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IoT Business Index 2017: Transformation in Motion

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Olympian odds: How autonomous driving could shake up Japan’s auto behemoths

Japan’s government and major carmakers have set the Olympics as an unfficial deadline for launching a new generation of autonomous vehicles (AVs). The hope is that Japan can repeat its triumph at the 1964 Olympics, when the first high-speed shinkansen (bullet train) was unveiled, cementing the country’s reputation as a transport pioneer. 

Mobile Seoul: How South Korea is catching up in the race for autonomous driving

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Infographic: Pioneering Leadership

Global consumers worry that small privacy invasions may lead to a loss of civil rights, finds EIU survey

Communication barriers in the modern workplace

It wasn’t long ago that a work meeting meant gathering around a table to discuss an agenda. These days you may be using Slack, Hangouts or other digital collaboration platforms that blend messaging with video and allow real-time editing of documents. Even with these tools, communication at work can still break down, potentially endangering careers, creating stressful work environments and slowing growth.
 

Rethinking professional services in an age of disruption

In October-November 2017 we conducted a survey of 307 senior executives from companies headquartered in the US, UK and continental Europe, with annual revenue of at least US$1bn. All respondents were director-level or above, and were responsible for managing professional service-provider relationships in three categories: legal and compliance, marketing, and management consulting.
 

Marketing at speed

Nuno Teles has a difficult job: getting US consumers to show some brand loyalty. As chief marketing officer of Heineken USA, he depends on using content, in multiple formats and published at a quick pace, to keep digitally savvy, slogan-leery customers engaged. Unlike in the past, when a catchy ad delivered across multiple channels would be enough, marketers today often have to manage a stream of fresh ideas across video, social media and other digital platforms.
 

The management consulting conundrum

Disruptive business and economic trends have always been a boon for global management consultants. When companies struggle to adapt to shifting market demands they rely on the guidance of external, objective experts to help them stay competitive. After all, alumni from elite consultancies include high-profile business leaders such as Meg Whitman, Sheryl Sandberg and Jeff Immelt.
 

A new verdict

Large companies have regularly hired large law firms and kept them on retainer to address legal needs as they arise. However, with legal expenditure continuing to rise, largely because of higher billing rates, some in-house lawyers are reconsidering how they choose and partner with outside firms. In 2016 partners at elite law firms were charging as much as US$1,500 per hour. Indeed, the 3.6% revenue growth at US law firms achieved in the first nine months of 2017 was entirely driven by rate increases, according to Citi Private Bank’s annual industry report. 
 

Rethinking professional services in an age of disruption

With the help of machine learning, some law firms are reinventing themselves as legal services software companies that sell licences rather than advice. Large global accounting and consulting firms are taking some of their services in a similar direction, for instance in the area of regulatory compliance. Some manufacturing firms have expanded into digital services, offering other firms help with supply-chain management, product design and prototyping.

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