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AUGUST 2020
ELEVATING HUMAN POTENTIAL THROUGH AUTOMATION
RESILIENCE IN FLEXIBILITY MOST VALUABLE DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY BRANDS
Jeff Richardson, CDO on its state of the art cloud infrastructure
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FOREWORD
W
elcome to the August edition of
been very difficult to predict outcomes in
Business Chief North America.
terms of where the world is going. These
This month’s cover features Jeff
are unprecedented times and investor
Richardson, CDO at Bentley Systems,
management is front and centre.”
on the state of the art cloud
Elsewhere, we explore the HR
infrastructure which benefits internal
technology trends of 2020 and look
and external stakeholders. “Living in
more closely at the benefits they can
a cloud-focused world, security is huge
provide an organisation that is looking
for us,” he tells us. “Our CIO, Claire
to digitally transform its HR operations.
Rutkowski, came on board in October
In addition, we speak to Max Cheprasov,
2016 and has been heavily focused on integrating a robust and industry-leading cloud security platform. Along with instituting a security office, we have beefed up our security staff and infrastructure by around 800% in the past five years.” Other leaders we speak with in this issue include Sankar Krishnan, EVP and Industry Head, Banking and Capital Markets at Capgemini, who discusses the investor management landscape prior to and post COVID-19, “Since World War II, I would say we have never had a situation like this where it has
Chief Automation Officer at Dentsu Aegis Network on why developing an AI and automation strategy is essential to modern enterprises’ future, and our Top 10 ranks the region’s most valuable digital technology brands. Do you have a story to share? If you would like to be featured in an upcoming issue of Business Chief North America, please get in touch at georgia.wilson@bizclikmedia.com Enjoy the issue! Georgia Wilson b u s i n e s s c h i e f. c o m
03
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PUBLISHED BY
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Owen Martin DIGITAL VIDEO PRODUCERS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Georgia Wilson
Jake Megeary Nicholas Bochmann Ryan Hall
Kieran Waite Sam Kemp
James White
MARKETING DIRECTOR
DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR
MEDIA SALES DIRECTOR
Leigh Manning
Jason Westgate
DIGITAL MARKETING MANAGER
CHIEF OPERATIONS OFFICER
EDITORAL DIRECTOR
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Oscar Hathaway Erin Hancox Sophia Forte Sophie-Ann Pinnell PRODUCTION DIRECTORS
Georgia Allen Daniela Kianickovรก
Shirin Sadr DIGITAL MARKETING EXECUTIVE
Kayleigh Shooter
Stacy Norman PRESIDENT & CEO
Glen White
MANAGING DIRECTOR
Mike Sadr PROJECT DIRECTORS
Arron Rampling Craig Killingback b u s i n e s s c h i e f. c o m
CONTENTS
12
30
60
HR operations and platform technology trends
44 74
AI:
ENTERPRISE CHALLENGES & OPPORTUNITIES
88 102 MOST VALUABLE DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY BRANDS
122 AltaMed Health Services
150 Digital Realty
136 166 COLOTRAQ
Interstitial Systems International Inc
198 Estruxture Data Centers
176 McDermott International Inc.
212 WSIB
236
252
SAP Global Center of Excellence
NIH STRIDES Initiative
You see a shipping terminal. We see the missing container that will shut down production. C3.ai transforms Manufacturing. Š 2020 C3.ai, Inc. All Rights Reserved. is a mark of C3.ai, Inc.
268 SMC
286 Bentley Systems
300 World Vision
314 342 Mastercard
328 MSU Federal Credit Union
OTIP
360 T-Systems
12
Dentsu Aegis: elevating human potential through automation
WRITTEN BY
WILL GIRLING PRODUCED BY
MIKE SADR
AUGUST 2020
13
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
DENTSU AEGIS NETWORK
Max Cheprasov, Chief Automation Officer, explains why developing an AI and automation strategy is essential to modern enterprises’ future
D
entsu Aegis Network prides itself on being a company with a talent for innovativethinking and being thoroughly in-tune with
the technological zeitgeist. When we last spoke with the global marketing group which operates in over 145 countries, we learned how a highly client-centric approach was defining its mission to introduce 14
digital transformation and lay the foundations for a next-gen way of operating. Despite the discussion occurring at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Dentsu Aegis demonstrated the confidence and optimism that only great teams guided by visionary leadership can achieve under such duress. Now, we revisit the company to explore one of the prevailing tech trends in modern business: artificial intelligence (AI) and automation. Having spent six years (2011 to 2017) as Senior VP and Head of Operations and Technology at iProspect – a wholly-owned subsidiary of Dentsu Aegis – Max Cheprasov took on the role of Chief Automation Officer for Dentsu Aegis Americas in November 2017. Considering himself a “digital native”, Cheprasov says that his transition into the role was a natural one and
AUGUST 2020
15
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
DENTSU AEGIS NETWORK
“ There’s always a need for creativity and ingenuity when designing your own unique and differentiated business strategy” — Max Cheprasov, Chief Automation Officer, Dentsu Aegis 16
was a decision guided by a long-term mission: “I transitioned into this new role to focus on acceleration of intelligent automation solutions and to promote best practice across Dentsu globally.” In a career clearly defined by his commitment to finding new and better ways to service clients and enable employees to do their best work, Cheprasov is a believer in going beyond convention and working out cutting-edge tech solutions to everyday problems. “There’s always a need for creativity and ingenuity when designing your own unique and differentiated business strategy,” he says. It is this attitude that he brings to bear on his daily activities at Dentsu Aegis. An early enthusiast of AI’s potential in business, Cheprasov embarked on his first automation-related project in 2016 by experimenting with natural language processing (NLP) and natural language generation (NLG) technology for data analysis reports and insights. It was because of this project that he and Dentsu Aegis’ leadership team became convinced that it was an avenue worth exploring with high priority. Certain that AI could lead to a dramatic boost in business performance and
AUGUST 2020
The future of AI and your business CLICK TO WATCH
|
2:26
17 customer experience, Cheprasov
functions to optimise the working lives
established an eight-year road map
of a company’s employees. Capable
(2017 to 2025) and the company for-
of augmenting workloads by automat-
mally established the Dentsu Aegis
ing a boring or repetitive task, Dentsu
Automation Centre of Expertise
Aegis can help mitigate or eliminate
(CoE). “Today, we have over 400 peo-
the laborious strain caused by routine
ple engaged with the CoE as part of
tasks, approval turnarounds and bot-
our global community of automation
tlenecks. “We can automate a process
champions and experts. But, as far
end-to-end and give that time back
as I’m concerned, this is still only the
to employees to handle more critical
beginning; the future of automation
tasks that cannot be automated, such
should be placed in the hands of every
as creative, critical, strategic thinking,
single employee,” he states. With the
complex problem solving and more.
goal of making teams as efficient, pro-
Our mission is to elevate human poten-
ductive and happy as possible, the CoE
tial,” says Cheprasov. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
DENTSU AEGIS NETWORK
18
AUGUST 2020
“ Our mission is to elevate human potential” — Max Cheprasov, Chief Automation Officer, Dentsu Aegis
19
w w w. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
DENTSU AEGIS NETWORK
20
Of course, this aim would be very dif-
incorporating the trend-setting new
ficult without a suitably agile workforce
ideas of the startups and other firms
behind the scenes at Dentsu Aegis,
it has acquired. “We operate without
and this is exactly what Cheprasov
borders and limitations as one enter-
says the company has. “I think we have
prise across 145 countries, where highly
a unique workplace culture. One word
collaborative teams of highly intelligent,
to describe everybody in the business,
optimistic and passionate people are
across 65,000 professionals, is that
working together and willing to take
we’re ‘entrepreneurial’ by the nature of
calculated risks to achieve impres-
how we’ve grown.” Having expanded
sive results for Dentsu Aegis and our
rapidly over the last five years due
clients,” he continues. Indeed, with over
to a fast-paced M&A (mergers and
150 acquisitions made and a growing
acquisitions) strategy, the company
capacity for innovation, talent and scale,
has continually rejuvenated itself by
Cheprasov’s observation that “there’s
AUGUST 2020
no future in staying the same” certainly
UiPath as essential partners: “We used
rings true.
Catalytic’s AI-enabled platform to
As well as its robust internal collabo-
design an automated RFP (request for
ration, Dentsu Aegis also prides itself
proposal) workflow, in combination with
on working well with other companies
NLP and ML (machine learning). As a
which share its vision and mission.
result, we reduced the time it takes to
With regard to the company’s pursuit
compile the initial draft of the response
of automated superiority, Cheprasov
from two weeks to just several minutes.
highlights FortressIQ, Catalytic and
Our most recent project with UiPath
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Max Cheprasov Title: Chief Automation Officer Company: Dentsu Aegis Network Industry: Marketing & Advertising
Location: New York
As Chief Automation Officer at Dentsu, Max Cheprasov leads the Automation COE on a mission to “Elevate Human Potential”. Dentsu, with its 65,000+ employees, is a global media and digital marketing communications company focused on innovating the way brands are built. The COE harmonizes Operational Excellence with AI and Automation to create the never-before digital exoskeleton for the enterprise. Max has 20+ years of experience within the Digital Economy, specializing in digital transformation, operational excellence, and AI-powered automation. Prior to his current role, Max served as the Senior Vice President of Operations, PMO, BPO, and Technology for iProspect between 2011-2017. Max holds an MBA degree from JWMI and professional certificates from Stanford University, MIT, and PMI, among others. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
21
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Interested to know how it works? Request a Demo
“ I think we have a unique workplace culture. One word to describe everybody in the business, across 65,000 professionals, is that we’re ‘entrepreneurial’ by nature of how we’ve grown”
required a deeper partnership with their Professional Services group, as we needed to temporarily add 10 RPA (robotic process automation) experts to our team to help us build 60 bots in six weeks. As a result, the software bots have automated 157,000 hours of work during their first deployment, completing over 600,000 tasks. Finally, FortressIQ helps us accelerate process mining and process discovery, exponentially improving our ability to identify new
— Max Cheprasov, Chief Automation Officer, Dentsu Aegis
use-cases for automation and process reengineering. Additionally, the time and motion analyses led to improved FO RT RESSI Q
Founded in 2017, FortressIQ is the creator of a cognitive automation platform which is capable of accelerating digital transformation through a combination of ANN, NLP and ML, as well as OCR. Able to quickly grasp the fundamentals of a business’ operations, the platform enables the collection of swift insights which can be used in the development of an automation strategy.
Commenting on the relationship that Dentsu Aegis shares with FortressIQ, Cheprasov praises the company’s technology and states that without its partnership “it would have taken over 30 business analysts to gather the same level of detail and insight that [FortressIQ’s] AI was able to capture if it was done manually.” Pankaj Chowdhry, Founder & CEO, FortressIQ
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
23
DENTSU AEGIS NETWORK
SOPs, compliance and training. Using FiQ’s artificial neural network (ANN), NLP, and ML models, in combination with advanced computer vision (OCR), we automatically mined, modelled and documented data for over 2,200 processes in five months with just two people operating the system.” On the subject of automation, Cheprasov is evangelical about its growing importance, not only for Dentsu Aegis but for its clients and modern business generally. “Automation is just a natural 24
evolution from operational excellence,” he explains. “Traditional operational workflows are no longer sustainable; the workforce is changing rapidly, yet very few global companies are ready to manage their workforce with people, bots and AI working side by side.” He asks every company to consider the subject of advancing technology seriously; it is an aspect of business which is both exciting and intimidating – staying on top of it and processing the large amounts of data accessible requires automation integrated into every process. It was because of this that Cheprasov formulated his seven-year roadmap. “It’s in response to client demands for AUGUST 2020
The transformation of AI & Automation CLICK TO WATCH
|
2:11
25
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
DENTSU AEGIS NETWORK
2013
Year founded
50,000 Number of employees
26
Covid 19 and the impact of technology CLICK TO WATCH
AUGUST 2020
|
3:01
27
higher levels of agility and consistent
When considering the future, not just
operational excellence,” he explains.
of Dentsu Aegis but also automation
As such, Dentsu Aegis plans to go
generally, Cheprasov identifies two
beyond traditional forms of automa-
key trends: hyperautomation and the
tion (AI, ML, RPA, etc) to fulfil its quest
democratisation of AI. The former,
for ever-greater heights of operational
a term with Industry 4.0 connotations,
efficiency. This brings the conver-
imagines an operational state which
sation back to the importance of
combines digitisation with connectivity
collaborating with startups in the sec-
and AI to create a supremely auto-
tor: “We continue to monitor who the
mated system capable of seamless
emerging players are; there’s a lot of
interoperability; regarding the latter,
new startups that have fantastic ways
he adds this: “The future of automa-
of applying AI to different problems
tion should be placed in the hands of
in business,” he says.
every employee, giving them access b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
DENTSU AEGIS NETWORK
28
to low-code or no-code platforms and
into the less overt considerations that
providing the necessary training and
furthering automation entails, such as
support.” This, Cheprasov anticipates,
its CSR activities with AutonomyWorks.
will lead to unprecedented efficiency
“Their goal is to create new job opportuni-
gains for workers and unlock the human
ties for individuals with autism and similar
potential in a way which was unfeasible
disabilities. At Dentsu, we recognise
previously. As the post-COVID-19 world
society as one of our key stakeholders
continues to make companies re-exam-
and one of our key objectives right now
ine their relationship with technology,
is to upskill the organisation’s workforce
Dentsu Aegis is already expanding
with the necessary automation skills to
AUGUST 2020
accelerate the work that they currently do for their clients.” Considering what the rest of 2020 might hold for Dentsu Aegis, Cheprasov summarises its goal as continuing to help its clients win, keep and grow their own customer bases. If the COVID-19 disruption has taught the company anything, it’s that close collaboration, an agile mindset and an innovative attitude will help Dentsu Aegis navigate the lingering aspects of disruption, which, in turn, will help its clients. “Every business today needs to have an AI and automation strategy and plan,” Cheprasov concludes. “By 2025, AI-powered companies will be 10 times more efficient and hold twice the market share over organisations that fail to embrace the technology
“ Automation is just a natural evolution from operational excellence”
today. I think we have reached a point in the evolution of intelligent automation when you can no longer delay this decision.”
