+ Hospital-based Versus Freestanding Outpatient Imaging Services [PDF]
+ Cost Comparison: Hospital-based Versus Freestanding Outpatient Imaging Services [PDF]
+ Radiology-group Financial Performance [PDF]
+ Outpatient Imaging Utilization Trends [PDF]
+ The Radiology Staffing Market, Temporary and Permanent [PDF]
+ 2011’s Top 20 Imaging-center Chains: Second Annual Report
+ Productivity Pressure: IT Unlocks New Radiologist and Referrer Capabilities
+ New Payment Models and the Radiology Practice
+ Value-based Purchasing: From Theory to Practice
+ Hudson Reporter: Why Prime Healthcare Services Backed Out of N.J. Christ Hospital Deal
+ Crain’s New York Business: Buyout of Peninsula Hospital Threatened by Creditors
+ Wall Street Journal: Talks on Extending Payroll Tax Cut + SGR Fix Bog Down, Again
+ NPR: Kommen VP for Public Policy Resigns
+ ITG Market Research: 70% of U.S. Hospital Execs Report Better Than Expected Q4 Performance
Radiology efficiency: The leading edge
Smart Practice Decisions Begin with Data Integration Recording
Developing a Comprehensive IT Strategy for the Practice: Roles, Relationships, Resources
Centralized Imaging and Collaboration in Today’s Decentralized Imaging Business
Extreme RIS: Breaking Down Communication Barriers
Advanced Visualization | Next-generation Architectures
RIS to the Rescue | Strategies for Driving Revenue, Productivity and Profitability
Keep Your Hospital Relationships Healthy: Strategies for Every Practice
Most radiology practices have not invited their CIOs onto the executive committee, but a recent surve1 from the Center for CIO Leadership suggests that it may be time to set another place at the table. A practice benefits not only from hiring a well-qualified CIO, but also from empowering that person to be a member of the core executive committee charged with analyzing, automating, innovating, and growing the business.
“How does a CIO have influence over the business? I used to think it was about being asked, or where I reported . . . influence is more about building relationships—having the right conversations, at the right times, with the right people, and grounding those conversations in the realities of the business.”
—Fortune 500 CIO
Overall, the survey, which includes the input of 175 CIOs representing a cross section of industries, indicates that CIOs have made significant progress in the past year in the eyes of senior management, which increasingly recognizes the transformative power of IT and the contributions of the CIO.
Conducted by the IBM Center for CIO Leadership in collaboration with Harvard Business School and the MIT Sloan School of Management Center for Information Systems Research, the survey’s questions probe into the strategic, operational, and creative domains of the corporate universe; in the process, they reveal the core competencies of the most effective CIOs, as well as their primary objectives and perceived shortcomings.
The CIOs who do participate in high-level strategic decision making demonstrate higher levels of IT-enabled business-model innovation; IT-enabled product/service innovation; and shared, centralized infrastructure and services. Those same CIOS also are more likely to have IT employees with the knowledge and skills to communicate effectively in business terms, with systematic collaboration between IT and business managers.
Partnering With Business Lines
While the influence of the CIO clearly has risen with the growing importance of IT, a majority of CIOs report that they struggle to propose and lead tangible transformation initiatives at the business level. Fully 53% say that promoting collaboration between IT and lines of business is their highest priority. Two other objectives are identified as priorities:
The report’s authors highlight the role of external collaboration in business improvement, citing a report that identified business partners and customers as among the top three sources for innovative ideas, far ahead of internal research and development. Only 10% of respondents, however, believe that they are applying IT to this effort to a great extent. Responding CIOs also give themselves room for improvement in the area of using IT to accelerate an organization’s capacity to innovate by launching new products and services and enabling internal collaboration.
CIOs report high use of IT to create competitive advantages for their companies, particularly in improving process efficiency and enhancing the quality of internal information and customer experience.
Figure. CIOs rate leaders in their industry on using IT to create competitive advantage. Reprinted with permission, IBM Corp.Core Competencies
The survey also successfully identifies a list of activities essential to CIOs who want to achieve strategic positions in their organizations, as well as a list of core competencies necessary to get there.
CIOs who report playing strategic roles in their organizations are better at the following activities:
The list of core competencies for strategic CIOs is devoid of technical expertise and strong on interpersonal and collaborative skills: political savvy; influence, leadership and power; relationship management; resourcefulness; strategic planning; doing what it takes; and leading employees.
Nowhere in medicine is the transformative power of IT more evident than here in radiology. Practices that hire skilled CIOs and empower them to participate in strategic planning and growth initiatives gain clear and profound benefits. One of the areas in which CIOs rate themselves poorly was in career management and development. By extending an invitation to the CIO to participate in executive planning, radiology practices can begin to reap the full benefit of their sometimes-sizeable investments.
Reference
1. Center for CIO Leadership. The CIO Profession: Driving Innovation and Competitive Advantage. New York, NY: Center for CIO Leadership; 2007.
2.The CIO Leadership Survey
+ AHRA | The Association for Medical Management
+ American College of Healthcare Executives
+ American College of Radiology
+ NSW Medical Radiation Scientists
+ Radiology Business Management Association
+ Radiology Meaningful Use Site
+ Radiological Society of North America
+ SIIM - The Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine