Caterpillar Inc. is marking its 100th anniversary this year. The company is a global leader in construction and mining equipment, off-highway diesel and natural gas engines, diesel-electric locomotives, and industrial gas turbines. With nearly $65 billion in annual revenue and more than four million pieces of equipment operating worldwide, Caterpillar’s reach is vast and its mission deeply rooted in building a better, more sustainable world.
Jamie Engstrom is the company’s Chief Information Officer and Senior Vice President of Caterpillar IT. She has spent 26 years at Caterpillar; four and a half in her current role. Engstrom leads a global IT organization of over 2,200 professionals across 28 countries. Her remit includes global information systems, IT risk management, cybersecurity, infrastructure, and IT transformation. Engstrom summarized her remit when she noted, “Our job is to align IT strategy to create and protect value.” Increasingly, she is doing so by increasing digital innovation and data literacy across the company.
A Global IT Vision
Engstrom oversees a distributed IT organization structured around Caterpillar’s three primary business segments:
Construction industries Resource industries and Energy Transportation
Group CIOs lead IT strategies within these areas, ensuring they stay tightly integrated with the business. Her team includes roughly 2,200 IT professionals across 28 countries. She and her team work not just to maintain systems but to build strategic partnerships with business leaders and operations managers around the globe.
From Transactional to Strategic IT
A key focus of Engstrom’s leadership has been shifting IT from a transactional support function to a strategic partner. She cites foundational investments in cybersecurity, high-performing systems, and data strategy as essential levers in that transformation. By moving from manual tasks to insight-driven decision-making, her team is helping Caterpillar become more agile and responsive to both market demands and internal operational needs. “Slow is the new down, and real-time isn’t fast enough,” Engstrom shared, highlighting some of the ways in which she gauges the success of her team.
A Culture of Collaboration and Curiosity
With such a broad operational landscape, collaboration is essential. Engstrom emphasizes a “customer-back” mindset, which includes understanding both external customers and internal partners. “It’s about visibility within the factory environment and sitting with the business partners to understand the business problems they’re trying to solve,” Engstrom explained.
The Group CIOs she oversees sit alongside senior leadership in each business segment, embedding IT into the core of Caterpillar’s value chain. They also visit factories and customers to see firsthand how technology supports operations, ensuring solutions are relevant and impactful. “There isn’t a factory or office I walk into where someone won’t buy you a cup of coffee,” said Engstrom. “We have a culture of pride in what we do.” Engstrom’s nearly 26-year tenure at Caterpillar is a testament to the company’s investment in people. Starting just before Y2K, she has seen IT evolve dramatically. Over the years, Caterpillar has provided her with leadership opportunities, international experience, and the freedom to grow. It’s the people, the culture, and the ever-evolving challenges that have kept her engaged and energized.
Caterpillar’s culture fosters intellectual curiosity. Engstrom encourages her team to stay grounded in business needs while exploring what’s next in technology. “It’s a careful balance between curiosity and value creation,” Engstrom concluded. By focusing on proof of value and disciplined experimentation, Caterpillar ensures that each new advancement serves its mission of building a better world. Engstrom’s leadership is helping shape a technology function that is as resilient, scalable, and forward-looking as the machines Caterpillar is known for.
Synergizing CIO, CDO, and CTO Roles
Engstrom works closely with the company’s Chief Digital Officer Ogi Redzic and Chief Technology Officer Jaime Mineart. Redzic focuses on improving digital customer experiences while Mineart oversees onboard equipment technologies. Engstrom’s CIO role ties these elements together with enterprise IT, ensuring seamless delivery across internal and external touchpoints. “Our roles intersect in many ways, but we are all aligned on delivering end-to-end value,” Engstrom noted. It is rare for companies, even at Caterpillar’s scale, to have a CIO, CDO, and CTO who are peers as opposed one overseeing the work of the other two. Their collaboration is a model of alignment that reflects Caterpillar’s tech-forward approach. Engstrom’s collaboration with the CDO has led to a robust enterprise data strategy, starting with enhancing customer experiences and evolving to internal manufacturing optimization. A prime example is Caterpillar’s use of AI to analyze telematics data, which improves response times for equipment issues. These innovations not only support customers more effectively but also create efficiencies across the organization. “What used to take hours now takes minutes,” Engstrom said, referring to condition monitoring using AI. Reinventing the Supply Chain
Supply chain complexity is a constant challenge, particularly in the wake of global disruptions. Engstrom’s team partnered with Caterpillar’s strategic procurement division to implement a data platform that enables end-to-end visibility, better demand forecasting, and smarter lead-time planning. “We now have a single source of truth for our global spend and supply base,” Engstrom stated. This initiative has improved operational resilience and service reliability for customers and dealers worldwide. The Future is Intelligent and Integrated
Looking ahead, Engstrom sees generative AI and smart manufacturing as powerful levers for innovation. AI is already helping reduce planning cycles and increase operational efficiency. Meanwhile, connected equipment and IoT-powered factories are creating a digital thread that links production, quality control, and customer outcomes. “Smart manufacturing allows us to optimize cost structures and improve quality,” Engstrom emphasized. She also underscored the importance of balancing innovation with risk management, always keeping a human in the loop. Building a Legacy Through Technology
Caterpillar’s centennial is not only a moment of celebration but a springboard into the future. With 1.5 million of its assets connected, the company is harnessing data insights to drive uptime, lower costs, and support customers and dealers with precision. Engstrom believes information technology will be vital to building Caterpillar’s next century of operation. Her excitement was palpable when she described the company’s global impact, from disaster relief to everyday operations that keep infrastructure running. “We provide clean water, energy, food, power in natural catastrophes,” Engstrom noted with pride, underscoring an example of the company’s broader impact. “It’s really beyond just building the equipment.” As Caterpillar enters its second century, Engstrom is steering its digital evolution with clarity, purpose, and a deep respect for both tradition and transformation. Peter High is President of Metis Strategy, a business and IT advisory firm. He has written three bestselling books, including his latest Getting to Nimble. He also moderates the Technovation podcast series and speaks at conferences around the world. Follow him on Twitter @PeterAHigh.