— Max Cheprasov, Chief Automation Officer, Dentsu Aegis
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
29
L E A D E R S H I P & S T R AT E G Y
32
AUGUST 2020
33
COVID-19: THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF INVESTOR MANAGEMENT WRITTEN BY
GEORGIA WILSON
busi ne ssc hief. com
L E A D E R S H I P & S T R AT E G Y
Sankar Krishnan, EVP and Industry Head, Banking and Capital Markets at Capgemini, discusses the investor management landscape prior to and post COVID-19
“S
ince World War II, I would say we have never had a situation like this where it has been very difficult to predict outcomes
in terms of where the world is going. These are unprecedented times and investor management is front and centre. In some ways it has taken a beat34
ing, but in others it’s trying to correct itself,” states Sankar Krishnan, EVP and Industry Head, Banking and Capital Markets, Capgemini. Over the last four months, the entire investor management ecosystem has been significantly disrupted which is creating new challenges for organisations and how they effectively maintain open communication with shareholders relating to company performance and guidance for the future, as well as providing a deeper understanding of the industry.
THE BEST STRATEGY FOR EFFECTIVE INVESTOR MANAGEMENT Prior to COVID-19 Krishnan believed that the best strategy for effective investor management was “transparency, followed by leaders providing
AUGUST 2020
35
busi ne ssc hief. com
L E A D E R S H I P & S T R AT E G Y
36
a consistent strategy, followed by a
that brought together the consum-
measurement process that gives a
ers, the asset management industry,
true representation of how an organi-
the wealth management industry and
sation is doing compared to what was
investment management industry,
discussed in the previous sharehold-
and from an investor management
ers meeting. This approach has an
perspective, the better CEOs, are
effective impact on an organisation’s
also the better communicators.”
valuation and velocity in the stock
However, post COVID-19 Krishnan
market. I believed that this was a very
details that, although “due to nobody’s
good model because you could easily
fault, there are a lot of unknowns.
compare a company’s performance
We don’t know much about this virus
based on previous history. This was
in terms of when it will disappear or
a good system across many sectors
when there will be a vaccine. As a
AUGUST 2020
“ I think overall it is about finding out how traditional companies can save a lot of costs as they get called upon to invest more and more in digital for the rest of the year” — Sankar Krishnan, EVP and Industry Head, Banking and Capital Markets, Capgemini
result it is very difficult to predict the
the first phase with more to follow. As
future of any organisation or industry
a result, it is very difficult to predict
at the moment. Therefore, from an
business outcomes, therefore some
investor management perspective
have decided that to give this guid-
we are witnessing on average a 95%
ance after a time of total economic
to 97% work from home raito, as well
uncertainty would be wrong due to
as a lot of organisations unable to
there being so many variables.” Giving
predict with any accuracy the future
examples of these variables Krishnan
cash flow, with COVID-19 costing
explains that “we do not know when
them between 10 and 25%, as well as
a vaccine would be ready, in a coun-
entire economies being propped up
try like the US even if a vaccine is
by their governments - the US alone
developed, what will be the process
has announced close to US$2.3trn in
to reach over 250 million Americans? busi ne ssc hief. com
37
L E A D E R S H I P & S T R AT E G Y
38
We also don’t know if there is going to
However, “the models are not able
be a variation of the virus that comes
to produce the outputs with a high
in winter and what the retail sector is
degree of probability. At best you can
going to look like. A lot of the tradi-
give a range or a best guesstimate,
tional companies have fallen down
because investor management is
due to being replaced by technology
facing global impact that crosses
companies that can meet the change
industries, companies, consumers
in customer behaviour and demands.�
and governments. While the virus
Ultimately, Krishnan highlights
may affect regions differently, there
that all of these inputs in the investor
is no doubt that each country and
management models would provide
industry will be impacted considerably,
outputs, which would be shared with
unfortunately a lot of the survivors will
the entire investment community,
depend on having at least an 80% to
fostering good investor relations.
90% capacity utilisation. This creates
AUGUST 2020
What is investor management/ investor relations? Investor management/investor relations (IR) is defined by the National Investor Relations Institute (NIRI) as “a strategic management responsibility that integrates finance, communication, marketing and securities law compliance to enable the most effective two-way communication between a company, the financial community, and other constituencies, which ultimately contributes to a company’s securities achieving fair valuation.” — Source: Institute for Public Relations
39
What the average investor should be doing during the coronavirus economic crisis CLICK TO WATCH
|
3:33
busi ne ssc hief. com
L E A D E R S H I P & S T R AT E G Y
“ We don’t know much about this virus in terms of when it will disappear or when there will be a vaccine, as a result it is very difficult to predict the future of any organisation or industry” 40
— Sankar Krishnan, EVP and Industry Head, Banking and Capital Markets, Capgemini
AUGUST 2020
problems for the investment management industry, because you are faced with the challenges of not being able to give guidance on any aspect of it, but life must go on. You have to make some assumptions and carry on, and I’m sure the public will understand if you’ve got some elements wrong. But I think we’ve got to deal with fighting the virus at the moment and I have no doubt that things will get better however this is the current landscape for the investor management industry.” 41
EMERGING TRENDS AND INNOVATIONS AS A RESULT OF COVID-19 Krishnan believes that “every cloud has a silver lining”. First and foremost, Krishnan highlights that the drive to digital has been extremely fast. “I think a lot of the industries due to COVID-19 have become digitally savvy and responsible. A record number of people have begun to use digital apps - at Capgemini we conduct a lot of research reports relating to retail, banking and fintech - interestingly 80% of people surveyed do not want to go into a bank, and will not choose a bank if they are not able to use a digital way busi ne ssc hief. com
L E A D E R S H I P & S T R AT E G Y
“ I think a lot of the industries due to COVID-19 have become digitally savvy and digitally responsible” — Sankar Krishnan, EVP and Industry Head, Banking and Capital Markets, Capgemini
to access the bank’s products. As a result we are seeing new business models are emerging, such as massive organisations moving to a 95% to 97% worked at home situation which was not easy to achieve. I believe we are also seeing improvements in business contingency planning, as people return to work we are seeing a lot of new technologies emerging as well as ways of working. It is interesting to see different sectors adapting to the current environments such as restaurants
42
becoming drive thrus or takeaway only;
AUGUST 2020
What makes a leading investor relations team? To ensure that an investor relations department provides value to the organisation, those within the team need to ensure that they are consistent, clear and honest with their communication. However, leading experts within investor relations explain that while these are the fundamentals to drive true value within an organisation, it is vital for a investor relations department to: Have a financial orientation “15 or 20 years ago, you could probably successfully work in IR with a strictly communications background. Now, though, you must have that financial background,” explains Regina Nethery, VP of Investor Relations for Humana. Foster deep knowledge of the company, industry and sectors, as well as constructive dissatisfaction. “You should never assume that what’s worked in the past is appropriate for the present or future,” says Chris Jakubik, VP of Investor Relations at Kraft Food Know who the go-to sources are “Don’t worry about organisational layers or protocol and deal directly with the people who have the information you need,” comments Dexter Congbalay, VP of Investor Relations at Mondelez International. Know the three Ts: Timeliness, transparency and trust, “The investment community values an IR organisation that demonstrates its commitment to building relationships based on trust and candor,” says Charles Triano, SVP of Investor Relations at Pfizer – Source: Deloitte
busi ne ssc hief. com
43
L E A D E R S H I P & S T R AT E G Y
“ These are unprecedented times and investor management is front and centre” — Sankar Krishnan, EVP and Industry Head, Banking and Capital Markets, Capgemini 44
the healthcare industry adopting 3D
believes that this increase in use of
printing capabilities to mass produce
digital solutions for investor relations
personal protective equipment (PPE);
due to COVID-19 is an interesting
the insurance industry using drones
concept to see how these disruptive
to survey damages; and the finance
technologies will be used in day to
industry using chatbots to continue its
day operations. “Given the fact that
services to customers. Across each
2020 is pretty much written off, it is
industry, we are seeing these kinds
not going to be so much about 2020,
of deployment, resulting in business
it will be more forward looking at 2021
operations, as we know them, evolving
and beyond. One of the good things
very quickly and out of this will come
that have come out of the virus is the
new business models.”
lowering of interest rates. So even
With digital innovations and implementations on the rise, Krishna AUGUST 2020
though you may lose 2020, 2021 and beyond will have low interest rates for
45
discounted cash flow, the challenge
for the last four months and how that
however is to show this in your digi-
shows on the balance sheet. These
tal model. I would also say that now
are some of the things I see from an
digital channels are the single largest
investor relations perspective - how
revenue channel for most organisa-
will the investor management teams
tions, it will be very interesting to
be able to digitally communicate with
see from an investor management
the shareholders and how you can
viewpoint, the impact that this has on
make the information digitally availa-
an organisations performance, and
ble. I think overall it is about finding out
whether a more digital approach will
how traditional companies can save a
be a model of choice post COVID-19.
lot of costs as they get called upon to
Then there are aspects such as nego-
invest more and more in digital for the
tiation of contracts for office space
rest of the year.�
where companies have been vacant busi ne ssc hief. com
2020 H U M A N C A P I TA L
HR operations and platform technology trends WRITTEN BY
46
AUGUST 2020
GEORGIA WILSON
47
busi ne ssc hief. com
H U M A N C A P I TA L
Business Chief explores the HR technology trends of 2020 and the benefits they can provide an organisation looking to digitally transform its HR
•••••••
O
ver the last five years, digital transformation has redefined the ways in
which organisations operate and seen an
48
increasing number of companies deploy digital solutions rapidly and at scale. As a result of this shift in mindset towards a digitally led culture, talent management and the need for new skills is changing how ‘traditional’ HR systems operate. “In a recent survey, two-thirds of business leaders told us that if their company does not digitalise more by 2020, it will no longer be competitive. But in HR, digitalisation is changing everything, from core functions like the way we hire and develop talent, to introducing new burdens such as raising performance. We found that 88% of chief HR officers say they need to invest in three or more technologies over the next two years. It’s a huge undertaking and it’s no AUGUST 2020
49
busi ne ssc hief. com
Digital Transformation. Made real every day. Find out how big advances in AI have made it easier than ever to unlock the power of data, create value, insights and a new level of intelligent security. From Individuals, to small organizations, to the Global Fortune 100, AI and machine learning are improving businesses and lives everywhere.
50
Learn More
Accenture Software: Simplifying HR Reporting with SAP HANA Cloud Platform CLICK TO WATCH
|
2:05
51
surprise many executives feel com-
human, Emily He, SVP of Global
pletely lost,” says Brian Kropp, Group
Marketing at Oracle, states that “the fas-
Vice President at Gartner.
cinating part of this AI revolution, is how
With organisations facing being left
automation is actually pushing the work-
behind if they do not ramp up their
force to become less techy and more
efforts to digitally transform, here are
human.” Agreeing with He, Ben Eubanks,
the top HR technology trends that
an HR industry analyst and influencer
could help them do so.
believes that “Every time work has been automated in the past, the resulting jobs
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI) AND ROBOTIC PROCESS AUTOMATION (RPA)
and tasks have been more human in
Whilst it may sound conflicting to sug-
aspects. These core human skills are
gest that implementing more technology
important today, but they’ll matter even
can make operations increasingly
more in the future.”
nature as we automate the less human
busi ne ssc hief. com
H U M A N C A P I TA L
Top 10 benefits of Cloud platforms for HR operations • Reduced paperwork • Real time and accurate analysis • Increased employee engagement • 24/7 access to information • Fast deployment 52
• Cost effective solutions • Improved security and GDPR policies • Easier to innovate, a more flexible solution • Ensuring that HR operations keep up with innovation across the organisation • Predictive analytics
Source: TrustRadius
AUGUST 2020
Key areas within HR that have benefited from AI include analysis of employee surveys - known as voice of employee (VOE) analytics - and removing human bias. “Our new research shows that AI tools are better than humans at analysing employee surveys,” comments Eubanks, while IBM states that “as we work to develop AI systems we can trust, it’s critical to develop and train these systems with data that is unbiased and to develop algorithms that can be easily explained.” When it comes to robotic process automation (RPA) the technology encompasses the likes of chatbots, natural language processing (NPL), machine learning, and AI. These capabilities can improve communications and increase productivity via access to the right data at the right time. Future trends for RPA within the HR sector include chatbots, with predictions that HR chatbots will be implemented at more than 50% of companies by 2022. Common questions asked to chatbots relate to payment, holiday leaves, social benefits and employee general rights. By having the technology busi ne ssc hief. com
53
H U M A N C A P I TA L
54
answer these simple questions compa-
(VR) and augmented reality (AR).
nies can help to alleviate the burden on
The technology can help recruiting and
HR departments. “These bots can act
onboarding processes by establish-
as self-service platforms that allow the
ing simulated environments that test a
HR personnel to focus on responding
candidate’s job-specific skills, sharing
to more complex and urgent questions
a virtual tour of your office space and
that warrant their attention,” comments
bolstering recruitment efforts.
Jeremy Nunn, Forbes Council Member.
According to a study conducted by Dr. Candice Lanius of The University
VIRTUAL AND AUGMENTED REALITY AND WEARABLE TECHNOLOGY
Lanius recorded more than 140 stu-
One technology gaining momentum in
dents’ speeches while monitoring their
the HR sector is the use of virtual reality
heart rate via wearable technology.
AUGUST 2020
of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), Dr.
