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The 360° CIO is here. Most operating models have not caught up

The idea of the “360° CIO” isn’t a future concept—it is already here.

As AI adoption accelerates and technology decisions spread across the business, this tension is becoming more visible—and more consequential.

In my experience and in conversations with other technology leaders, the CIO role now extends well beyond traditional IT boundaries. Today, CIOs are pulled into decisions spanning AI strategy, cybersecurity risk, digital platforms, operational resilience and capital allocation. What used to be separate conversations now converge at the CIO.

But while expectations have expanded, most operating models have not kept pace.

What I see across organizations is a consistent tension: CIOs are operating with 360° accountability, but only 180° authority.

We are expected to deliver enterprise outcomes across functions we don’t fully control, with investments we do not fully own, under governance models designed for a different era.

This is not a capability issue—it is a structural one.

This has important implications for how CEOs and CFOs hire and position the CIO. Many organizations now expect the role to deliver enterprise outcomes across AI, data, risk and transformation—but without redesigning the operating model around that expectation. They want integration at scale, while authority, governance and decision rights remain fragmented. The real gap is not leadership capability. It is the gap between what the role is expected to deliver and what the organization is actually designed to support.

Where this shows up in practice

This dynamic does not show up in strategy presentations. It shows up in how decisions get made day to day.

I’ve seen a business unit move forward with an AI tool to improve customer engagement while operations pilots automation with a different vendor and finance explores its own analytics platform. Each decision makes sense on its own. No one is doing anything wrong.

But over time, these decisions create fragmentation—different tools, data assumptions and ways of working.

In larger enterprises, this often results in parallel investments optimized locally but difficult to scale collectively. By the time integration becomes a priority, the organization is already managing overlapping platforms, inconsistent data definitions and competing architectures.

At that point, the expectation shifts to the CIO to connect the data, rationalize the tools, manage risk and scale it across the enterprise.

By then, the complexity is already embedded.

This is what 360° accountability–180° authority looks like in practice: Being responsible for outcomes shaped by decisions made across the enterprise.     

This challenge is becoming more visible as organizations scale digital and AI initiatives. Gartner reports that only 48% of digital initiatives meet or exceed business outcome targets, and that only about 35% of AI capabilities are being built within IT, with the rest emerging across business functions. McKinsey’s 2025 technology research similarly shows that emerging technologies move from experimentation to piloting to scaling, with full enterprise integration occurring only at the most mature stage. The challenge is no longer generating ideas or pilots. It is integrating and scaling them across the enterprise.

Why the mismatch persists

The problem is not whether the role has changed. It has. The problem is that many operating models still assume technology can be managed within a single function.

In my work, I’ve seen the role shift from managing systems to shaping how the enterprise operates. Today, it sits at the intersection of how decisions are made through data and AI, how risk is understood and managed, how technology investments are prioritized and how execution actually happens across functions.

In effect, the CIO is now operating as an enterprise integrator.

But most organizations are still structured as if technology can be managed within a single function. Budgets are distributed, decision rights are fragmented and governance models are often tied to projects rather than products or platforms.

That mismatch is where friction begins.

From my research on CIO leadership, one pattern stands out clearly: Success is increasingly tied not just to technical expertise but to the ability to operate across boundaries – aligning stakeholders, navigating timing and building coalitions across the enterprise. The role is less about control and more about coordination.

That shift is significant, and it’s still unfolding.

How CIOs are adapting in real time

The most effective CIOs I’ve worked with or observed are not trying to take control of everything. They are adapting how they operate within the system.

One of the biggest shifts is getting involved earlier in decisions. Not to slow things down, but to shape direction before fragmentation sets in. In practice, this often means building informal alignment with business leaders before initiatives become fully defined.

There is also a noticeable shift toward integration over ownership. Instead of asking who owns a system or a dataset, the more useful question becomes: How does this connect? How does it fit into the broader architecture, the data model and the operating processes of the enterprise?

Another critical capability is translation. Much of the CIO’s role today involves translating between business priorities and technical implications, between speed and risk and between local optimization and enterprise impact. This is not a one-time activity—it’s continuous.

I have also seen strong CIOs make trade-offs more visible. Particularly with AI and emerging technologies, not everything needs to scale, and not everything should.

And perhaps most importantly, leadership increasingly happens through alignment rather than authority. In most organizations, formal authority does not match enterprise expectations. Progress depends on the ability to influence across functions, not just within them.

What you can do now

For CIOs—and for the CEOs and CFOs who work closely with them—the challenge is structural, but there are practical steps that can make an immediate difference.

Start by mapping where decisions are actually happening. Not based on the organizational chart, but in reality. Where are AI investments being approved? Where are data platforms being selected? Where are technology decisions being made outside of IT?

From there, create lightweight alignment points. This does not require a full governance redesign. Even regular cross-functional check-ins on major initiatives can surface misalignment early and prevent downstream rework.

It is also helpful to define a small set of enterprise guardrails. These might include data standards, security expectations or platform principles. The goal is not to slow innovation but to reduce fragmentation as initiatives scale.

Another practical shift is to bring integration thinking earlier into the process. The earlier integration is considered, the less complexity needs to be unwound later. This is especially important in AI, where early decisions around data and models can have long-term implications.

Finally, be explicit about trade-offs. Speed versus scale. Innovation versus risk. Local optimization versus enterprise value. These are not just technical decisions—they are leadership decisions.

The real risk is misalignment, not capability

There is no shortage of capable CIOs.

In many cases, the challenge is not the capability of the CIO, it is how the organization is structured around the role.

When expectations expand without corresponding alignment, the symptoms are familiar. AI efforts scale unevenly. Technology investments multiply without coherence. Risk is managed inconsistently. Transformation slows despite strong leadership.

Not because people are not capable, but because the system is not fully aligned.

This pattern is consistent with broader industry research showing that many digital initiatives still fall short of their intended business outcomes.

The issue is not vision. It is integration.

Closing the gap

The 360° CIO is already operating inside the enterprise.

The question is whether the organization is evolving with the role.

That evolution requires more than redefining responsibilities. It requires aligning how decisions are made, how investments are governed and how accountability is shared across the business.

It also means recognizing the CIO not just as a functional leader, but as a central integrator of strategy, technology and execution.

Until the gap between 360° accountability and 180° authority is addressed, organizations will continue to experience unnecessary friction in transformation.

Not because the ambition is not there, but because the organization has not yet caught up to what it now expects from the role.

For CEOs and CFOs, that means the CIO’s success increasingly depends not just on who is hired, but on how intentionally the role is designed.

This article is published as part of the Foundry Expert Contributor Network.
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Category: NewsMay 11, 2026
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