December 2019CIOAPPLICATIONS.COM9What are the strategic points that you go by to steer the company forward?At any office or in any public, private, or nonprofit organization, you need a seat at the table. In the past, IT was always looked upon as a utility company, "as long as things are working, one can access their stuff and as long as they can access it remotely and the internet is working."It is when something goes wrong that they want to know why it's not working. This is not the right approach. Being an internal partner to the business is the right solution. At our office we are fortunate, because the District attorney, the assistant District attorney and the rest of the staff believes in IT. I always promote that IT is the propeller of the business. You can build a big boat, but if your propellers don't work, then the boat is not going anywhere. So as small as the propellers are to the boat, they are the ones who are moving the business. This is something we always promote; we are partners of the business and not just a utility company or a support team. We must make the decision based on our business needs rather than what IT thinks is right. For example, there are certain security capabilities that we want to acquire and apply but before we bring them in and start applying them, we sit down with the business and talk about it. We look at that fine balance that is hard to achieve in most offices, security and productivity So, on our side we understand the business because we need to know the business inside out in order to serve it as an IT division.How do you see the evolution a few years from now with regard to disruptions and transformations within the arena?When we look at the history of policing or of law enforcement from the old ages, crime has always been around,but it has evolved to be what it is right now, and we are just adjusting the ways we do business to fight the evolving cybercrimes. For example, cybercrime exceeds regular crime by far. You need to adjust for this by bringing in more professionals that are both legally and IT educated. We have that kind of capability in our office. Many people think crime is physical but nowadays those criminals are not doing it because it endangers their existence. So, they are doing it from the comfort of a café, or their house and we need to adjust the way we fight and prosecute it. This is one of the things that we always work on. But executing this is a challenge because we don't know whether to bring in officers or attorneys and have them study information technology or take information technology engineers and train them on law enforcement. This is a major concern. We need to come up with a hybrid of those in order to face the rising number of cybercrimes committed. Using analytics is another method to face such challenges, as it helps to predict efficiently as to what can happen in the future based on the things that have happened in the past. This is another thing I can see a lot of law enforcement agencies using on regular basis. What would be the single most important piece of advice that you could impart to your colleagues to excel in this space?The role of the CIO remains the same while the environment keeps changing. I came from a for-profit and scientific environment to a legal environment. So the first thing a CIO needs to do is to understand the business so that you can serve the business right. The second advice would be to stay humble and that will bring you a lot of success. Promote leadership within your teams; let them innovate and come to you with ideas. Also,adopt ideas from the business side, don't shut them down as shadow IT projects, let them come to you, let them bring their ideas and then implement them such that everybody succeeds. Collaboration is the key. Always try to be partners of the business and not just a utility company or a support team
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