“In a recent survey, two-thirds of business leaders told us that if their company does not digitalise more by 2020, it will no longer be competitive”
•••••••
55
Brian Kropp, Group Vice President, Gartner Based on the data, Dr. Lanius adjusted
employee experience was one of the
the curriculums to better prepare
most important aspects of their initia-
students to combat public speaking
tives, and will remain as a top priority
anxiety. This trend is predicted to
through 2020 as they look to drive
emerge within HR to track heart rate,
engagement and foster employee-
body temperature, pupil dilation and
centric cultures.
other factors to provide an insight into employee stressors.
“Put systems, tools, and processes in place that enhance, not limit, their employees’ daily tasks and
EMPLOYEE EXPERIENCE, HR GUIDANCE AND REAL-TIME PERFORMANCE FEEDBACK
schedule but beyond the tools the
It was reported by Gartner that
relationship and the respect to your
among HR professionals in 2019,
people. Your employee is your first
most important is the value of the
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H U M A N C A P I TA L
customer,” noted François Bornibus, the President of Lenovo.Such tools can include the use of real time performance feedback to allow employees and employers to receive regular, consistent feedback in real-time. This allows managers to have meaningful forward-looking conversations relating to employee development, which can increase engagement and productivity. The concept of HR guidance via an Organisation Guidance System (OGS) is also predicted to 56
grow. Dave Ulrich, speaker, author, professor and thought partner on HR, leadership, and organisation sees “HR delivering value by offering more ‘guidance’ rather than simply scorecards, dashboards or predictive analytics.” Such systems would identify not only the desired outcomes of organisation investments but the roadmap to reach the outcomes and the requirements for sustainable progression. An OGS allows an organisation to identify desired outcomes relating to talent, organisation, leadership and human resources allowing HR professionals to provide a framework for solutions. AUGUST 2020
Digital HR saving facts and figures • Organisations can save 40% of their data load time when using a data conversion and migration extension to reduce errors during mass uploads • US$80,000 can be saved with a test data and optimisation extension to secure personal data, avoiding penalty payments • US$100,000 can be saved with a data validation and monitoring extension for defensive reporting efforts due to reducing the number of queries • A document creation extension can help users to build and manage templates easily Source: Accenture
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H U M A N C A P I TA L
“ 88% of chief HR officers say they need to invest in three or more technologies over the next two years”
•••••••
Brian Kropp, Group Vice President, Gartner 58
NEW WORKING MODELS AND GENERATION-Z
as well as ensuring they have the
New working models are changing
correct policies in place to effectively
the way in which organisations adopt
support their remote workers. This
technology. While more flexible
new style of working is only further
working environments and remote
being driven by the technologically
working is not a new concept with the
savvy, Generation-Z which are begin-
outbreak of COVID-19, the increase
ning to enter the workforce.
like Zoom and Microsoft Teams,
in remote working has been expolooking to rapidly adopt remote work-
INTEGRATED SYSTEMS AND CLOUD TECHNOLOGY
ing capabilities such as cloud and
With the average HR function using 11
digital communication technologies
different systems just for recruiting,
nential. As a result, organisations are
AUGUST 2020
59
and the continued rise of digital
as the company grows, which will ulti-
transformation, the importance
mately improve a HR team’s reporting
of integrated systems to maintain
and analytics capabilities.
accuracy and efficiency continues
However, “from an HR perspec-
to grow. In addition to integrated
tive, any changes to existing systems
systems, high quality software is also
must be carefully considered and
critical. The ability to process large
skillfully executed,� highlighted Venky
amounts of data via the integrated
Seshadri, Senior Sales Director and
system is a valuable capability for
Product Manager at Accenture. While
HR professionals in order to save
some capabilities will be more critical
time and resources. This capability is
than others and will vary depending on
driven by having a robust and reliable
the business, one thing is for certain,
software solution that is adaptable
that when digital technologies are busi ne ssc hief. com
H U M A N C A P I TA L
60
“ From an HR perspective, any changes to existing systems must be carefully considered and skillfully executed
•••••••
Venky Seshadri, Senior Sales Director and Product Manager, Accenture AUGUST 2020
effectively adopted the capabilities bring value to organisations to drive sustainable and efficient operations. Within HR innovative technologies can help to better deliver an organisation’s HR, services. “Digital technologies remove some of the mystery behind HR processes,” adds Seshadri, by involving the workforce in recruitment, onboarding, performance review, learning and career development procedures, as well as opening up the ‘anytime-anywhere’ services with the use of mobility, social media platforms and smartphones. While HR platforms can be built inhouse, utilising a cloud platform is a more cost and time effective solution. The technology also provides flexibility and control for HR professionals to effectively customise applications to suit requirements, as well as the ability to make better decisions, improve efficiency, improve employee experiences, and improve HR compliance.
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D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
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DESIGNING A DIGITAL STRATEGY AND THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 Business Chief takes a look at McKinsey’s 10 factors for a successful digital transformation strategy and the impact of COVID-19
WRITTEN BY
AUGUST 2020
GEORGIA WIL SON
63
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D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
W
hen it comes to designing a digital transformation strategy, McKinsey explains that “clear targets, man-
agement buy-in, and targeting easy wins early are just some of the key aspects of a successful digital transformation. Firms should also look to rapidly up-skill the digital expertise of their workers, and deploy agile
ways of working.”
REALISING DIGITAL POTENTIAL – 10 FACTORS FOR A SUCCESSFUL DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION FRAMEWORK 64
While it is no secret that digital transformation and industry 4.0 are providing organisations with a multitude of opportunities for customer experience, growth, innovation, optimisation, transparency and agility, to drive sustainable and efficient operations. “However, mounting evidence shows that digital transformations are easier said than done, with more than half of all UK projects estimated to fail at realising their desired goals,” says McKnisey. To help organisations navigate the challenges of developing a successful digital transformation strategy, McKinsey outlines 10 factors that can help an organisation realise the digital potential for an effective strategy.
AUGUST 2020
65
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First on the list is senior manage-
investment. When it comes to invest-
ment buy-in. When it comes to budgets
ing in a digital transformation strategy,
and decision making, having execu-
McKinsey explains that “investment
tives onboard and taking a proactive
is likely to result in lower profits for a
approach will drive quicker decision
while. But without it there is a serious
making and gain support across the
risk to profits in the longer term”.
entire organisation, as well as a smooth
Organisations willing to truly commit
transition process and clear priority
to the investment needed will be able
focus. “The CEO cannot simply sanc-
to pull off a digital transformation
tion a digital transformation; he or
strategy. While investment is a core
she must communicate a vision of
element of designing a digital trans-
what needs to be achieved, and why,
formation strategy, resources are not
in order to demonstrate that digital
unlimited and particularly in the cur-
is an unquestionable priority,” states
rent climate it is important to manage
McKinsey, this clear communication
the risk when investing in projects.
is crucial to maintain momentum and
McKinsey therefore, highlights the
reduce failures when digitally trans-
importance of sequencing initiatives.
forming operations, which leads to
As the more value a digital transfor-
the importance of identifying key mile-
mation captures, the more it becomes
stones and targets to aim for, with a
self-funding and builds great support.
clear roadmap and regular progress updates. “Targets are needed for each source of value creation – cost savings, revenues, improved performance of agents, and satisfaction of employees and customers—and for new ways of working and the new capabilities required,” adds McKinsey. Another key element to designing a digital transformation strategy is busi ne ssc hief. com
67
D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
“A company’s financial pressures
the projects – known as a ‘lighthouse
will shape the sequencing to some
project’ – could be a key way to build
degree. So will its IT, if legacy systems
support. These short term and well
restrict initial choices. Companies
defined projects act as a measurable
must be more flexible. It could prove
model for projects going forward that
hard to recruit the particular people
are perhaps more broader.
needed, while technology and cus-
68
As an increasing number of organi-
tomer behaviour will continue to
sations look to design a digital
evolve. When initiatives are successful
transformation strategy, there has
and deliver the intended financial ben-
also been a rise in the need for skilled
efits, the board and top team should
talent, in particular a Chief Digital
be emboldened to push to achieve
Officer (CDO) to lead the digital
more,” states McKinsey. As a result
disruption and innovation. Recent
the establishment of ‘easy win targets’
statistics show that 19% of top global
in order to build the momentum for
companies now have a CDO – 60%
AUGUST 2020
How Coronavirus is Impacting Big Tech CLICK TO WATCH
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1:03
69 of which have been hired since 2015.
speed and autonomy at its core,
“The importance of securing a high-
agility as a process is defined as the
calibre launch team, often under a
division of tasks into short phases
CDO, cannot be overstated. A CDO
of work and the frequent reassess-
can prove invaluable in co-ordinating
ment and adaptation of plans. CDOs
a transformation – avoiding duplica-
and executive leaders can help to
tion by devising a methodology for
promote new ways of working within
the redesign of customer journeys
an organisation that are essential for
that can be replicated across the
digital success, including: agile prod-
organisation as digitisation efforts
uct development, maintaining focus
are extended.”
on customers, and cross-functional
With this in mind, the importance of
teams. McKinsey does however, high-
having a central launch team manag-
light that “separating a digital component
ing the overall operations leads into
from the rest of the organisation is
the need for agile ways working. With
not entirely the answer. They can start busi ne ssc hief. com
D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
to create channel conflict, particularly if innovations threaten to cannibalise revenue streams. The digital unit therefore needs to be reintegrated at some stage, and that becomes more difficult as time passes. Whatever the choice, the ultimate goal has to be to enmesh the old and the new.” A recurring theme within these key factors is the need for a digital mindset to maintain momentum. It is important for organisations designing a digital transformation strategy to 70
encourage a digital culture. One way to develop such culture is through education. It is important for employees to understand the changes that
reach the stage when only a funda-
are happening within the organisation
mental organisational redesign will do,”
and how the changes will impact their
comments McKinsey. Organisations
way of working. It is also important
will need to redesign many fundamen-
when it comes to education to boost
tal aspects of its operating model
the skills and system. The success
in order to realise the true potential
of a digital transformation strategy
of a digital transformation strategy.
requires the ability to acquire and
“Silos drawn along functional lines
develop competencies relating to
have always been a drag on collabo-
digital skills, technologies, processes
ration and performance in large
and operating models to avoid skill
organisations. In the digital age, when
gaps and shortages.
companies need to reinvent the way
Ultimately, “whatever structures a company chooses initially, it will AUGUST 2020
they work on the fly, an inability to connect all parts of the organisation to
71
share data, expertise, and talent can
organisations had a digital transfor-
be crippling,” concludes McKinsey.
mation strategy in place, most were not far enough ahead to make the
THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON DESIGNING A DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION STRATEGY
As a result, organisations have been
When it comes to the future of digital
mation in order to adapt to new
transformation, organisations, when
working constraints as a result
asked ‘who led your digital transfor-
of lockdown measures.
mation?’ will answer, ‘COVID-19’. It is no secret that since the outbreak
impact of COVID-19 a non-issue. forced to drive rapid digital transfor-
“This is certainly a before-and-after moment in the history of the economy
of COVID-19, organisations all over
and the digital transformation,” noted
the world have had their operations
Andrew Filev, a Forbes contributor.
impacted by the virus. While 70% of
“Even when the COVID-19 outbreak busi ne ssc hief. com
D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
72
is contained, it’s unlikely things will
adopted change due to the outbreak
return to normal. Instead, we’re seeing
of COVID-19. “Whatever objections
the forced acceleration of previously
businesses have previously had to
slow-moving trends that are likely to
telecommuting, COVID-19 may be
shape the future for the long haul.”
the moment that brings it into the
Accelerated adoption of digital trends as a result of COVID-19 include:
mainstream and shows leaders that with the right technology, culture, and expectations, employees can
TELECOMMUTING
be just as productive and effective
While remote working is not an unfamil-
from home,” says Filev.
iar concept, a recent survey revealed that 49% of workers have never worked
ON-DEMAND FOOD AND SERVICES
from home. As a result, telecommut-
With thousands of businesses due
ing technology has been the most widely
to social distancing guidelines forced
AUGUST 2020
to close, the on-demand economy has further reinforced its importance as part of digital transformation. With the likes of Uber Eats and Just Eat, digital delivery apps are providing revenue for those who had to close their brick and mortar stores. “If it works for restaurants, we may see new aggressive adoption of driveup or on-demand local delivery of
“communities and surrounding busi-
essential goods as a result. Some
nesses may need to compensate
businesses might even find this model
for a decrease in foot traffic in certain
provides lower costs, helps manage
anchor locations, and it could also
inventory, and makes revenue more
mean the painful loss of jobs in the
predictable,” believes Filev. However,
retail and service sector.”
F I V E D I G I TA L T R AN SFO RMAT I O N FACT S • 70% of companies have a digital transformation strategy in place or working on one • Top industries for digital-first business strategies include: services (95%), financial services (93%) and healthcare (92%) • Top benefits of digital transformation include: improved operational efficiency (40%), faster time to market (36%)
and the ability to meet customer expectations (35%) • 27% of organisations believe digital transformation is a matter of survival • 55% of organisations without a digital transformation strategy believe they have less than a year before they begin to lose market share Source: Forbes
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D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
W H AT D I G I TA L TR A N S F O R M AT I O N MEANS TO OR GA N I S AT I O N S • 52% believe it enables worker productivity, via tools such as artificial intelligent (AI) assisted processes • 49% believe it has the ability to better manage business performance with data availability 74
• 46% believe it helps meet customer experience expectations Source: FinancesOnline
VIRTUAL EVENTS
their physical event into a virtual one,
Events is an industry hit particularly
something “which in the end may not
hard due to the impact of COVID-19,
just be a 2020 phenomenon but the
alongside the travel and hospitality
new standard for experiences,” high-
industry that supports it. As a result,
lights Filev. It is unknown yet as to
conferences and trade shows have
whether virtual events will drive busi-
been cancelled or postponed due
ness to the same extent that a
to mitigate the spread of the virus.
physical one can, “but if they can, their
However, some of these events are turning to technology, transforming AUGUST 2020
appeal may be lasting. With lower costs for attendees and promoters
75
and more flexibility in content formats,
provides organisations with instant
I wouldn’t be surprised to see some
communication from any location.
events remain virtual in the future.”
