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Culture clash - the challenge of innovation through acquisition
IoT Business Index 2017: Transformation in Motion

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The strategic CIO

Report Summary

Information technology is playing an increasingly significant role in determining how companies interact with customers, prospects, partners and suppliers—and how firms function internally. This trend will only accelerate as new tools become crucial in binding a company’s products, services and operations together into a functional whole. This makes the role of the chief information officer (CIO) more strategic than ever.

The strategic CIO

The strategic CIO

As the basis for this research, The Economist Intelligence Unit surveyed 156 CIOs in May and June 2013 and conducted in-depth interviews with CIOs from a cross-section of major corporations. 

The strategic CIO

Key Findings

  • Technology decisions are collaborative, but CIOs increasingly have financial control
  • CIOs also report a high degree of interest in and knowledge of emerging technologies (92%)
  • 60% of CIOs report that communicating the benefits of technology to the business requires them to speak first in terms of solving customer or partner problems

Workforce of the future: Part 1

Part 1 of an EIU advisory board meeting discusses how companies balance retraining existing employees with hiring new talent  and how they can leverage tech skills of a multigenerational workforce.

Workforce of the future: Part 2

Part 2 of an EIU advisory board meeting continues to discuss how companies balance retraining existing employees with hiring new talent and how they can leverage tech skills of a multigenerational workforce.

The workforce of the future

Why read this report

  • Overall scores in the Workforce of the Future Index indicate that OECD countries have the most favourable environments for technological proficiency, and the United States is best in class
  • The United Kingdom, Denmark, the Netherlands and Australia will have the most technologically capable workforces in coming years
  • Several African countries (Tunisia, Egypt, Algeria and Nigeria) rank at the bottom of the index
  • Unfavourable labour market conditions hamper scores in Western, Central and Eastern European countries

The workforce of the future

There is growing pressure on companies, governments and other employers to identify, attract and retain human talent capable of leveraging technology effectively and efficiently. The difficulties in engaging such workers stem from numerous factors, including globalisation, changing demographics and emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things.

The disruption of banking

Report Summary

Digital disruption is the top-of-mind technologicdal issues in the C-suite today. Senior executives in virtually every industry are wondering whether their firm will be Amazoned or Ubered. Others take a more nuanced view that new digital players might skim off their best customers or steal a share from their most profitable product lines. All are trying to determine whether they should ignore, acquire, partner or compete with their new technology-driven competitors.

The disruption of banking

In order to develop a fact-based perspective, The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), sponsored by Hewlett Packard Enterprise, has conducted parallel surveys of more than 100 senior bankers and 100 Fintech executives. The objective is to determine their respective views on the impact of Fintech, the strengths and weaknesses of the participants and the likely landscape for the retail banking industry over the next five years.

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