The most appropriate first step is to establish an objective, evidence-based baseline of operational performance and customer experience. In health IT management practice, staffing assertions must be validated against measurable service performance (e.g., ticket volumes, backlog aging, mean time to resolve, change success rate, system uptime/availability, on-call burden, cybersecurity response times) and against how well IT services are meeting clinical and business expectations (e.g., clinician satisfaction, recurring downtime complaints, escalation frequency). This aligns with foundational governance and service management principles emphasized in healthcare information systems leadership: decisions about resourcing should be driven by data, risk, and service obligations to patient careānot by anecdote alone.
Option A (polling) can be useful later, but it is subjective and may reflect local pain points rather than enterprise priorities. Option C (budget adjustment) presumes the solution (more headcount) before diagnosing whether the issue is demand, process, tooling, skill mix, or governance. Option D (process improvement) also jumps to intervention without first confirming where performance gaps exist and how severe they are. By starting with metrics and stakeholder perception, the CIO can perform a defensible gap analysis and then determine whether the right remedy is additional FTEs, reallocation, automation, vendor support, training, or process redesign.