Ultimately, “digital transformation has already saved millions of jobs,
THE CLOUD
helped slow the spread of the virus,
The cloud is the driving force that
and allowed businesses to maintain
has allowed organisations to rapidly
a level of normalcy amidst a chaotic
adapt their operating models as the
situation,” concludes Filev.
disruption of COVID-19 impacted their operations. Cloud technology busi ne ssc hief. com
TECHNOLOGY
76
AI:
ENTERPRISE CHALLENGES & OPPORTUNITIES WRITTEN BY
AUGUST 2020
MARCUS LAWRENCE
77
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TECHNOLOGY
AI and machine learning pose major questions for nations at all stages of development we look at some of the challenges and opportunities AI provides
A
rtificial intelligence (AI) has no universal definition, though its
applications are perhaps its best descrip-
tors. As computing speed and power rise 78
while purchasing costs fall, the accelerated development of AI systems, those capable of completing actions typically reliant on human cognition to be accomplished accurately or at all, shows no signs of slowing down. Businesses are integrating technologies capable of automating simple tasks across their operations, from data collation, entry and analysis to payroll systems that can accurately and securely calculate an employee’s earnings against the myriad factors that could affect them month to month. The desire to work smarter rather than harder, repurposing existing staff freed from repetitive tasks so that they can contribute to value-added activities, is steering global business AUGUST 2020
79
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TECHNOLOGY
AI & Manufacturing in Asia — Opportunities, Challenges and Solutions: Microsoft Asia CLICK TO WATCH
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3:02
81
towards a mindset that, if something
“ BOTH SKILLED AND LOW-SKILLED ROLES ARE UNDER PRESSURE AS AI’S CAPABILITIES GROW AT AN EVER ACCELERATED RATE”
can be automated, it should be. This is a stance that’s not without its problems, of course, and in Asia the challenges of AI adoption are perhaps more stark than elsewhere. McKinsey Global Institute’s (MGI) ‘Artificial Intelligence and Southeast Asia’s Future’ report from 2017 cited earlier research which found that 50% of work activities conducted across the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia could be automated. This work, cumulative across the four busi ne ssc hief. com
TECHNOLOGY
FACTS
“For their part, most of the companies across ASEAN will need to make fundamental changes in management culture, including adopting a data-driven style of decision making, and most importantly, striking innovative partnerships with specialist firms to incubate the scarce skill sets needed for AI efforts; a thoughtful approach to strengthening the data infrastructure is also needed to prioritise effort and investments” — McKinsey Global Insights
82
AUGUST 2020
biggest Southeast Asian (ASEAN)
the ASEAN region, the threat to low-
economies, accounted for around
skilled work from AI is compounded
US$900bn in wages in 2017. On the
by the nature of those economies:
one hand, companies across those
delivering quality education and inclu-
four economies could stand to save
sion at all levels is a challenge across
almost a collective $1trn by adopting
these populations and substantial
AI and automating those processes.
swathes of the countries’ poorest
On the other, workers across those
stand to be left behind.
companies, industries and economies
Both skilled and low-skilled roles
may either find themselves reas-
are under pressure as AI’s capabili-
signed or made redundant as the
ties grow at an ever accelerated rate.
money is invested elsewhere. In devel-
McKinsey’s 2017 report found that
oping economies such as those in
at least 30% of activities carried 83
busi ne ssc hief. com
TECHNOLOGY
out across 60% of all occupations could be automated, though it noted: “Because automation applies at the task level, AI seems likely to change more occupations than it will eliminate outright.” And, while the aforementioned automation of around 50% of tasks at a cost saving of $900bn is staggering to consider, “this does not mean that companies will replace workers with machines overnight just because it is technically feasible to do so. The pace and extent 84
of automation will be determined by how companies view the business case, weighing considerations such as the cost of these technology systems, their ease of use, labour market dynamics, the value that could be created, the customer experience, their own capabilities and regulatory and social acceptance.” The latter points made here are perhaps the most vital impediments to the potential havoc that AI could wreak on labour markets ill-prepared for its introduction: it won’t happen immediately and there is time to integrate the technology thoughtfully across economies. In short, as has AUGUST 2020
“ WHERE AI’S IMPLEMENTATION COMES WITH RISKS, IT ALSO COMES WITH THE PROMISE OF BENEFITING INDIVIDUALS AND SOCIETIES IN WAYS BEYOND EFFICIENCY IN BUSINESS” been typically accomplished during previous industrial and technological revolutions, societies, government spending and education can adapt to the new normal as productivity rises and wealth blossoms through gradual adoption. What sets AI apart from previous technological overhauls of working life is its propensity to extend beyond automation of repeatable, predictable tasks. Where AI’s implementation comes with risks, it also comes with the promise of benefiting individuals and societies in ways beyond efficiency in business. busi ne ssc hief. com
85
TECHNOLOGY
86
McKinsey highlights some of the
records and observations of physical
key areas in its report, with the abil-
changes caught on camera to assess
ity for machine learning to “enhance
whether a disease has taken hold
credit models and financial inclu-
or progressed. Ophthalmic care, for
sion”, as well as its applications for
example, is limited for people in geo-
healthcare, having clear and direct
graphically remote areas by the need
benefits to populations across
for specialist equipment and limited
developing countries. Preventative
availability of doctors specialising in
and remote healthcare will be
eyecare. Bangladesh is one example
supercharged by machine learning’s
where a patient may only need to
ability to cross-reference medical
have photos taken of their eyes and
AUGUST 2020
FACTS
McKinsey highlights five McKinsey highlights five elements that must be tackled elements that must be for AI adoption within tackled for AI adoption enterprises: within enterprises: • Clearly defined use cases or • Clearly defined use cases or sources of value sources of value • Robust data ecosystems • Robust data ecosystems • A workforce that is adept at using • A workforce that is adept at systems and tools using systems and tools • Clear integration with workflows • Clear integration with in the core business workflows in the core business • A n open culture that embraces a • A n open culture that embraces ‘test and learn’ approach a ‘test and learn’ approach
have them uploaded to a machine
infrastructure and data ecosystems to
learning-enhanced platform for a
realise these types of opportunities,”
diagnosis to be made based on learn-
McKinsey says.
ings from other patients. Changes
It is clear that Asia and the
over time may be minor and difficult
ASEAN region is both replete with
to detect by a human being, but such
opportunity and risks that must be
signs can be caught and flagged by
addressed when it comes to the
the system as new images are sup-
implementation of artificial intelli-
plied. But, of course, for such ideas
gence and its technological brethren,
to become reality, “most of the region
machine learning, deep learning, and
will need to build foundational digital
RPA. Governments and enterprises busi ne ssc hief. com
87
TECHNOLOGY
“ THE SKILL SETS NEEDED FROM WORKFORCES WHOSE TRADITIONAL ROLES HAVE BECOME AUTOMATED MUST BE DELIVERED BY BOTH BUSINESSES SEEKING TO UNLOCK THE POTENTIAL FOR ABSTRACT HUMAN INPUT AND VALUE-ADD ACTIVITIES”
88
AUGUST 2020
must face down considerable challenges in order to unlock its capacity for accelerated efficiency and economic growth, improved availability of credit and financial inclusion, enhancements to healthcare and more. The skill sets needed from workforces whose traditional roles have become automated must be delivered by both businesses seeking to unlock the potential for abstract human input and value-add activities, and governments who stand on the verge of enormous potential for growth and prosperity. As the dust settles on a global pandemic that has called computational power to arms like never before, it will be interesting to see how the likes of the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia shift to take advantage of AI.
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D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
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AUGUST 2020
DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION IN CORPORATE FINANCE WRITTEN BY
HARRY MENE AR
busi ne ssc hief. com
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D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
From AI and RPA to advanced data analytics, digital transformation in the corporate finance sector is poised to reach maturity There’s no denying it: we’re in the midst of a digital revolution. From remote telemedicine to blockchain apps that stop blood diamond smugglers, and artificial intelligence (AI) that verifies the freshness of high-grade tuna, nearly every aspect of our lives is becoming more and more saturated with technol92
ogy. Digital transformation is affecting every vertical in every market across the globe. While some industries have moved faster than others, each transformation has followed an inflection point: the technologies required to power significant transformation reach a level of maturity and availability that allows for change. The companies that are able to embrace these technologies and successfully use them to drive their operational and digital transformations will gain a critical advantage over their peers. “The technologies needed to reimagine finance are here and they will only get better,” observes a recent report by global consultancy and accounting firm Deloitte. "Plus, we can learn a lot from other business functions. Modern factories give us a
AUGUST 2020
93
“The technologies needed to reimagine finance are here and they will only get better” — Deloitte
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“[Automation applications] are evolving from simple individual task automation to full process automation that could improve the accuracy of financial analysis and forecasts” — Gartner glimpse of what automation can deliver.
INCREASED AUTOMATION
Smart contracts show us new ways of
From manufacturing to supply chain
tracking assets. The lessons are out
and logistics operations, automation is
there. We don’t have to reinvent the
the technological trend that is shaping
wheel. We can focus instead on adapt-
up to define the century. In the finance
ing and adopting.”
sector, robotic process automation
The report continues, however, to
(RPA) has the potential to reshape
note that although the technologies
the role of the finance professional,
necessary to effect seismic change
as well as dramatically increasingly
across the industry are appearing (typ-
the potential for value creation across
ically in the form of pilot programs and
entire businesses.
localised trials) there has yet to be
It’s estimated that financial planning
much evidence of scalable transforma-
and analysis (FA&P) professionals
tional change. “The roadmaps to that
spend as much as 80% of their workdays
future are still being drawn.” This month, Business Chief breaks down three of the key trends affecting the relationship between digital transformation and the finance operation, and looks at how companies can best adapt and thrive under these new conditions. busi ne ssc hief. com
95
D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
on manual data gathering, consolidation, verification, and formatting, leaving just 20% for high-level analysis and strategic planning. Significant RPA adoption across the industry could change all that. RPA uses AI to train software bots to perform increasingly complex yet repetitive digital tasks, from processing claims and transactions, to monitoring compliance and auditing processes. This technology is primarily manifesting through a phenomenon known as 96
“co-bots”. Rather than removing humans from the equation, the goal of a co-bot deployment is not to replace the human worker, but rather to augment that worker’s abilities through repetitive task automation, superior analysis, and workflow management. For example,
“The modern CFO is evolving from being a backwards-looking number collector to a trailblazing strategic leader who uses data and emerging technologies” — Marc Linden, EVP, GM of Medium Segment Native Cloud Solutions, Sage AUGUST 2020
97
process automation is having a signifi-
Automation in finance is gaining
cant impact on invoice management.
a good amount of traction in some of
According to Manoj Shroff, MD,
the more developed markets. In the
Finance and Accounting Business
US, for example, a report released
Process Lead at Accenture, using
in June by ISG found that around 83%
AI-powered predictive technology,
of enterprise finance functions have
finance departments are now able
deployed RPA in some way, and
to know with almost 95% accuracy
around 95% are experimenting with
when a particular invoice will get paid.
or have deployed machine learning busi ne ssc hief. com
D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
technologies in their finance and
“at the same time finance robotics must
accounting processes.
be scaled out of shared services and
Automation in finance has almost unlimited potential to increase efficiency,
into other finance sub-functions such as procurement and tax".
agility and ROI. As the technology
98
increases in sophistication, its applica-
POWERFUL ANALYTICS
tions are “evolving from simple individual
A technological trend that remains
task automation to full process automa-
closely linked with the increase in auto-
tion that could improve the accuracy of
mation deployments across the sector
financial analysis and forecasts,” accord-
is the growth and changing nature of
ing to Gartner’s report on automation in
analytics. The ability for finance depart-
finance. Gartner also notes, however,
ments to shift their energies away from
however, that the finance industry still
back-office reporting, and towards
faces pressure to increase ROI from
forecasting and predictive analysis,
automation deployments, adding that
has powerful implications for industries
Digital Finance – Finance Transformation at Deloitte CLICK TO WATCH
AUGUST 2020
|
3:55
like insurance and investment. The
finance analytics can cost a business as
power of data analytics to harness
much as 1% of its revenue, a figure that
and draw insights from vast pools of
can mount dramatically over the course
data (that would simply not be feasible
of an unsuccessful transformation.
for humans to manually evaluate) is a game changer for the industry.
“CFOs must ask what technologies will enable finance to deliver on-demand
However, the game hasn’t been
reporting, how should data be gov-
changed yet. A report released earlier
erned as reporting expands to inte-
this year by FSN, a mere 14% of financial
grate financial and nonfinancial data,
organisations are successfully harness-
and what skills finance will need to
ing the large volumes of transaction data
deliver insight in an on-demand report-
they accumulate. These organisations
ing environment,” commented Craig
are either laden down by too much data,
Wilton, Senior Director, Advisory,
constrained in accessing their data,
Gartner. “Finance must balance the
or hindered by the technology they are
need for accuracy with the need to
using to analyse the data. The stakes
make a huge volume of data available
are high, as well; Gartner estimates
for decision-making, which is a new
that each incorrect decision regarding
muscle for many finance teams.” busi ne ssc hief. com
99
D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
T H E E R A O F T HE DI GI TAL CFO
As digital transformation touches every aspect of a business’ organisation, the need for digitally forward-thinking executives is extending beyond the CTO, CSO and other, traditionally techfocused roles.
