Shipping CIO
Shipping CIO
com
Information and communication technology (ICT) is the most important technology for shipping companies. IT systems
are complex and over the years the role of the Chief Information Officer (CIO) has evolved to the credible executive
assigned to extract value from the use of technology. ICT in shipping is very much alike other industries but some
notable differences exist.
Employing the best CIO makes a big difference in cost and returns and can accentuate IT to a strategic asset. The
principal factor that impacts technology in a shipping company is the Chief Information Officer.
We, shipping people, often feel that this is a unique industry and that information and communication technology in
shipping is very much different from any other industry. I would generally disagree; tools, challenges and opportunities for
ICT are very common across industries, including shipping. CIO’s in shipping can benefit a lot by observing other
industries. Nevertheless some notable differences may be of great importance for a shipping company:
- Ships are in remote locations, on route. A great effort and money is required to keep in touch, to close the ship to shore
gap.
- Safety is of paramount importance and several systems may be involved in supporting a company with this prime
concern.
- Reporting requirements are increasing dramatically either because of international safety and regulatory requirements
or because shipping companies found their way to international stock markets.
- Currently the level of IT investments is lower in shipping companies than in other sectors.
Although shipping is generally regarded as a conservative industry it recognized early enough that information and
communication technology may be the definite source for a competitive advantage and embraced this technology
sometimes by being the early adopter with the notable and relatively recent example of email networks (BIMCOM 1991).
Complex systems
ICT is currently the most complex technology in such wide use by businesses worldwide. This claim stands with any
variation we may use in the definition of a complex system: ICT systems are by design and function difficult to
understand and verify. There are multiple interactions between many components. ICT systems constantly evolve and
unfold over time. The fact that vessels are spread around the world is adding up to the complexity. Especially in shipping
the complexity of information technology systems is becoming a critical factor since more business areas and more
people depend on such systems.
The main forces influencing the CIO role are: Applications portfolio that is ever expanding to more operations and people
who are impacted by IT. The overall atttitude of business executives that agree on the strategic application of IT and
increase the available resources (money and people). IT suppliers that are offering a rapidly expanding range of
technological solutions and services in increasing quality levels.
The CIO role has evolved in tandem with the following major technological periods: Mainframe era, distributed (PC) era,
Web-based era. Each of these phases armed the CIO with maturity and credibility.
The future of ‘the CIO role will be largely shaped by new business models of the IT industry changing the nature
of computing to utility (i.e. on-demand computing). Under such models computing is seen as a "utility" that users pay to
access on a pay-as-you-use basis, just as is the case with electricity, gas, telecommunications and water.
http://akereon.com Powered by Joomla! Generated: 17 March, 2013, 18:14
akereon.com
Shipping is a cyclical industry with relatively high degree of risk that experiences the volatility of international trade.
Currently information technology for shipping companies is in the ferment era with numerous offerings and companies
investing increasingly more effort and money.
IT can be the enabling technology that will allow shipping companies to scale their services in good and bad times
without giving up anything from their wisdom and products portfolio. During the trough the shipping CIO will be
instrumental in safeguarding the company’s knowledgebase in technology, to keep things going and maintain
readiness for the next peak.
The foundation of IT is the corporate strategy that defines the firm’s key competencies and how the company will
deliver them to customers.
The development of IT architecture involves converting the corporate strategy into a technology plan. This will define the
key capabilities required from technology, responsibilities, where data will be located and how it will be accessed; what is
company wide and what local.
Infrastructure, such as equipment, network, data center.
Systems applications, such as enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems.
Organizational processes, such as supply chain integration, customer and company linkages, leveraging company
learning and experience.
The 5 layers of IT strategy are glued together with partnerships of the IT department with the senior management,
vendors, line management and vessels.
Charis Nassis