How common is this scenario?:  The CIO needs to improve the
quality and credibility of the firm’s IT implementations, but since
he lacks the money and resources he believes would be needed,
he’s looking for a less expensive way to boost IT’s performance.

If he asked you, what would you recommend?  Beats me as well,
but Michael Schrage, co-director of MIT’s Media Lab and a monthly
columnist for CIO magazine, has a snappy
comeback
:  Fire the right person. 

And don’t kid
yourself that you don’t know who that is:  It’s the person
who’s the consistent obstacle to bringing projects in on time,
who’s the prima donna, who may be a brilliant coder but who views
his peers as jerks. 

Are there reasons to keep that person?  There always are.  Firing
someone is, we hasten to add, a drastic measure not to be undertaken
without contemplating the potential fallout to morale, not to mention
the pain inflicted on the fire-ee. 

But a "strategic" firing
can deliver a powerful message, and for sheer thriftiness among competing tactics it can’t
be beat.  Give it some thought.

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