Up in the air: The journey to the cloud in ASEAN

Up in the air: The journey to the cloud in ASEAN is a report from The Economist Intelligence Unit, sponsored by VMware, examining the opportunities and challenges presented by cloud services adoption in the public sector in ASEAN countries with a focus on Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand. 

Infographic | The journey to the cloud in ASEAN

Transforming in a pandemic

As 2020 dawned, few business leaders or public sector executives in the ASEAN and ANZ regions harboured any lingering doubts about the need to accelerate their digital transformation. The covid-19 crisis, however, has driven home the urgency of building advanced digital capabilities, and the vital role of the cloud in helping to build them.

Managing application development: The Asia-Pacific Perspective

The growth of the global digital economy has fundamentally altered the way businesses interact with consumers and conduct their operations. Gone are the days of IT merely supporting back-office functions. Today, IT and enterprise applications in particular are essential drivers of business strategy. Download our paper to learn more. 

 

 

Managing application development: The retail perspective

Retailers are a mixed bunch in their application development behaviour relative to other industries. On the one hand, they are the biggest adopters of new technologies. On the other, they implement advanced development approaches such as Agile and DevOps at an average pace relative to other industries—faster at adopting some approaches and slower at adopting others. However, growing adoption of these methodologies is helping retailers improve the flexibility of their operations and address constantly changing business priorities. Learn more by downloading our report. 
 

Cloud computing in China

Listen to Junsheng Hao, chief technology officer of Shanghai Yungoal Info Tech, Digital China Group as he shares insights on the rapid progression of cloud computing and why he believes the coming decade will be a golden period for the industry in China. 

IT leaders consolidate their powers

Digital disruption is good news for IT executives. As digital improvements become a priority across organisations, IT leaders, and aspiring leaders, are in even higher demand.

When customers drive innovation

With a constant stream of new technologies and emerging business models to choose from, businesses need their innovation initiatives to retain a clear focus. According to Harald Schwager, deputy chairman at chemicals firm Evonik, that focus must be the customer. 

“As long as the customer is not in the picture, we only talk about ideas,” says Dr Schwager. “Only once the customer is in the picture and has started to buy into the product and solution, can we talk about innovation.” 

Technology, wellbeing and work

Levels of disengagement at work have been growing for some time, as expectations of work-life balance shift, and the nature of modern work changes. Of particular concern are a growing number of surveys and studies producing worrying findings about the levels of stress, anxiety and disengagement at work.

Financial regulatory reform in uncertain times

No rest for the weary

A decade on from the global financial crisis, are policymakers and regulators starting to tire of imposing a seemingly endless drip-feed of new rules on financial services firms? With his regular warnings on the dangers of “reform fatigue”, Financial Stability Board (FSB) chairman Mark Carney certainly appears to think so.

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