CIO Values: Michael Fuqua, Senior VP, Global IS, Global Crossing

Believe in and demonstrate IT as a business enabler and don't avoid risks.

InformationWeek Staff, Contributor

May 1, 2008

3 Min Read

Career Track

Michael FuquaSenior VP, Global ISGlobal Crossing

How long at current company: 14 years

Career accomplishment I'm most proud of: Working with a team that has transformed the IT application and operations structures at Global Crossing from a cost-containment shop to a business strategic enabler. More rewarding, we accomplished this while having a direct impact on the success of the business transforming itself from Chapter 11 to a growth company.

Most important career influencer: My father taught me to lead by example, find the best in people, and focus them on how to have an impact. He was a Detroit city firefighter who moved up to chief, managing the busiest areas, and he turned "trouble" personnel into some of the most decorated.

Decision I wish I could do over: I guess--no, I know--I've made many mistakes over the years. However, I typically don't dwell on whether a wrong decision can be done over, but instead attempt to learn and look forward.

Vision

The next big thing for my business will be ... automation of IP services, as part of which customers will have control and, when needed, real-time access to consultative expertise via unified communications tools.

Best advice for future CIOs: Believe in and demonstrate IT as a business enabler and don't avoid risks. Think broadly, taking on the business challenges that help drive the vision and mission success, demonstrating new ways of doing things that directly influence other leaders within the business.

On The Job

IT budget: $60 million

Size of IT team: 310

Top three initiatives:

  • Deliver system initiatives that support the corporation's 15 program priorities

  • Auto-activation of business IP services

  • Improve reliability of our infrastructure from four nines to five nines

How I measure IT effectiveness: We measure contribution to business development priorities in terms of new products, productivity improvements, and efficiency, and we use a scorecard of key IT measurements, including labor contribution to service revenue, system availability, various cost-per-unit areas, and internal customer-support satisfaction.

Tech partners: HP, IBM, Microsoft, Sun

Personal

College/degree: From Wayne State University, a BS in electrical engineering

Favorite sport: College football

Leisure activities I enjoy golf as well as dabbling with electronics.

Last vacation Dakota national parks

If I weren't a CIO, I'd be ... doing product development or R&D.

See what other top tech execs have to say:
CIO Values: What They've Accomplished, Where They're Headed

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