100
A report from January of this year by Sage found that 98% of CFOs say their job has significantly changed in the past five years, with around 75% claiming that they now play a critical role in driving digital transformation across their organisations. “The modern CFO is evolving from being a backwards-looking number collector to a trailblazing strategic leader who uses data and emerging technologies, like artificial intelligence and predictive analytics, to create a vision for the future of their business,” said Marc Linden, Sage EVP and GM of Medium Segment Native Cloud Solutions, in a press release. “The digitalisation of business is fundamentally changing the way finance leaders work and
AUGUST 2020
embracing technological evolution will separate the leaders from the laggards in this new era. However, a lack of cultural readiness in the office of finance may slow adoption of new technology and hinder achieving optimal results with any digital transformation.” Simply being a tech-savvy leader is not enough for the modern CFO; the most successful executives in this area need to be drivers of both cultural and digital transformation throughout not only their own finance departments, but the entire company. “Company culture plays a vital role in the effective integration of any technology,” cautioned Nancy Harris, Managing Director, Sage North America. “As CFOs are driving digital transformation forward, they must not overlook the critical role they play in ensuring teams have the skills necessary to optimise these solutions and allaying any misperceptions and fears about
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AI and automation across the wider organisation.” However, if the modern CFO can combine cutting-edge digital adoption with smart, agile strategic decision making, while working to successfully create cultural change and readiness for Industry 4,0 throughout their organisation, they can be a formidable agent of change. “CFOs have access to the most important data in the business and the insights pulled
from this data are critical to driving the company forward,” commented Marie-Helene SimardBrown, CFO, Costa Farms. “Data such as inventory management, compliance changes and financial forecasting must be set up and gathered properly in order to glean the right insights and operational efficiencies. This creates a real opportunity for CFOs to be innovation ‘change agents’ in the digitalisation journey of the business.”
busi ne ssc hief. com
D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
“Finance must balance the need for accuracy with the need to make a huge volume of data available for decision-making, which is a new muscle for many finance teams” — Craig Wilton, Senior Director, Advisory, Gartner 102
THE CHANGING ROLE OF CORPORATE FINANCE
According to Deloitte, with digital solu-
As automation and analytics steadily
tions compensating fro routine work-
take on a more mature role in the oper-
loads, finance departments will have
ation of corporate finance divisions,
increased opportunities to proactively
the roles of those business units, and
create value and direct strategy.
the finance professionals working
These new roles will include functions
within them, is set to change dramatically.
like “scenario planning, advanced
This trend can best be described as
roles for their partners and clients.
forecasting, and better visualisation.
an upstream migration. As functions
Teams of business partners will come
like budgeting, processing and report-
together to focus on the most complex
ing begin to approach full automation,
commercial decisions, moving around
finance professionals will fulfil new
the business as needed”.
AUGUST 2020
103
In essence, the digital transforma-
will double down on business insights
tion of a finance department’s more
and service,” predicts Deloitte.
mechanical functions will create a
“Whether Finance continues to direct
world where the lines between the
the resources currently under its
finance discipline and other business
control will be dependent on its ability
functions like leadership, supply chain
to add value. That will require quality
and HR are increasingly blurred. This
insights and exceptional customer
interdisciplinary world will require
service. Some finance organisations
a shift in both attitude and training
will evolve into full-fledged business
focus for these departments, but has
service centers.”
the potential to promote agility and cross-company communication. “With operations automated, finance busi ne ssc hief. com
T O P 10
104
Most valuable digital technology brands WRITTEN BY
GEORGIA WILSON
Business Chief North America ranks the region’s top 10 most valuable digital technology brands WRITTEN BY
AUGUST 2020
WILL GIRLING
105
busi ne ssc hief. com
T O P 10
CEO
SAFRA CATZ
1977 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
REDWOOD CITY CALIFORNIA
Photo © Oracle PR 106
10
Oracle US$32.2bn
Founded in 1977 by Larry Ellison, Bob Miner and Ed Oates, Oracle began its journey under the name Software Development Laboratories. Between 1977 and 1982 the company took on one more name – Relations Software Inc. – before becoming Oracle Corporation in 1982. In 1986, the company went public and became one of the largest database management companies the following year in 1987. Oracle provides multiple industries with products and services that address a wide variety of aspects in the corporate information technology environment. Its expertise include cloud infrastructures, cloud applications, on-premise infrastructure, data clouds and on-premise applications.
AUGUST 2020
09
General Electric (GE) US$34.3bn
Founded in 1892, General Electric (GE) has over 125 years of experience in innovating and pioneering technology. Reflecting on its heritage, GE highlights four areas where it has led the way for technological transformation over the years. • Transportation: “For over a century, GE’s creations have powered vehicles in the air, at sea, and on land.” • Power: “GE’s co-founder Thomas Edison created the first electrical grid in 1882. Ever since, GE has played an integral role in generating and delivering power.” • Devices: “Our revolutionary breakthroughs have fundamentally changed aspects of industry and daily life in manufacturing, healthcare and materials science discoveries.” • Environment: “We know that our company’s future success depends upon our ability to create safer, cleaner, more efficient power, products, and processes.”
CEO
H. LAWRENCE CULP, JR.
1892 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS
busi ne ssc hief. com
107
T O P 10
CEO
CHUCK ROBBINS
1984 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
SAN JOSE CALIFORNIA
Photo © Gunawan Kartapranata
08
109
Cisco
US$34.5bn
Since its founding in 1984, Cisco has been striving to “seize the opportunities of tomorrow by proving that amazing things can happen when you connect the unconnected. An integral part of our DNA is creating long-lasting customer partnerships, working together to identify our customers’ needs and provide solutions that fuel their success.” Cisco works to build technological bridges to solve business challenges via network, security, collaboration, internet of things (IoT) data center and service provider capabilities.
busi ne ssc hief. com
T O P 10
CEO
ROBERT SWAN
1968 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA
110
07
Intel
US$38.8bn
Founded in 1968, Intel strives to shape the future of technology, by creating “world-changing technology that enriches the lives of every person on earth.” With the rise of devices, data, artificial intelligence (AI), 5G and intelligent edge, Intel is focused on “unleashing the potential of data to unlock Brand value for people, business and society on a global scale.” Intel strives to “create world-changing technology that enriches the lives of every person on earth. We believe technology must constantly evolve to make more things possible and all things easier, smarter, and more connected than ever before.”
AUGUST 2020
08
AT&T
US$41.3bn
Since 1876, AT&T has been striving to transform the way people live, work and play. AT&T’s journey started with Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone. “Since then, our legacy of innovation sparked the invention of the transistor, as well as the solar cell, the communications satellite and machine learning.” Throughout its history AT&T has been driving innovation, but today, the company is striving to shape the future with “premium content, high-speed networks, direct-to-consumer relationships and an advanced ad technology platform. AT&T and its employees are united by a shared desire to inspire progress and change the world for the better.”
CEO
JOHN STANKEY
1876 YEAR FOUNDED
111
HQ DALLAS TEXAS
busi ne ssc hief. com
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T O P 10
CEO
MARK ZUCKERBERG
2004 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
MENLO PARK CALIFORNIA
Photo ©Anthony Quintano
05
113
Facebook US$88.9bn
Co-founded in 2004 by Mark Zuckerburg, Facebook is “committed to building technology that helps people find ways to be together.” Facebook is built on five core principles: giving people a voice; building connections and communities; serving everyone; keeping people safe and protecting privacy; and prompt economic opportunities. Facebook’s mission is to “give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together.” It is a key reason why the company constantly iterates, solves problems and promotes collaborative working to connect people all over the world.
busi ne ssc hief. com
T O P 10
04
Amazon US$97bn
Founded in 1994, Amazon strives to have a positive impact on customers, employees, small businesses, the economy, and communities. Guided by its four principles; customer obsession rather than competitor focus; a passion for invention; commitment to operational excellence; and long-term thinking, Amazon operates in a variety of sectors including, ecommerce, logistics, cloud technology and web services. As part of its commitments, Amazon is striving to make big changes to protect the planet. Its commitments to the Paris agreement include: 100% net zero carbon by 2040; 80% renewable energy by 2024; 100% renewable
114
energy by 2030; and 50% shipments net zero carbon by 2030.
CEO
JEFF BEZOS
AUGUST 2020
1994 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
SEATTLE WASHINGTON
CEO
ATYA NADELLA
1975 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
REDMOND WASHINGTON
03
115
Microsoft US$125.3bn
Since its founding in 1975, Microsoft has been striving to transform the way that people live, work, play, and connect through technology. “We are inspired every day by the genuine belief that we can change the world for the better”, it says. Microsoft’s journey began in Albuquerque with Bill Gates and Paul Allen developing software for the Altair 8800, under the name Micro-Soft, for microprocessors and software. In 1980, Gates and Allen struck a deal with IBM to provide the operating system for the company’s first personal computer. In 1985, Microsoft released Windows and by the late 1980s, the company was one of the world’s largest personal-computer software companies.
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T O P 10
Grow stronger with Google CLICK TO WATCH
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1:22
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CEO
SUNDAR PICHAI
1995 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
MOUNTAIN VIEW CALIFORNIA
AUGUST 2020
02
Google US$167.7bn
In 1995, co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin – at Stanford University – built a search engine that used links to determine the importance of individual pages on the World Wide Web, giving it the name Backrub. Soon after ‘Backrub’ was renamed Google – a play on the mathematical expression for the number 1 followed by 100 zeros. Today, Google’s mission remains the same as it did in 1995, “to organise the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.”
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busi ne ssc hief. com
T O P 10 AC C E N T U R E ’S T OP FI VE T ECH T REN DS I N 20 20
• Personalisation “Redesigning digital experiences with new models that amplify personal agency, transforming one-way experiences into true collaborations.” • Artificial intelligence (AI) and human collaboration Business operations will be reimagined with human and artificial intelligence (AI) collaboration. Taking “a new approach that uses artificial intelligence to bring out the full power of people.” • Moving away from the beta stage “Overcome the ‘beta burden’. Addressing the new reality of product ownership in the era of ‘forever beta.’” • Moving beyond the walls of the enterprise “Companies in every industry will unlock new opportunities by introducing robots to the next frontier: the open world.” • Innovative DNA Accenture sees organisations building upon their capabilities and ecosystem partnerships to assemble a unique innovative DNA. Source: Accenture
AUGUST 2020
U S E C AS E S O F T R EN DI N G T ECHN O LO GY – I O T, A RT I F I C I A L I N T E L L I GEN CE AN D BLO CKCHAI N – I N G LO BAL SECT O RS
• Automotive
• Education
IoT: crash avoidance, fleet management and smart factories. Artificial intelligence: autonomous driving, driver assistance and vehicle-to-vehicle communication. Blockchain: vehicle title management, counterfeit detection and origination identification.
IoT: facilities management, personalized student experience and student security. Artificial intelligence: student enrollment, personalised learning plans and student success. Blockchain: student records, digital rights management and learning marketplace.
• Manufacturing
• Finance
IoT: service monitoring, production monitoring and product insights. Artificial intelligence: predictive maintenance, intelligent manufacturing and demand sensing. Blockchain: compliance management, IP management and product traceability.
IoT: wearable technology, insurance as a service and trade finance. Artificial intelligence: risk management, financial planning and fraud prevention. Blockchain: cross border payment, identity management and settlement trading.
• Communication
• Healthcare
IoT: connectivity, delivery and monetization of iot services and asset tracking and remote workers. Artificial intelligence: network maintenance and troubleshooting, dynamic resource allocation and customer experience. Blockchain: roaming charge settlement, media and game streaming, and security and fraud.
IoT: remote patient monitoring, asset management and medication adherence. Artificial intelligence: fraud detection, pattern based cybersecurity and virtual nursing assistant. Blockchain: claims management, medical traceability and credential validation. Source: Oracle busi ne ssc hief. com
T O P 10
01
Apple
US$205.5bn
Founded in 1976, Apple is a multinational technology company that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, computer software, and online services. “We’re a diverse collective of thinkers and doers, continually reimagining what’s possible to help us all do what we love in new ways. The same innovation that goes into our products also applies to our practices — strengthening our 122
commitment to leave the world better than we found it.”Driving business growth under one common goal – to create the best customer experience, it explains that, “every new product we invent, service we create, or store we open is the result of people working together to make each other’s ideas stronger.”
