How a CIO Can Wake Up a Slumping IT Organization – Information Week

TechTarget and Informa Tech’s Digital Business Combine.TechTarget and Informa
Together, we power an unparalleled network of 220+ online properties covering 10,000+ granular topics, serving an audience of 50+ million professionals with original, objective content from trusted sources. We help you gain critical insights and make more informed decisions across your business priorities.
A declining IT organization will drag down the entire enterprise. Here’s how a CIO can sound a wake-up call.
October 10, 2025
When an IT team begins to slump, it can be a demoralizing, frustrating experience for CIOs and team leaders. A once vibrant workforce now appears to be stuck in a rut as its performance dwindles, innovation slumps, and morale crashes.
What can a CIO do to reinvigorate a collapsing IT operation? Katherine Hosie, an executive coach at Powerhouse Coaching, said the first step should be understanding the reason for the slump. "Is it burnout and fatigue, disappointment due to past failures or pivots, or are current goals too big, unachievable?" she asked.
Remote work often leads to a slumping IT organization, said Surinder Kahai, an associate professor at Binghamton University's School of Management. "While remote work offers flexibility and reduces unproductive commuting time, it also reduces opportunities for social interaction and connection with colleagues and the organization," he explained.
With remote work, there are fewer opportunities to collaborate on innovative projects, which can bring excitement and joy to a team, Kahai said. "Innovation often happens when you team up with someone quite different from yourself and get the opportunity to bring together diverse ideas and combine them creatively."
Organization flattening — eliminating middle managers to cut costs, reduce red tape, and/or simplify organizational charts — has accelerated in recent years, forcing managers to make do with less, Kahai said. The remaining managers now have more people in their span of control, challenging them to devote the same amount of time to each subordinate as before. "This leads to less communication, recognition, and support from leaders, which results in lower worker engagement."
Related:Human-AI Collaboration Is the New Teamwork. Are We Ready?
Waking up a slumping IT organization requires leadership that invests in workers' growth and makes them feel more valued, Kahai said. "It suggests leadership that makes IT workers excited about their work — leadership with a vision that provides meaning and purpose in what they do."
As IT workers face uncertainty about their future, building a supportive environment where others understand their challenges and are willing to lend a hand when needed is also critical. "No employee is immune from work-related uncertainty and stress," Kahai said. "Workers benefit from role models who persist in their efforts and show resilience despite uncertainty and stress in their lives."
As soon as a slump becomes evident, alert your team leaders, Hosie suggested. "Let them know you've observed a slump in their team and that your motive is to help them," she advised. Sharing your motive will decrease anxiety and confusion.
Related:InformationWeek Podcast: Realigning After a Tech Disruption
The next step should be conducting a thorough tech audit, advised Steve Grant, AI search strategist and founder at Figment. "You'll need to map where your workflow is sagging and flag any inefficiencies in the system that slow things down," he said. "If your fixes are targeted and measurable, momentum will build quickly, because your teams will see progress in areas that have likely long frustrated them."
The next logical step, Grant said, is to include the team in setting goals and choosing priorities. "These are the people using your system every day, so involving them directly builds a sense of ownership, turning vague instructions into common goals," he stated. "This change will drive engagement and accountability and make employees more invested in outcomes."
Team leaders and members typically prefer the solutions they develop themselves, Hosie said. "Work with your teams and help them find their own answers." Yet this may take a lot of restraint, she warned. "Encourage their ideas, even if they aren't perfect and then verify that their ideas are achievable.
Every solution must have a single, self-selected, owner, Hosie said. "People take action when they know they're the directly responsible individual," she noted. Roll this concept into future team meetings and one-on-ones. "It's now on you to ensure they follow through."
Related:Have Your Say: InformationWeek Seeks Your Input on This Survey
An intelligent and supportive HR business partner can be a tremendous resource, Hosie said. "They've likely seen these challenges before and can share ideas and even facilitate possible solutions." Never waste a crisis, she advised. "It's always an opportunity to grow and become stronger as a team."
