Compliance and regulatory disruption

Compliance and regulatory disruption: The interplay of regulatory trends and strategic priorities was written by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by OpenText. The research is based on a survey of 307 business executives from enterprises across industries located in the US, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Australia and Japan. All survey respondents are familiar with compliance and regulatory requirements as they relate to information governance and security in their respective industry. 

Pioneering Leadership: Service

Watch our video above to learn how CIOs can pioneer leadership at their organisations:
-Theresa Payton, former CIO of the White House, current CEO of Fortalice Solutions

The strategic CFO in a rapidly changing world

To identify the strategic priorities of CFOs and senior finance professionals,  The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) conducted a survey, commissioned by Coupa, of 507 finance executives across industries and located in the US, UK, France and Germany. Seventy-five percent of respondents are CFOs, and 25% are corporate finance professionals who are at the VP-level or above.

The report is based on survey findings, as well as interviews with the following finance executives: 

Q&A with Renata Marques, CIO, Whirlpool Latin America

In this Q&A, The EIU asks Renata Marques, CIO of Whirlpool Latin America, about the changing role of the CIO, how emerging technologies like cloud are enabling innovation and how businesses execute their digital transformation journeys.

Renata Marques is the CIO at Whirlpool Latin America, responsible for information technology and digital business transformation solutions. Ms Marques has held previous IT leadership roles at ABB and Monsanto.

The Right Skills: Bridging the strategy design-delivery gap

When Benoît Claveranne was appointed Chief Transformation Officer of the AXA Group in 2016,1 his first act was to hire Sébastien Van Dyk to head up HR for the transformation teams. Mr Claveranne recalls, “If I did not have someone focusing specifically on people, I had no chance. Integrating talent strategy with the company’s overall strategy may be the most important question of all [for successful delivery].”

Bridging the Strategy Design-Delivery Gap: What the Leaders are doing

Harnessing the power of the feedback loops for strategy design and delivery

Designing and delivering a strategy that works: Managing the two faces of culture

Closing the Gap: Designing and Delivering a Strategy that Works

Strategy has little value until it is implemented. In a world where disruption can happen overnight, moving rapidly from strategy design to delivery is critical. Yet too many companies go only halfway, putting their best resources into design and in effect ending up treating delivery as an afterthought. As a result, strategies fail, customers leave, key talent is lost and financial performance suffers. 

Bridging the strategy implementation gap

Most companies, however, find this difficult in practice. In prior Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) research, 61% of respondents acknowledged that their firms often struggle to bridge this gap, and just over half of strategic initiatives were completed successfully. To gain a more in-depth understanding of this complex field, the EIU interviewed Joseph Jimenez, CEO of Novartis, and Donald Sull, Senior Lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management, about strategy implementation. To learn more download our article below. 

 

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