CEO TIM COOK
AUGUST 2020
1976 YEAR FOUNDED
HQ
CUPERTINO CALIFORNIA
123
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AltaMed’s digital healthcare transformation AUGUST 2020
125
WRITTEN BY
LEILA HAWKINS PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
A LTA M E D H E A LT H S E R V I C E S
Raymond Lowe, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer at AltaMed Health Services, discusses clinical system transformation and remote working
N 126
on-profit healthcare company AltaMed Health Services was founded as the East Los Angeles Barrio Free Clinic in
1969, with a mission to provide healthcare to the underserved Latino and multi-ethnic population of east Los Angeles. There was a lack of healthcare available in this area and today they’re one of the largest community health centres in the country, serving nearly 300,000 patients with more than 1,000,000 visits a year. AltaMed serves everyone and anyone independent of their ability to pay or their immigration status. “We welcome everyone at AltaMed and we are here to help them with primary care and their health concerns, providing quality care without exception” Lowe says. “At our core is social justice.” Lowe joined AltaMed in January 2018. The company had been going through a decade of “explosive growth”, with the number of patients they serve having increased tenfold. AUGUST 2020
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b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
A LTA M E D H E A LT H S E R V I C E S
“ Through our digital transformation our patients will have access to healthcare through mobile devices, when and how they want it” — Raymond Lowe, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, AltaMed Health Services 128
He launched its digital transformational journey with a focus on healthcare’s quadruple aim: improving quality, improving patient experience, improving provider satisfaction, and lowering costs. In order to do this Lowe set about developing a comprehensive plan that was rapid, agile and included input from business stakeholders in clinical and financial operation areas. “A DevOps initiative or technology without operational buy-in will likely not deliver the right outcomes,” Lowe says. “I always keep in mind what the corresponding workflow is and what the KPIs are that we need to meet for the organization, thinking not just in terms of technology, but from an operational perspective. “Digital transformation is not easy,” he adds. “Aligning the organization requires flawless delivery of operations. Good IT requires detailed planning and strong operations to ensure the organization will be successful. Ultimately, I think IT needs to run like magic.” The last two years have certainly produced many benefits. AltaMed has hardened core services, particularly uptime and critical services,
AUGUST 2020
AltaMed Health Services CLICK TO WATCH
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1:00
129 implementing cyber solutions to
make our data centre to UTI tier III,
address threats that arise with
and we’ve added 350 new virtual
increased remote working and tel-
machines and 33 hosts in the last
ehealth solutions. The company has
two years within the VMware envi-
further been able to extend meeting
ronment,” Lowe explains.
services so remote workers can col-
To upgrade its network and cyber-
laborate seamlessly regardless of
security AltaMed has relied heavily
location and the number of attend-
upon its partners. Lowe explains that
ees. As well as managing televisits
there was technical debt when he
and increased traffic to their patient
first joined, and he needed to bring
portal, they’ve deployed the Epic
the corporation to an enterprise class.
electronic medical record system, a
“Fortunately I have a good partner
new managed care software solution.
network with Cisco and Presidio,
Virtualization has also been a key element. “We’ve been able to
having worked with them previously at Dignity Health, and Red8 is an b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
A LTA M E D H E A LT H S E R V I C E S
130
existing partner at AltaMed. We
cybersecurity. My entire digital, video
did a baseline gap analysis to plan
and telehealth strategy is built upon
how to correct the environment so
this framework and we are able to
we could be at an enterprise level.
work fast - taking the time to lay the
This involved collaborative working
proper foundation allows you to move
both with my technology team and
fast and perform transformation at
my partners, and through that we
the speed of light. We also entered
developed a remote multi-phase
into enterprise licensing agreements
programme. Ironically, most of it was
in the Collaboration (Webex) and
actually completed prior to COVID-19.
Cisco’s Security Umbrella.”
“The partnership with Cisco and
A partnership with NetApp and
Presidio allowed AltaMed to trans-
Red8 allowed AltaMed to simplify data
form the network, switch route,
management and non-disruptively
hyper converged infrastructure and
scale capacity, while cost-effectively
AUGUST 2020
supporting its general-purpose business applications. Red8 also worked with Lowe’s team consolidating fragmented infrastructure, allowing it to stabilize and grow the core of its managed care business. They also assisted in overall design and deployment of data protection, retention, and encryption. “Partners really help to shorten the time to market. No organization has all the talent that’s necessary, and great organizations are built on great opportunity. I’ve been very fortunate to have a very strong partner network that has been an extension of my team.” Lowe says.
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Raymond Lowe Title: Senior Vice President / Chief Information Officer Company: AltaMed Health Services Industry: Healthcare Location: Los Angeles, USA Ray Lowe serves as the Senior Vice President / Chief Information Officer of AltaMed Health Services. Ray started at AltaMed Health Services in January of 2018. Ray currently resides in the Greater Los Angeles Area.
The COVID-19 outbreak has substantially changed the way the company works. In keeping with social distancing guidelines, AltaMed has expanded video and telephonic appointment it opened nine outdoor testing sites including in some places where there was no power or network services. “We had to figure out how to deploy corporate wireless out into a parking lot to support a clinic,” Lowe explains. “From an application and DevOps perspective, in days b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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A LTA M E D H E A LT H S E R V I C E S
CLOUD FIRST PARTNER
ACCELERATING HEALTHCARE’S DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
Automate the routine, focus on health Today’s modern IT organization is being asked to do more than ever before in an IT enviroment that is more complex than ever before. Red8, alongside NetApp, is dedicated to solving these critical technology challenges through modern infrastructure solutions. Delivering flexible and scalable cloud, cybersecurity, devops, advanced analytics and data center solutions; transformation starts here. Start your digital transformation today by partnering with Red8 and NetApp.
NETAPP AND RED8: POWERING ALTAMED’S TRANSFORMATION NetApp’s Dave Nesvisky and Red8’s Eric Sarraf, Luke Lederman and Brandon Kaier discuss their partnership with AltaMed and the services they provide. Red 8 and NetApp have played a crucial part in non-profit healthcare company AltaMed Health Services transformation. Red8 is a system integrator and consulting firm, specialising in areas such as data centres, cybersecurity, DevOps and operations. For more than 20 years, it has helped customers streamline operations and roll out new technologies. NetApp is a specialist in data management and storage, dedicated to helping customers solve their data challengers whether on-premise, in the cloud or hybrid. It serves organisations of every size in the context of healthcare, from community access hospitals to national health systems. Working together with AltaMed and its CIO Raymond Lowe, the two companies have helped to simplify data management and scale capacity in a nondisruptive manner, while cost-effectively supporting AltaMed’s general-purpose business applications. “Our relationship with AltaMed started around eight years ago,” says Eric Sarraf, Senior Account Executive at Red8. “We deployed their very first data storage systems, and since then we have rolled out a number of NetApp systems. Once Ray joined the organisation, we were really able to expand our services.” Accordingly, Red8 has worked to consolidate fragmented infrastructure, allowing AltaMed to stabilise and grow the core of their managed care business. They also assisted in overall design and deployment of data protection, retention, and encryption systems. NetApp, meanwhile, provides the crucial data management and storage infrastructure, as Dave Nesvisky, Executive Director - Healthcare, explains: “As the relationship has matured and as the use cases have expanded, AltaMed has enjoyed the benefit and the simplicity of being able to manage all of their data using a common interface - instead of having islands of information and a large portfolio of disparate
NetApp & Red8
products. It takes risk out of the equation, and ultimately also saves considerable training costs in different technologies and platforms.” The work they’ve done together has had the effect of streamlining operations, and freed up employees to spend less time managing the day-to-day. “Before, several people were dedicated to just infrastructure,” says Red8’sSenior Systems Engineer, Luke Lederman. Today, they’re in a position where not only can they spend less time managing it, but also where they can scale much more easily as the business grows.” According to Red8 Field CTO Brandon Kaier, It’s a relationship born of a keen understanding of the ways technology is transforming the industry. “Digital transformation for organisations is, at the end of the day, pretty simple. It’s gaining unrealised value out of a physical asset through the use of technology. Why the partnership with NetApp and AltaMed is so important is the rise of cloud and cloud applications. Everybody, not just born-digital companies, is trying to figure out how they can accelerate their application development.” The partnership, then, has brought reliable, scalable benefits to the mission critical healthcare environment in which AltaMed operates, doing more with data and freeing up its employees’ time. Red8.com/Healthcare
A LTA M E D H E A LT H S E R V I C E S
“ Taking the time to lay the proper foundation allows you to move fast and perform transformation at the speed of light”
134
— Raymond Lowe, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, AltaMed Health Services
AUGUST 2020
we deployed a brand new build for COVID-19 to support the testing sites”. We needed increased infrastructure uplift for virtual meetings to provide rich video experience for our patients, providers and employees. For social distancing and remote work we deployed 800 laptops over a three-week period. Working with Cisco and Presidio helped us accelerate the implementation of a thousand remote workers, which happened in a matter of days.” Lowe says this was a real test as to nimbleness and agility. “Our teams excelled during this crisis, meeting the needs of our employees and continuing to care for the underserved population of Southern California.” Looking ahead, he says some of these changes will remain in place. “Social distancing is now the norm, and certain jobs may not return to the office. From a technical perspective we need to ensure that we have a highly reliable network, connected in a secure manner, allowing employees to be productive either on site or remotely.” “From a patient perspective, many b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
135
A LTA M E D H E A LT H S E R V I C E S
people are very concerned about being in crowds, so we are looking at shifting the way we provide care with a much heavier emphasis on video and telephone services.” We are deploying patient-centric care with flexible walls, meaning our patients won’t have to come to a clinic to see a provider. They will be able to obtain care from their location on their schedule. Also for COVID-19 testing we are deploying temperature kiosks that prompt patients and employees 136
to answer CDC guideline questions to ensure the safety for everyone.” AltaMed’s digital journey has already
“ A DevOps initiative or technology without operational buy-in will likely not deliver the right outcomes” — Raymond Lowe, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, AltaMed Health Services
seen it expand into these areas and they are prepared to continue this digital transformation. For patients enroute to an appointment, AltaMed has enabled them to check in to their appointment on their phone, and wait in their car until someone is ready to see them. They will then receive a text message reminder to let them know when to enter the medical building. To improve the quality of care in the home for chronic disease
AUGUST 2020
1969
Year founded
3,170 Number of employees
137
management, AltaMed is also work-
organization that lives its mission
ing on remote patient monitoring
and values providing healthcare
for people with chronic diseases, for
to the most vulnerable and under-
instance by sending out glucometers
served communities. “Through our
to track weight and blood pressure
digital transformation, our patient
in patients with diabetes, conges-
will have access to their providers
tive heart failure, hypertension and
from their mobile device or home
COPD. For moms, it is deploying an
when and how they want it.�
application that will provide education, tracking and support during their pregnancy journey. AltaMed Health Services is an b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
138
Data center sourcing made simple WRITTEN BY
JOHN O’HANLON PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
AUGUST 2020
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b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
COLOTRAQ
Dany Bouchedid, CEO of COLOTRAQ, on his vision to provide colocation, managed hosting, cloud, network and data center services globally
G
reat businesses often spring from very small seeds: the seed that grew into COLOTRAQ was a lecture, one of a
series, from an early .com entrepreneur to a final year ‘ecommerce’ class at NYU’s Stern School of Business in 1999. The internet was largely unex140
plored territory to the students of management including Dany Bouchedid, who approached the entrepreneur at the end of his talk, expressing his interest and asking him for a tip. After a moment’s thought, Jeff Bezos (for it was he) answered: “Infrastructure.” The class hadn’t yet tackled this subject but Bouchedid was sufficiently interested to ask his professor for a reading list. “I never looked back,” he says. After thoroughly acquainting himself with the data center infrastructure that supports the expanding internet, he founded COLOTRAQ as a full-service consultancy to help companies and institutions source data center colocation. This proved a winning business model, and today COLOTRAQ uses a global network of data centers from over 400 service providers and has helped more than 10,000 clients, giving them access to AUGUST 2020
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COLOTRAQ
“ When it comes to the whole as-a-service concept, where does the rubber meet the road? It’s in the data center” — Dany Bouchedid, CEO, COLOTRAQ
upwards of 3,000 colocation and managed hosting facilities. Its custombuilt cloud-based software DCITRAQ allows them to instantly identify, with granular detail, the best data center infrastructure (DCI) to deliver their business goals. It also lets them compare, in real time, the technical specs of the different options facing them. DCITRAQ was launched five years ago, and has evolved since then with new features. It is available to customers, their consultants or agents
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to dynamically compare and source data center services such as physical or wholesale colocation, managed hosting, cloud and cybersecurity, he explains. “You can have multiple vendors compete for your business through DCITRAQ.” Essentially, DCITRAQ is a reverse auction model for the data center industry, costing the client nothing to gain a transparent view of the physical, virtualized and hybrid offerings available from a huge pool of providers. It gives the client all the information they need about a provider from their physical facilities to their software capabilities and carriers. “The power AUGUST 2020
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of DCITRAQ lies in 21 years of experi-
bookseller should have set such a
ence and thousands of projects. All
store on infrastructure. “It wasn’t till
this information is collected to an intui-
Amazon launched AWS almost a
tive dashboard – all your deal history,
decade after Bezos gave that talk that
communications all fully integrated
his master plan became clear: he had
with COLOTRAQ’s cloud based enter-
been the retail king but now he was the
prise accounting platform – and that
infrastructure king!”
information is always up to date.” Though the rise of the internet was
When the corporate flight to the cloud started, Bouchedid heard people
clearly going to drive demand for data
say the colocation business might
center services and be the basis for his
suffer as people started to abandon
business expansion plan, Bouchedid
on-premise solutions and put their
did wonder at first how someone who
data and their operations in the hands
seemed no more than a clever online
of AWS, Oracle, Azure and the like. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
COLOTRAQ
favor a hybrid approach: good news for COLOTRAQ, which is uniquely placed to help them navigate these waters. For 21 years COLOTRAQ has been pitching digital transformation, virtualization and outsourcing. Suddenly the arrival of a global pandemic has meant that instead of a phased introduction, corporations are faced with an urgent need to move to a distributed workforce and off-prem systems as an immediate survival strategy. As an example, he cites telecoms: “You’d be 144
surprised at the number of organizations that still retain PBX systems: we are seeing an unprecedented take-up Far from it, he soon realized: “When
of UCaaS.” For 10 years COLOTRAQ
it comes to the whole as-a-service
has maintained its core systems
concept, where does the rubber meet
including its DCITRAQ platform in the
the road? It’s in the data center!” For
cloud so it experienced no disruption
COLOTRAQ, the effect has been that
whatever when lockdown came in.
the lower value, high churn business
Many businesses were totally
did reduce as small business clients
unprepared for the pandemic. One of
moved to the cloud, but that was good
COLOTRAQ’s biggest projects cur-
news. Its biggest market is now among
rently involves digitizing a large law
mid-market to large enterprises as well
firm’s entire caseload and building
as the providers of services over IP, such
an enterprise portal enabling them
as VoIP, UCaaS, IaaS and a host of ser-
to virtualize all the complex informa-
vices driven by technologies like IoT or
tion that litigation requires, work on
blockchain. Large enterprises do tend to
the case and present it at a Zoom
AUGUST 2020
court session through screen shar-
who have not done so will be urgently
ing. “Law is just one vertical that is
virtualizing their entire value chain.”
still quite archaic in many ways, with
So called ‘traditional’ industries like
lawyers showing up at court with
law or real-estate may be racing to
piles of papers – that is not much use
catch up, but the need of tech-based
at a Zoom meeting. The many firms
verticals is just as pressing, for slightly
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Dany Bouchedid Title: CEO
Company: COLOTRAQ
Dany Bouchedid is a relationship-driven entrepreneur, leader and visionary with a proven track record of success in building, growing and managing multimillion dollar enterprises. In 1999, he founded and is currently CEO of COLOTRAQ, a full-service sourcing and consulting firm that helps companies and institutions source data center colocation, managed hosting, cloud computing, network infrastructure and other related telecom services in 140 countries. Dany has been published and quoted in various industry publications and has been a speaker at several industry conferences. He has served on several boards for both non-profits and corporations. Dany is the founder and president of The Bouchedid Foundation, a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit charitable organization whose mission is to identify and evaluate thousands of charities and non-profit service organizations and rank them using a proprietary algorithm to determine which causes to fund directly. The foundation considers a multitude of variables including the focus of the charity, the urgency and direness of their cause, and the level of disenfranchisement and vulnerability of the group they service. The ultimate goal is to fund the most immediate and worthwhile causes that are affecting the most underprivileged and neglected groups. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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Data center and colocation providers like Equinix are investing in expanding their footprint to meet the demands of their consumers and changing technologies.