Still, CIOs face a tough job — making sure that the trains run on time while also providing direction that's well integrated with business strategy. "Both technical and business acumen are critical," Kahai said.
The truly difficult part, Kahai said, is that CIOs are facing an uphill battle, persuading both senior executives and other decision-makers on hiring and workforce planning in a world where AI is increasingly viewed as a panacea to slumping performance and productivity.
John Edwards
Technology Journalist & Author
John Edwards is a veteran business technology journalist. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and numerous business and technology publications, including Computerworld, CFO Magazine, IBM Data Management Magazine, RFID Journal, and Electronic Design. He has also written columns for The Economist's Business Intelligence Unit and PricewaterhouseCoopers' Communications Direct. John has authored several books on business technology topics. His work began appearing online as early as 1983. Throughout the 1980s and 90s, he wrote daily news and feature articles for both the CompuServe and Prodigy online services. His "Behind the Screens" commentaries made him the world's first known professional blogger.
The State of Cyber Resilience: When the Wolf is at the Door
2025 InformationWeek State of DevOps Report: On the Job Market, DevOps Skills Are Now a ‘Must-Have’
Forrester – Total Economic Impact of Carbon Black
Cyber Resilience
The State of IGA in 2025: Key Findings from an Exclusive Survey
Perfecting IT Automation in 2025: A Roadmap for CIOs
The Pathway to GenAI Competitive Advantage
Verified Trust: The Identity Imperative for a Workforce Under AI Threat
EDB Postgres® AI: Sovereign Data and AI Factory
EDB Postgres® AI
The automation and agility of cloud services, with the flexibility to deploy anywhere: public cloud, hybrid cloud, and bare metal
EDB Postgres® AI: Hybrid Management
Engineering the Future
Data Center Capacity Planning: What to Look for in a Vendor
You May Also Like
Oct 2, 2025
Your Enterprise Cyber Risk Assessment
How IT Leaders Can Create and Sustain a Culture of IT Innovation
Rewriting the Admin Playbook: Smarter Google Workspace Management for 2026
The CIO’s Guide to AI Security
IT Automation in 2026: It Isn’t ALL About AI (Just Mostly)
October 13-17 Dubai World Trade Centre
Verified Trust: The Identity Imperative for a Workforce Under AI Threat
EDB Postgres® AI: Sovereign Data and AI Factory
EDB Postgres® AI
The automation and agility of cloud services, with the flexibility to deploy anywhere: public cloud, hybrid cloud, and bare metal
EDB Postgres® AI: Hybrid Management
Engineering the Future
Data Center Capacity Planning: What to Look for in a Vendor
Oct 23, 2025 | Online
The State of Cyber Resilience: When the Wolf is at the Door
2025 InformationWeek State of DevOps Report: On the Job Market, DevOps Skills Are Now a ‘Must-Have’
Forrester – Total Economic Impact of Carbon Black
Cyber Resilience
The State of IGA in 2025: Key Findings from an Exclusive Survey
Perfecting IT Automation in 2025: A Roadmap for CIOs
The Pathway to GenAI Competitive Advantage
Early Bird Rates Expire 9/26!
Copyright © 2025 TechTarget, Inc. d/b/a Informa TechTarget. This website is owned and operated by Informa TechTarget, part of a global network that informs, influences and connects the world’s technology buyers and sellers. All copyright resides with them. Informa PLC’s registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. Registered in England and Wales. TechTarget, Inc.’s registered office is 275 Grove St. Newton, MA 02466.

source
This is a newsfeed from leading technology publications. No additional editorial review has been performed before posting.

Continue Your AI Leadership Journey

Turn insight into action with CDO TIMES.

CDO TIMES helps executives move from AI awareness to AI execution through practical frameworks, tools, executive research, and advisory support.

Explore the Frameworks

Continue with Enterprise AI 2030, HI + AI = ECI, AI Governance, and executive playbooks.

Explore Enterprise AI 2030 →

Use the Free Tools

Assess readiness, estimate AI ROI, model AI costs, and prioritize AI initiatives.

Open Executive Tools →

Read the Book

Explore the HI + AI = ECI leadership model in The AI-Ready Leader.

Order The AI-Ready Leader →

Go deeper with CDO TIMES Pro.

Unlock premium research, executive playbooks, templates, advanced tools, and member-only briefings.

Join CDO TIMES Pro

Need executive help?

Explore advisory, workshops, fractional CIO/CDO/CISO/CAIO support, and AI operating model design.

Explore Advisory →

Attend executive events

Join leadership forums, executive dinners, webinars, and strategic AI briefings.

View Events →

Build AI capability

Use CDO TIMES Academy for executive learning, AI leadership development, and implementation training.

Explore Academy →

Leave a Reply