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Measuring wellness

Report Summary

As US employers grapple with rising healthcare costs, many have established employee wellness programmes. Yet companies continue to struggle with low employee engagement and health ownership. In May 2014 The Economist Intelligence Unit conducted an employer and employee survey, sponsored by Humana, to explore the extent to which employers use health-related employee data to guide the operation and outcomes measurement of US wellness programmes. 

Milking it

New research shows collaboration with rivals is top of the corporate agenda. Theo Spierings, CEO of Fonterra, a dairy co-operative and New Zealand's largest firm, explains his strategy for finding the right match

Service thinking

Designing for the Internet of things? First, think of the service

Why starting with the service you aim to provide may be the best way to design IoT-connected objects

This year’s International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) was heaving with exhibitors chasing the current top trend in consumer electronics: the Internet of Things (IoT). From a suitcase to a dairy cow, from a light bulb to a train track, almost any object can be now connected to the Internet via embedded computing components. 

A new era of design

The IoT calls for nothing less than a new era of design.

And the designers that define it will be the architects of the modern world

By 2020, there will be 50 billion devices connected to the web, from lamp posts, cars and doorbells to your pet dog and the chicken sitting in your fridge.

These connected objects, collectively known as the Internet of things, will soon outnumber people. They have the potential to enrich our lives - but they could also prove overwhelming, infuriating and even hazardous to our health.

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Finding a niche

Devising an Internet-connected object with a viable business model has proved elusive for many organisations 

Every technology trend carries with it a degree of hype and at present the “Internet of things” (IoT) is overburdened. In August 2014, IT analyst company Gartner declared that IoT is at the very peak of inflated expectations in its annual Hype Cycle of emerging technologies.

Designing for the Internet of things

The IT industry is alight with buzz about the Internet of things, the idea that objects embedded with sensors and communications components can interact with each other and their owners via the Internet. So far, the use cases have focused primarily on established product categories, such as cars, fridges or energy meters, and with good reason. But what new products could be devised for the Internet connected-era? 

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A new era in finance

Bitcoin may be risky investment, but the technologies that underpin it are a safe bet to disrupt the finance sector.

The price of Bitcoin, the best known and most widely used example of a cryptocurrency, has followed a roller coaster trajectory in the past 18 months. This erratic behavior, combined with Bitcoin’s reputation as an enabler for criminal activity, means that serious investors may not consider cryptocurrencies to be an asset class worth considering.

Blockchain revolution

The technological mechanism that underpins cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin could theoretically be used to anonymously verify any kind of transaction – and its impact could be enormous.

Bitcoin is the first and best known example of a cryptocurrency, a system that uses the principles of cryptography to allow value to be exchanged without a middleman such as a government or bank.

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