Abstract
We often hear anecdotes that suggest the real meaning of the acronym CIO is is over, rather than chief information officer. The premise of the quip is that CIOs' career paths and tenure (or survivability) in their positions may not the same as those of other C-suite executives: the chief executive officer (CEO), the chief financial officer (CFO) and the chief operating officer (COO). Is this truly the case? What evidence is available to assert that CIOs exhibit shorter job tenure than their C-suite executive colleagues? This research explores three alternate theoretical interpretations that compare and contrast reasons why team-building, the turbulence of the business and organizational environment, and the gender of the executive appear to have different impacts on the tenures of the different categories of executives. Our empirical research takes advantage of a new data set acquired during Spring 2009 from the State of California that provides information on C-suite executives from 223 state agencies. The data consist of 504 observations of executive tenure, including their start and finish dates, and the relevant variables for their organizational, market and technological environments that permit us to assess their survivability. To conduct this exploratory analysis of the empirical regularities of public sector executive tenure, we utilize statistical methods from epidemiology and public health. Our results cast doubt on many of the enduring beliefs about public sector CIOs by showing the relative infrequency of their job changes and by showing that job changes are, unlike for other C-suite executives, more closely tied to instances of environmental turbulence. In all, this exploratory paper suggests a reexamination of the way that public sector CIOs are viewed relative to other C-suite executives.
Published Version
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