The future of business: Human resources

Why read this report

  • HR managers must use data to win the "War for Talent" as LinkedIn and other social networking sites change the way employers and prospective employees interact.
  • Some managers are aggregating data from internal sources, social media sites and special interest forums to produce rankings that identify suitable prospects for open positions.
  • Using similar data and analytics, HR managers can also identify key employees who may leave their firms and develop more effective training and mentoring programmes to increase retention.

Spark of life: Maximising urban efficiency through location-based analytics

As one of South-east Asia's leading telecommunications firms, Singtel is no stranger to dealing with massive amounts of rapidly changing information. Recognising the untapped potential of this consumer data, the company created DataSpark, an analytics subsidiary, to provide insights to clients.

A new growth area for telecommunications firms

Autodesk and the Internet of Things

For some companies, opportunities are emerging to offer new products and services directly to consumers. For others, such as Autodesk, a US-based maker of design software, the opportunity is to support clients as they create new connected devices that power the Internet of Things (IoT). 

“We are working to help existing customers transition to the new world of the Internet of Things,” says Chris Bradshaw, Autodesk’s CMO. 

Big data getting bigger: What the Internet of Things means for data

The amount of information flowing across networks has mushroomed in recent years, and its varieties multiplied, thanks to the growth of social media, peer-to-peer websites, mobile Internet use and other modes of digital communication. Data is now termed “big” not only due to its enormous quantities and multiplicity of types (photos and video, for example, in addition to conventional spreadsheet data). “Big” also refers to the potential opportunities for organisations that can mine the data mountains and extract the insights they contain. 

Executive Summary

The sharp increase in interconnectedness that results from the Internet, mobile technology and the Internet of Things (IoT) is referred to
as “hyperconnectivity”. This is not merely a technology trend. It is the era-defining cultural milieu in which we live—and in which businesses operate—in the 21st century.

Hyperconnected organisations

Report Summary

Thanks to the Internet, mobile technology and now the Internet of Things, the interconnectedness of people, places and things is growing at an unprecedented rate. 

In a multiphase research programme sponsored by SAP, The Economist Intelligence Unit is investigating the economic and business impact of this 'hyperconnectivity'. Phase one of the programme, published in 2014, examined the economic of impact of hyperconnectivity. 

CEO Briefing 2015: From productivity to outcomes

CEO Briefing 2015 is structured in three chapters. The first chapter examines the impact of digital technologies, particularly the Internet of Things (IoT) on business. The IoT presents an array of challenges and new revenue possibilities but the question is which companies will be able to capitalise on this opportunity. This an especially crucial question as C-suite executives see competition rising sharply in 2015. 

Enabling resilient cities

Key to resilient cities is an information and communication technology (ICT) platform that optimises infrastructure, argues Michael Weigelt, director of corporate communications at Living PlanIT.

Always connected

A key factor in the rapid expansion of the IoT is the falling cost of sensors and network components. But there are a number of other key factors at play, explains John Davies, chief researcher in BT’s ICT Research Practice.

Executive summary

“Hyperconnectivity” is a term that describes a defining feature of contemporary society. 

Thanks to the Internet, mobile technology and increasingly the Internet of Things, people, places, organisations and objects are linked together like never before.

More than a technological trend, hyperconnectivity is a cultural condition to which businesses have no choice but to adapt. But what does is it mean for companies, industries and consumers?

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