Peers and SuperiorsHow CIOs Can Negotiate CEO-like PayBy Renee Oricchio
The average CIO makes about $200,000 a year, depending on the size of the company. At larger enterprises, it's more like $500,000 a year. And then there's Randy Mott of Hewlett Packard, Jeff Fox from AllTell, Bob Willett from Best Buy, and Larry Kittelberger of Honeywell. Their annual salaries are more like $10 million, $9 million, $8.5 million and $6 million, respectively. Clearly, there is an emerging elite class of CIOs pulling down major league baseball-like paychecks. According to this year's annual survey of CIO salaries just released by Baseline magazine, it's a club that is growing. There were 39 millionaire CIOs on this year's list, up from 21 the year before. And that list is not all-inclusive, but just the results from surveying 1,000 publicly traded companies. No doubt many a CIO is wondering how to get on that list. Laurie Orlov, a principal analyst from Forrester Research, says it's a combination of being in the right place at the right time with a proven track record. "The ideal condition would be for the new CIO placed in the wake of a huge IT failure or just before a major IT deployment," says Orlov. For those CIOs who want to get serious about making the big bucks, Orlov offers the following:
How CIOs stack up against other C-level executives Eric Sigurdson, CIO Practice Leader at Russell Reynolds Associates, an executive recruitment firm, describes CIOs as actually somewhere in the middle of the pack. "The average CIO makes more than the head of human resources and perhaps more than the general counsel," says Sigurdson. "On average, however, they make less than the CFO, less than the president of the business, and probably less than the CMO." Sigurdson points out that it's still a relatively new C-level position in corporate America. "The first time our company placed a CIO was around 1990, 1991," he says. "The title didn't exist before then. If you go back 10 years before that, the closest thing to a CIO was the director of data processing." The times they are a-changing
One thing is clear: IT departments have come a long way over the past 25 years, when it was better known as data processing. "IT now has a huge impact on the company bottom line," says Sigurdson. "It's a big line item expense. Many companies spend more on IT than on their ad budgets or healthcare. For that reason, IT gets a vote, and there will always be a need for world class CIOs." Renee Oricchio is a freelance writer in Norwalk, Conn. For the past 20 years, she has been writing and producing news segments about technology and business for CNN, MSNBC, Ziff-Davis, CNET, and a variety of Silicon Valley-based local news outlets. |
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"Compensation is the spoils, and the spoils are based on the track record of success." --Eric Sigurdson, CIO Practice Leader, Russell Reynolds Associates Podcast Audio ContentCIO Strategy Center is now available in audio format. This week's feature topic is: Risks of Wireless EmailPlaytime: 8 min 23 sec |