Equinix and Colotraq: joint data centre pioneers Jules Johnston, Vice President, Americas Partner Sales at data centre company Equinix, discusses the company’s collaborative approach to interconnection. Jules Johnston is Vice President, Americas Partner Sales at data centre company Equinix. Having joined in early 2016, she has overseen a move to new sales channels as part of the company’s work. “The team we’ve put together in the last few years has helped the company go from what was single digits in terms of partner-connected selling to something greater than 30% of our bookings globally,” she says. “We’re on a path and committed to do the majority of our business with partners, so it’s been very exciting to be part of that. The team I lead today is the 40-person Americas partner sales organisation, and our job is to work with partners so that we can help our field and inside sellers meet at the customer.” While Equinix is renowned as a co-location and data centre organisation, Johnston is clear that the company takes a broader view. “We really think of ourselves as an interconnection company and as the global platform for digital business. So when companies build their digital infrastructure and platforms within Equinix, what they’re able to do is dynamically connect to the world’s largest ecosystem of clouds, data, suppliers and customers.” Constructing such an ecosystem has required a significant amount of infrastructure. “Equinix has invested in over 210 data centres around the world, or international business exchanges, IBXs, as we call them. That allows Equinix to be able to meet the needs of any company today with global aspirations.” Equinix works closely with colocation broker Colotraq, with the organisation having been one of Equinix’s master agents for around five years. “Colotraq is a fellow pioneer in the data center space,” says Johnston. “As one of the oldest master agents in telecom, they’ve intersected with us naturally. Equinix started as a place for the world’s networks to come together in a neutral fashion and Colotraq also prides itself on being network neutral.” The partnership extends far beyond the surface level, with Colotraq agents and Equinix solutions architects jointly meeting with customers to advise on digital edge strategy briefings.
Jules Johnston @ Equinix
“One of the places that we intersect is in helping customers in their network optimisation strategies,” says Johnston. “We have the largest collection of networks in the world in Equinix data centers, and Colotraq advises companies on optimising their network strategies and spend. We’ve had a really long, productive association given that overlap.” Incoming trends such as 5G, AI, IoT, blockchain and more all signal a bright future for Equinix and its cloud offering, with the company continuing to prove invaluable for customers even during the COVID-19 pandemic. “Equinix was able to help a global financial powerhouse stand up 120,000 employees remotely in three days. In this current climate, companies have a real need for that. We’re able to use our digital platform to help companies make those kinds of moves.”
Learn more
COLOTRAQ
different reasons. Another big current project involves a very popular online gaming company: “They are expanding their footprint like crazy, and they need to get to the edge. Edge computing has been a huge driver: any business where there’s consumption of streaming content or which is bandwidth-intensive like streaming media, music or online gaming needs to push its network out to the edge, closer to its end users and subscribers. That is good news for colocation because 148
with edge computing you need to control the location of your data center equipment.” The mantra of ubiquity, where it no longer matters where the physical equipment is as long as you have access to your application, does not work for edge computing architecture he noted. “Many businesses of this nature are moving towards hybrid models now. 20 years ago it was all about location, then it shifted to the notion of ubiquity: now we’ve come full circle.” Blockchain is another major disruptor, he continued. “You can’t have your blockchain nodes on a public cloud platform: the whole point is to have the controls in place for all the AUGUST 2020
“ It’s vital for any entrepreneur to make sure he is not outpaced by the market he is in” — Dany Bouchedid, CEO, COLOTRAQ
different blockchain nodes, and the only way to do that is by having racks in each of your key markets, with georedundancy.” Edge computing and blockchain are developments where a one-size-fits-all approach won’t answer in the post-Covid world. Looking ahead the company is keeping a close eye on the internet of things (IoT), in particular industrial IoT or IIoT. “We have seen only the tip of the iceberg: as manufacturing and logistics really starts to implement IIoT devices throughout the supply chain it will create so much big data, for storage and to have the computing power at the edge, to be able to feed back data in real time to those devices. This will escalate the demand for colocation, create more ‘sprawl’ and get us closer to the edge, where customers and subscribers actually live and work. Many data center providers to my knowledge are investing in expanding their footprint.” The industry has come full circle when even AWS and VMware have gone physical for the first time ever with their recently launched Outposts, an integrated hardware rack that seamlessly connects to Amazon’s public cloud. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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COLOTRAQ
COLOTRAQ is a company that thrives on change, and nothing drives change like a pandemic. Every client he speaks with is scrutinizing its IT infrastructure and architecture like never before, and that presents opportunities in every aspect of the IT value chain from their data center infrastructure to their communications and their networks. Security is again at the forefront: “Hackers are having a field day thanks to the lockdown, where businesses secured their offices but not their 150
employees’ home networks, so we are seeing cybersecurity projects coming in relating to the post-pandemic world.”
“ Over 21 years I have been blessed by having rock stars for my employees and that makes it really easy to lead the company” — Dany Bouchedid, CEO, COLOTRAQ
The terrible economic and human cost of the crisis will accelerate the pace of change. Already the data center industry was predicted to grow at an annual rate of 25% over the next five years. “It’s vital for any entrepreneur to make sure he is not outpaced by the market he is in. For COLOTRAQ, if we feel we can’t handle demand at this scale we may raise a capital growth round and staff up – it will be a great problem to have!” It would be nice if the realization that IT consumes far more energy
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worldwide than any other activ-
visible by DCITRAQ – it’s a good case
ity would drive the greening of the
where the triple bottom line is driven by
industry, but in Dany Bouchedid’s
profitability as well as social pressure
opinion that goal will more probably
to combat climate change.
be reached though economic pres-
Meanwhile COLOTRAQ is happy to
sure. “All operators are under pressure
share access to its platforms with the
from their shareholders to lower their
many entrepreneurial players entering
operating expenditure, and energy is
the colocation space, and work with them.
the biggest part of that. And that OpEx
“There will be more than enough space for
is passed on to customers. There’s
everyone, and I see new entrants as co-
a direct correlation between better
opetition rather than competition.”
energy management and competitive pricing.” All of these metrics are made b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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Digital Realty: the global data centre ecosystem platform WRITTEN BY
MATT HIGH PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
AUGUST 2020
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D I G I TA L R E A LT Y
Chris Sharp, CTO at Digital Realty, on powering data centre digital transformation with a global ecosystem platform
“
F
orget data lakes, we’re now talking about some of the largest data oceans ever created,” says Digital Realty’s Chris Sharp,
discussing the seismic evolution of data – and how 152
enterprise and hyperscale customers use that data – towards a series of interconnected global, digital ecosystems capable of supporting even the most complex digital transformations. Digital Realty, at which Sharp holds the role of Chief Technology Officer, Executive Vice President and Service Innovation, is a key enabler of those transformations. The company supports the global data centre, colocation, and interconnection strategies of leading organisations worldwide with a fit for purpose global data centre platform, PlatformDIGITAL. This comprehensive solution offers a model built around network, control, and data hubs, and has been created to enable the ever-changing data, security, and networking demands of these global enterprises as they grow.
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2001
Year founded
$3bn+ Revenue in US dollars
1,500 Number of employees
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D I G I TA L R E A LT Y
“ We are really focused on supporting our customers in their enterprise journey, and a crucial aspect of that is not only focusing on what they need today, but what they’ll absolutely need tomorrow” — Chris Sharp, Chief Technology Officer, Executive Vice President and Service Innovation 154
The pace at which the global digital economy has evolved has changed the way enterprises in every sector create and deliver value. Now more than ever data, technology and an effective IT strategy are essential to enterprises. Equally so, is operating on demand, ubiquitously and in a manner that is augmented by real-time intelligence at every point of business globally. Yet, with that growth comes challenges. For example, as data creation and consumption rises, so too does the need for effective tools, networks and infrastructures to access and analyse it. This creates data gravity – a point that many enterprises reach as they scale in a digital environment.
THE GLOBAL DATA TRANSFORMATION Sharp is a seasoned technology leader, with more than 20 years’ experience and a proven track record of evolving businesses to meet the most complex and demanding technology trends. From the countless enterprise organisations that he and Digital Realty work with, he identifies an overarching trend driving change: as enterprises scale, they deploy globally and need access AUGUST 2020
to their data and public cloud-based systems in a different way, yet they also all need help managing the complexity from this shift. “This is where, in my experience, Digital Realty is really able to differentiate itself from others in the market,” he says. “We are dedicated to supporting our customers in their enterprise IT journey and a crucial aspect of that is not only focusing on what they need today, but also what they’ll absolutely need tomorrow. “It’s essential to recognise that all enterprises and businesses – not just the hyperscalers that we deal with – are often going through significant digital transformations,” he continues. “Part of that, in terms of their data, is about being able to deploy globally consistent infrastructure to manage efficient data exchanges, rethink data flows to a broader set of partners, and build these ecosystems of community interest.
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Chris Sharp Title: Chief Technology Officer, Executive Vice President and Service Innovation Location: Menlo Park, California Chris has more than 20 years’ experience and a proven track record of evolving businesses to meet the most complex and demanding technology trends. He has a strong understanding of technology and its business impact with a deep network of relationships in the internet, telecommunications and IT industry. During his career, Chris has led acquisition and integration for seven successful companies since 2003, valued over $3bn in managed network services, colocation and security services.
Providing those organisations with an innovative and market-leading platform that’s exactly the same whether they’re in Silicon Valley, Chicago, London, Osaka, or any other location worldwide, allows access to revenue and ecosystems in a very repeatable fashion.” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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a very different ethos at Digital Realty, where we want to empower our customers and be a true open platform.” That ethos, as Sharp explains, mirrors the broader evolution of the data centre sector, as well as how companies – indeed, all of us – use data. “We’ve seen a shift wherein customers don’t want to be siloed into different products or different services – so, the differences between collocation and scale, for example. Typically, particularly with how rapidly the landscape is changing, you’ll see customers may go into collocation and outgrow it very quickly because the economics and the sheer infrastructure they need just can’t be provided through a collocation
BUILDING A GLOBAL DATA CENTRE PLATFORM
model. From our perspective, it’s about
This approach, Sharp explains, is the
manage all of those different fields in
driver behind PlatformDIGITAL, which
a seamless fashion. It’s why you’ll see
he says is “about being entrenched
us stop talking about collocation and
in what each customer needs and
scale, and just talk about ‘the platform’.
truly supporting them on a global
building out a robust platform that can
“That shift is really dictating the direc-
basis. This is what directly drove our
tion of PlatformDIGITAL,” he adds. “You
recent announcement of expanding
don’t go to Hertz to rent a car for three
PlatformDIGITAL with Interxion, adding
years, you know? It’s economics. So, for
more value to our customers and deeper
us, it’s always about understanding a
reach into Europe and beyond. We have
customer’s requirements around sizing b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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D I G I TA L R E A LT Y
Digital Realty: PlatformDIGITAL CLICK TO WATCH
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158 so we can work on an environment
created in a centralised place, the
that lets them ‘land and expand’. The
proliferation of digital technologies,
other critical challenge enterprises
smartphones, cloud, mobile analyt-
face today beyond that blended set of
ics and more means it is now being
services, is really around what it means
created everywhere. That data must
to be open, so that they can get the full
still be aggregated in order to ana-
value from the broader landscape that
lyse, understand, and learn from it.
they need access to.”
When it collects, a growing number
The last major challenge in the shift
of services and applications use it —
to a global ecosystem is data gravity,
against this proliferation of devices,
which Sharp describes as fundamental
data gravity interacts. This can result
to successful enterprise infrastructure.
in data that is near impossible to
By 2025, it is estimated that 463 exabytes
move and, according to Digital Realty,
of data will be created daily worldwide.
“unfavourable complexity when factor-
And while that data was typically
ing business locations, proximity to
AUGUST 2020
users, regulatory constraints, compli-
a customer’s data – say they are look-
ance and data privacy.”
ing to carry out some data analytics
To grow globally, businesses must
and want to stand up an AI farm with
use the global open platform approach
several GPU processors, for example –
offered by Digital Realty to mitigate
which is a real game changer for many
the data gravity barriers created by
of those enterprises we’re working
digital transformation. “Some of the
with. They’re all trying to work with data
enterprises we work with aren’t fully
analytics, to use multi-hybrid cloud
aware of the issue, or that they should
architectures and our platform does
deploy in proximity to where all of this
that — when that data doesn’t have
data is burgeoning or being built, and
to travel far because the customer is
this is where PlatformDIGITAL brings
immersed right in it, that’s probably
huge value,” Sharp notes. “So, we can
the most optimal architecture that an
procure a cabinet in close proximity to
enterprise could hope to achieve.”
