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

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Good to grow? The environment for Asia's Internet businesses

Executive summary

Over the past decade Asia has become the world leader for the majority of Internet-related statistics. It has close to 50% of the world’s Internet users, some of the fastest broadband speeds globally, and the most rapid growth in mobile broadband out of any region worldwide. Yet it is curious that there are some areas where Asia is lagging. The most obvious is the size and global interests of its Internet businesses.

E-government in Europe, the Middle East and Africa

E-government in EMEA: Expert views on the UN e-government survey is an Economist Intelligence Unit report, sponsored by Oracle. This report focuses on e-government trends in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) and also looks at the role of the biennial United Nations survey of e-government development.

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.

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