytics platform to fuel insights across its many business lines, including the emerging market for autonomous vehicles. Read More

White Paper: Dell EMC

8 Steps CIOs Must Take To Transform With Artificial Intelligence

Companies across the globe are embracing artificial intelligence (AI) within their organizations - 51% of firms have already implemented or are expanding their implementation of AI. An additional 20% plan to implement AI in the next 12 months. However, to ensure success and mitigate the risks, CIOs must take the lead and engage the lines of business on their AI initiatives, modernize IT, and ultimately drive the AI agenda. Read More

CIO Insider

1. 6 most-dreaded IT projects
2. 14 reasons why software projects fail
3. IT as a product: Rethinking IT service delivery
4. How CIOs can last longer than 4.3 years
5. 8 early warning signs of IT disaster

Editor's Picks

1. 10 BI tools for data visualization
2. 6 ERP trends for 2018
3. New CIO? Your transition playbook in 10 (not-so-easy) steps
4. Reskilling facilitates agile IT in the digital era
5. When diversity training backfires
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Google+

You are currently subscribed to CIO Daily as newsletter@newslettercollector.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

Learn more about INSIDER

Copyright © 2018 CIO, 492 Old Connecticut Path, Framingham, MA 01701

Please do not reply to this message.
To contact someone directly, send an email to newsletters@idg.com.