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

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Nationwide combines physical and digital banking

In the last few years, the once-staid banking sector has seen an explosion of innovation and the launch of many digital-only banks, such as Atom Bank in the UK, Simple in the US, and WeBank in China.

Does this spell the end for high-street bank branches? Not for Nationwide. The UK building society, which functions as a bank with voting rights for its customers, views a high-street presence as critical to the success of its connected future.

John Lewis's omni-channel evolution

Department stores, relying on selling a wide variety of goods in a single shop, seem an old-fashioned idea these days: after all, shoppers can find a wider variety of goods online, often for a lower price. In the US, this has forced store closures among household names such as JCPenney and Macy’s. More broadly, retailers from the video rental company Blockbuster to bookstores such as Borders have wilted under the online assault.

Tata's hyperconnected manufacturing base

When Tata, the Indian conglomerate, introduced its Nano budget car in 2010, it was hailed as a triumph of lean manufacturing: the company applied production techniques that allowed it to set a price of just US$2,500 in its home market of India, offering family transport for the same price as a small motorbike.

Leading the real-time organisation

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Business in a hurry

At a transactional level, however, it is undeniable that the pace of business is faster today than it has ever been, thanks mainly to digital technology. It was the finance industry that first saw transactions reach a speed far beyond what any human being could process. Equity trades, which once required a physical exchange of documents, can now be executed electronically in 10 milliseconds or less.

Leading in real time

This quote, published in a medical journal in 1884, shows that the feeling that business is accelerating is nothing new. But it is undeniable that, at a transactional level, the pace of modern business is faster than it ever has been. The culprit, of course, is digital technology, which allows information to be transferred in an instant - and sets an expectation that it will be acted on just as quickly.

Supply chain innovation

This article series, sponsored by BNP Paribas, explores how senior executives across an array of different industries are achieving remarkable innovations through their supply chains.

 

 

Building collaboration through cloud

Asia’s fintech fever

Globally, Web Summit reckons investment in fintech has risen 20-fold since 2008. Anyone who thinks Asia has lagged Silicon Valley (or Silicon Roundabout) in this field hasn’t been paying attention.

Mitigating risk in an increasingly complex international regulatory environment

Governments around the world have responded to the unprecedented pace of financial and technological innovation by building a rapidly growing matrix of international regulation. For their part general counsel recognise that despite the best efforts of international organisations to persuade governments to harmonise their regulations, sovereign nations routinely act unilaterally to advance their national agendas, to suit the idiosyncracies of the local market and to compete for business.

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