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Going mobile at Methodist

When Methodist Hospital, a 460-bed facility serving the San Gabriel Valley near Los Angeles, wanted to create a computerised provider order entry system and digitise patient records, the IT department faced a number of challenges in coming up with a solution that would appeal to the doctors and nurses that had to use the new technology.

Virtua goes paperless

In late 2005 when Virtua, a diversified health-services company that operates four hospitals in the US state of New Jersey, decided to open a new hospital, the board decreed that it would be a paperless facility. By the time the IT department completed an assessment of what would be needed to make one facility paperless, the board decided that if the organisation was going to invest the money and human resources to do it in one facility, it may as well roll out the same technology in all its locations.

P&G pushes the envelope

While some companies aspire to finding sources of innovation from among their networks of suppliers and business partners, Proctor & Gamble has taken the open approach to innovation a step further with its Connect + Develop initiative.

Procter & Gamble: process innovation via the “wicked workout”

Procter & Gamble (P&G) has not become the world’s biggest consumer-products company solely on the basis of the quality of brands such as Pantene shampoo, Tide detergent and Pringles potato chips. The US-based company is also a master of point-of-sale displays—the posters and other materials that influence a consumer’s initial buying decision. Yet at a company like P&G, which does business in tens of thousands of stores in hundreds of countries, the right marketing materials do not always arrive when they are supposed to.

Boo-box: How to make online content profitable

Brazil’s media and entertainment market is forecast to grow by nearly 12% between 2011 and 2015, a much higher rate than in the US and European countries. According to Mr Gomes, Latin America is undergoing a major digital revolution. “Facilitated access to the internet and the growth of homes with personal computers, laptops, smartphones and tablet sales have fostered a spirit of entrepreneurship and innovation in Latin America,” he says. “I believe we can expect a massive expansion of start-ups focused on technology, internet and e-commerce.”

A punishing time for publishing

Our survey confirms that publishing firms are struggling more than their internet, TV and entertainment peers to adapt to changes brought about by the shift to digital. Perhaps most importantly, only half (49%) of magazine publishers believe marketing through digital channels has increased their sales and lead generation significantly compared with two-thirds of TV and film companies.  

Meanwhile, only 55% of newspaper publishers expect to have a digital model that is commercially successful in the next three years compared with 69% of film companies.

Storing your content

In the download market Sony Pictures Entertainment, the television and film unit of Japanese conglomerate Sony, has launched Ultraviolet, a cloud service where customers can store their purchased films. Mitch Singer, Chief Digital Strategy Officer at Sony Pictures Entertainment and the chief architect of UltraViolet, says the idea originated from customer research.

High-growth markets

As in other industries, another important driver of change in media and entertainment is the rapid growth of emerging markets. In terms of total media spend, the US remains the world&;s largest market by far with, according to PwC, a total spend in 2010 of over $443 billion. However, other countries are growing more quickly.

Broad: A new generation

Zhang Yue, the president and chief executive officer of Broad, a private Hunan-based manufacturer of air-conditioners, heating systems and air purifiers, is among China’s new generation of entrepreneurs. While many of China’s companies compete on price, Mr Zhang has put his faith in developing Broad’s technology and a strong service model to build his company.

Competition spurs innovation: Li Ning counts on R&D and supply chain management

Li Ning, China’s largest domestic sportswear brand, not only needs to fend off multinational sportswear giants Nike and Adidas, but also needs to stay ahead of its increasingly savvy domestic rivals, including brands such as Anta and 361°. Such mounting competitive pressure has turned into a major driver for innovation, confirms Guo Jianxin, Li Ning’s chief operating officer.

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