# **ADR Playbook for Chief Technology Officer (CTO)** --- ## **Purpose** This playbook supports the Annual Development Review (ADR) process for the **Chief Technology Officer (CTO)**. It enables structured, fair, and forward-looking evaluations across technical vision, delivery excellence, team leadership, and business alignment. --- ## **1. Role Overview** The CTO is accountable for: - Setting and communicating the **technology vision** - Ensuring **execution quality, scalability**, and **innovation** - Building and mentoring a **high-performing technical organization** - Aligning technology with **business objectives** - Managing and modernizing **tooling, platforms**, and **DevEx** - Creating strategic leverage through effective use of **time, talent, and resources** --- ## **2. Evaluation Categories & Guidance** Each category includes a definition, what good looks like, and example behaviors. --- ### **2.1 Technology Vision & Strategy** **Definition**: Defines and communicates a compelling technology direction aligned with company goals. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Translates business goals into a scalable architecture vision. Builds buy-in across teams and execs. | | **Strong** | Clear technology roadmap linked to priorities. Drives cross-functional alignment. | | **Developing** | Good local execution, but vision lacks clarity or long-term direction. | | **Needs Improvement** | No clear technology strategy or it frequently shifts. Misaligned with business. | --- ### **2.2 Execution Leadership & Operational Excellence** **Definition**: Drives results through delivery cadence, quality, cost management, and risk awareness. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Launches complex initiatives on time. Optimizes org for fast, safe delivery. | | **Strong** | Tracks delivery metrics, resolves blockers, meets reliability expectations. | | **Developing** | Execution is inconsistent. Delivery misses are common. | | **Needs Improvement** | No delivery rhythm. High incidents or delays without improvement. | --- ### **2.3 Product & Business Partnership** **Definition**: Collaborates with product and go-to-market teams to align roadmaps and outcomes. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Proactively drives strategy sessions, co-owns metrics with product/sales. | | **Strong** | Operates as a strategic partner, not just technical owner. | | **Developing** | Involved, but relationship or alignment is passive or reactive. | | **Needs Improvement** | Tech roadmap operates in silo; disconnect with business stakeholders. | --- ### **2.4 Talent Development & Org Design** **Definition**: Builds an inclusive, scalable, and high-performing technology organization. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Coaches future CTOs. Scales hiring playbook, succession plans, diversity practices. | | **Strong** | Hires well, runs structured performance and growth processes. | | **Developing** | Good intentions but inconsistent feedback loops, slow org evolution. | | **Needs Improvement** | Struggles with hiring, retention, or team health. Lacks leadership bench. | --- ### **2.5 Innovation & R&D Enablement** **Definition**: Enables technical experimentation, modernization, and platform thinking. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Systematically funds innovation. Evangelizes platform leverage. | | **Strong** | Supports innovation culture. Keeps stack and skills current. | | **Developing** | Some technical curiosity, but no space for innovation. | | **Needs Improvement** | No innovation space. Architecture drifts or stagnates. | --- ### **2.6 Security, Risk & Governance** **Definition**: Proactively protects systems, data, users, and regulatory posture. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Embeds security into culture, automates risk mitigation. | | **Strong** | Meets compliance, manages access, prioritizes security debt. | | **Developing** | Some processes in place, but often reactive. | | **Needs Improvement** | Security gaps present; risks are unknown or ignored. | --- ### **2.7 Stakeholder & Board Communication** **Definition**: Provides clarity and confidence to executive peers, board, and investors. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Frames updates in business terms. Presents clearly at board level. | | **Strong** | Transparent, concise, and collaborative communicator. | | **Developing** | Shares updates but lacks clarity or consistency. | | **Needs Improvement** | Avoids communication. Others are unclear about strategy or issues. | --- ### **2.8 Critical Thinking & Strategic Decision-Making** **Definition**: Makes reasoned, bold, and business-informed technical decisions. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Proactively addresses long-term risk and trade-offs. Encourages debate. | | **Strong** | Considers multiple options, engages key voices, and owns decisions. | | **Developing** | Makes ad hoc calls, slow to respond to emerging complexity. | | **Needs Improvement** | Decisions lack logic, data, or follow-through. Anchored in past habits. | --- ### **2.9 Learning, Reflection & Executive Growth** **Definition**: Grows leadership capacity through feedback, mentorship, and learning. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Models curiosity, reads widely, mentors exec peers. | | **Strong** | Applies coaching, reflects with humility. | | **Developing** | Interested in feedback but lacks consistent integration. | | **Needs Improvement** | Resistant to feedback or unaware of blind spots. | --- ### **2.10 Tooling & Developer Enablement** **Definition**: Builds systems, platforms, and tooling that enable engineering velocity and happiness. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Developer experience is a priority; measures and improves DevEx. | | **Strong** | Invests in CI/CD, observability, testing, and internal tooling. | | **Developing** | Tooling initiatives exist but lack coordination or impact. | | **Needs Improvement** | Teams are slowed down by fragile, under-resourced infrastructure. | --- ### **2.11 Time & Focus Management** **Definition**: Applies energy to high-leverage work, delegates effectively, and focuses on impact. | Rating | Example Behaviors | |--------|-------------------| | **Excelling** | Spends time on vision, people, and leverage. Models priority ruthlessness. | | **Strong** | Delegates operationally; spends time where it matters. | | **Developing** | Struggles to shift from IC or firefighting to strategic work. | | **Needs Improvement** | Wastes time on low-leverage work; team lacks clarity. | --- ### **2.12 Free Comments** Use this section to note: - Board or stakeholder feedback - Strategic impact beyond formal categories - Culture and visibility contributions - Aspirations and long-term influence --- ## **3. Best Practices for Reviewers (CEO, Board, or Exec Peers)** ✔ Collect feedback from peers, leadership team, and senior engineers ✔ Balance strategic impact with execution quality ✔ Focus on leverage: team health, delegation, and long-term bets ✔ Use business metrics alongside technical maturity ✔ Co-create a development plan for 6–12 months --- ## **4. After the Review** - Finalize written feedback - Discuss development goals and upcoming challenges - Review performance incentives and role evolution - Schedule next leadership reflection (quarterly or biannually) --- This playbook helps ensure CTO evaluations support high-impact leadership across **Technology, Tooling, Team, and Time**, while also encouraging growth, clarity, and cross-functional partnership. ```