Solve data gravity challenges and scale digital business by implementing the PlatformDIGITAL solution model
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CONTROL, CONNECT, OPTIMISE There is also a notable trend of enterprises looking to move away from running their own data centres and data locations, Sharp reveals. He explains that, in this context, solutions like PlatformDIGITAL enable those businesses to get ahead of the curve before their footprint is too difficult to move, adding that “we can expose the benefits of having that fit-for-purpose platform that’s heavily interconnected. Believe me, I don’t run into any custom160
ers that tell me they want to continue building their own data centres.” PlatformDIGITAL allows enterprises to leverage full interconnection capabilities across Digital Realty’s global ecosystem, including cloud service providers, partners, networks and customers, that will drive their business. According to the company, the core benefits of the platform revolve around three distinct opportunities: be in control, be connected, be optimised. In the case of control, for example, standardising deployment and operations on a single platform simplifies infrastructure and reduces risk, while the greater connection of a global AUGUST 2020
platform improves business performance through participation in global digital ecosystems; it also shortens the time to connect with markets and other players in that ecosystem. The platform tailors infrastructure deployments and controls matched to specific business requirements, irrespective of data centre size, scale, location configuration, or ecosystem configurations. In line with the scaling of modern, digital enterprises, it lets customers operate deployments as part of a seamless extension of any global infrastructure, says the company, thus enabling global, distributed workflows at centres of data exchange
“ Forget data lakes, we’re now talking about some of the largest data oceans ever created” — Chris Sharp, Chief Technology Officer, Executive Vice President and Service Innovation
to remove data gravity barriers.
CONNECTION AND SX FABRIC “To embark on a digital transformation, the first thing an enterprise needs is storage,” Sharp says. “They need their own data store, and that’s where the IP for a lot of our customers comes from, the ability to have that data store and run analytics against it. You’re no longer talking just about owning land, but the ability to deploy high power density infrastructure in close b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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D I G I TA L R E A LT Y
proximity to that data store once you
global exchange of data centre cloud
factor in things like AI. There’s not an
and connectivity solutions that enables
industry out there today that isn’t look-
interconnected global workflows, the
ing to up its data analytics capabilities
integration of cloud and B2B ecosys-
and it’s the proximity element that
tems with virtual interconnections,
PlatformDIGITAL enables in a very
and the ability to virtually connect
efficient way.”
clouds and digital ecosystems both
After storage, says Sharp, connec-
162
locally and globally. “It essentially lets
tivity is crucial. It is here that Digital
enterprises click and procure,” says
Realty’s Service Exchange (SX)
Sharp. “They’re afforded a portal within
Fabric on PlatformDIGITAL proves
which they can pick any one of the
crucial. SX Fabric, which is powered
150-plus cloud on-ramps from all of the
by Megaport’s multi-cloud and eco-
top cloud providers globally through
system connectivity, is an automated
SX - all without ever having to use an
AUGUST 2020
engineer, or even understanding the
and giving them as open a platform
level of complexity behind it.
as possible. We really like to invest
“The work that we collaborated on
in our partners, not to compete with
with Megaport on SX is really at the
them, and have those best-of-breed
highest level,” he continues. “It’s very
relationships that let us deliver the best
technically challenging to achieve
capabilities to our customers.”
because it revolves around the hybrid multi-cloud approach that a lot of
GLOBAL FOOTPRINT
enterprises are taking, wherein they
SX Fabric is just one aspect of the vast
need to establish a location to stand
PlatformDIGITAL capability roadmap.
up their private infrastructure and then
For example, the platform offers cover-
access multiple public clouds. From our
age from more than 265 Digital Realty
perspective, it was really about aligning
data centres in 20 countries and 44
our enterprise customers in the market
metropolitan areas. Connections are offered through physical and virtual cross-connects and includes more than 2,000 ecosystem participants — the company plans to extend this to more than 10,000 in the future. More recently, the business has completed projects in Frankfurt, Dublin, and Tokyo, locations that Sharp describes as “hotbeds for enterprise customers trying to access revenue opportunities”. Take the new Clonshaugh data centre in Dublin, which forms part of an existing portfolio in the Irish capital. Ireland’s data centre economy is growing rapidly having already contributed 7.13bn euros b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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D I G I TA L R E A LT Y
164 to the nation’s overall economy in the
28MW; it offers solutions from Network
last decade. Digital Realty has invested
Hubs through to Data Hubs.
more than 200mn euros in Ireland
“With our size and our balance sheet,
to date, with the latest Clonshaugh
there’s rarely an opportunity in the
development designed to underpin the
market that we don’t see,” says Sharp.
importance of data-led technologies
“If there’s an asset that will trade or
to Dublin’s economy.
customer demand around an area
The company has also expanded
then we’ll spend a lot of time assess-
PlatformDIGITAL in Germany, purchas-
ing that prospect. We already have
ing 1.35 acres of land in Frankfurt to
one of the most robust platforms to
address increasing customer demand.
serve Europe with the recent expan-
The new campus, purpose built for
sion of the Interxion assets, we’re
those enterprises looking to exploit the
constantly watching for opportunities
opportunities that PlatformDIGITAL
in the Middle East and we also have an
provides, will add an additional 6MW
eye on some of the deeper elements
of power to the company’s existing
of the African market. It’s also worth
AUGUST 2020
165 noting that we’re always looking to go
trends we have discussed, as well as
deeper into existing markets. That’s
other emerging trends like the personi-
particularly the case in terms of new
fication of the data centre becoming
technologies, such as 5G or edge
a critical asset. Every industry and
computing, both of which will still
every customer out there, regardless
need efficient access back to the core
of size, will need to have a fundamental
infrastructure we have today.”
foundation like PlatformDIGITAL that
Those new technologies aside, Chris
allows them to increase in power den-
believes that the global ecosystem
sity, increase interconnection, increase
model enabled by PlatformDIGITAL
in square footage or footprint, and
will continue to dominate. “If you
increase in global presence.”
would’ve told me 15 years ago that I’d still be going to work in a data centre, I’d have found it hard to believe,” he states. “But what continues to draw me in is my passion for those secular b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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Interstitial Systems: flooring for data centre efficiency WRITTEN BY
WILLIAM SMITH PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
AUGUST 2020
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INTERSTITIAL SYSTEMS
William Collier, owner of Interstitial Systems, on what the company’s electromechanical raised floor distribution system offers data centres
I 168
nterstitial Systems is a manufacturer of multilevel electromechanical raised floor distribution systems for data centres.
William Collier is the company’s founder and owner, bringing his extensive 42 years’ of industry experience to the firm. Collier emphasises both the simplicity of Interstitial Systems’ TIER E/A electromechanical raised floor distribution system offering, and the enormous impact it can have. “It’s remarkable that something as simple as dividing the underfloor horizontally into two levels for wires and air can have such a huge impact on the way a data centre is designed, serviced and maintained.” Traditionally, data centres have been built with conventional raised flooring or on concrete. “That’s basically the two options that are available,” says Collier. “We’re the third option that nobody knows very much about – what we refer to as an electromechanical distribution system.” AUGUST 2020
Pyramid floor structure design to meet seismic requirement
169
Remove unlimited number of floor panels without affecting structural integrity
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INTERSTITIAL SYSTEMS
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Compared to conventional flooring,
unit to escape. So if you open up four
Interstitial Systems’ approach comes
floor panels, all of the cabinets in that
with a host of benefits for data centres.
air handling unit’s zone downstream
“The beautiful part about our system is
from the opening are going to be
you can open up an unlimited number
starved of air. Because of our pres-
of floor panels for as long as you want
surised plenum, we’re able to distribute
and never lose air pressure. This is untrue for a traditional raised floor. The
AUGUST 2020
air over a 200 foot area, meaning we can push air 200 feet across the room, whereas a typical raised floor air
opening created when
conditioning unit can do no more than
four floor panels are
30 to 35 feet at best. That allows us
removed permits all of
to reconfigure the design of a room to
the air produced by a
better optimise the space and improve
30 ton air conditioning
efficiency for the user.”
William Collier
“White space is gold and cabinets are diamonds” — William Collier, Owner, Interstitial Systems 171
“It is our belief that in data centres, white space is gold and cabinets are
space, I have a compelling story to tell.” Another crucial element of the data
diamonds,” says Collier. Accordingly,
centre puzzle is uptime, with redun-
the company emphasises achieving
dancy therefore being critical. “What
maximum efficiency for its clients,
data centres typically look for is N+1
with clear examples of improvement.
redundancy. So for every four or five
“In a typical room, of around 10,000
air handlers, designers add another for
square feet, the owner’s plan was to
redundancy. But this does not provide
put in 418 cabinets. With Tier E/A, the
effective redundancy unless the extra
owner could put 512 cabinets in that
unit is adjacent to the unit that goes
room. That’s 22% or so more cabinets
down. We, on the other hand, build a
in the same space. Every one of those
central mechanical equipment room
cabinets increases revenue. So if I
and, by providing a mixing box, are
can put 94 more cabinets in the same
able to provide true N+1 redundancy b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
Returning to work with chemical free disinfection.
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“One of our methodologies when doing business is that we work in a very lean and mean way,” says Collier. “We’ve been doing this for a long time and we’ve always believed in working to the best optimisation.” Consequently, the organisation chooses its partners carefully, such as TekClean. “They’re in the data centre cleaning business down in Atlanta. We teamed up with them a long time ago thanks to their good reputation. I need a rep that has responsibility, loyalty, is smart, savvy and just down to earth. People that make good relationships and want to bring good things to their customers.”
AUGUST 2020
“ We’re the third option that nobody knows very much about – what we refer to as an electromechanical distribution system” — William Collier, Owner, Interstitial Systems
a terraced, raised floor for control and command centres. Thanks to our two-level approach, we can ensure consistent air distribution in that pressurised bottom plenum and allow for the rapid change, relocation and reconfiguration of power and structured cabling underneath the floor.” Achieving high tech solutions doesn’t itself require anything too revolutionary for Interstitial Systems, instead it leverages technology smartly. “We’re obviously big users of AutoCAD because we typically receive a set of
for the entire room with a single extra
plans, where the client says: ‘this is the
air handler. This is because of the Tier
direction we’re going in, how would
E/A’s pressurised plenum’s superior
you optimise the facility using your sys-
air distribution capabilities. We’ve just
tem?’ Then there’s computational fluid
planned a project where the original
dynamics analysis - again not a new
design called for 32 air conditioning
technology - but when used correctly it
units. We redesigned the room and did
is a powerful tool to head off any short-
the same with 26 air conditioning units.
comings that might occur in a facility.”
Taking six air conditioning units out of
Like all businesses worldwide,
the equation for around $250,000 a
Interstitial Systems has not been
piece provides huge savings, and also
unaffected by the ongoing COVID-19
saves a great deal of energy.”
pandemic. ButCollier is an eternal
The company is continuing to
optimist believing that this challenge
develop its capabilities. “Something
will eventually result in a better world.
that we did with the trading pits for the
“I can’t tell you how many people I’ve
Chicago Mercantile Exchange is build
talked to in the last 90 days that have b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
173
INTERSTITIAL SYSTEMS
Generous Cable Cuts –no need for gaskets
174
“ It’s remarkable that something as simple as dividing the underfloor horizontally into two levels for wires and air can have such a huge impact” — William Collier, Owner, Interstitial Systems
AUGUST 2020
Power Wiring installed in Wireway
said: ‘Oh my God, I pick up an extra three hours a day not having to commute to the office.’ That’s found time. That’s family time. That’s quality of lifetime. That’s exercise time. That’s all kinds of time that allows people to do things for themselves. And at the same time, it’s helping the planet because we’re not putting out all the emissions from commuting back and forth.” As for Interstitial Systems’ future, Collier is confident it is treading the right path. “We’re going to keep plowing ahead, one job at a time. That’s what we’ve always done and that’s what we’ll always do. We want to bring the best value to our customers. Everything’s about relationships. You build networks, you find like-minded people. And when you find the people that appreciate what you do, you love doing work with them, you become a team. You become partners. You even build friendships. That’s how we like to do business.”
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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TRANSFORMING OPERATIONS THROUGH DIGITISATION WRITTEN BY
SEAN GALEA-PACE PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
M C D E R M O T T I N T E R N AT I O N A L I N C
Mark Lowman, Vice President of Operations at McDermott, discusses the impact of COVID-19 in the oil and gas industry
M
cDermott is a premier, fully-integrated provider of technology, engineering and construction solutions to the energy indus-
try. Operating in over 54 countries, McDermott’s locally focused and globally integrated resources include more than 42,000 employees, a diversified fleet of specialty marine construction vessels and 178
fabrication facilities worldwide. Mark Lowman is Vice President of Operations at McDermott. Having spent his early career as a Submariner in the Royal Navy, Lowman worked his way through the ranks to advance to Lieutenant Commander, before spending a further four years with the Royal Australian Navy. In 2000, Lowman left the Navy and joined the oil and gas industry and, over the next few years, gained experience as a Project Manager delivering projects in the Subsea, Offshore and Onshore business segments. In 2012, he joined McDermott to oversee company fabrication operations in Asia and to manage the Batam Fabrication yard. Two years later, he stepped into his current role as Vice President of Operations and is now based in Houston, Texas. “I loved my career with the Royal Navy, but I always knew I was AUGUST 2020
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b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
— Makes operations and asset optimization easier than it looks ABB Ability™ Genix Industrial Analytics and AI Suite In today’s trying times, we need every angle to solve business challenges faster. Analyzing data can give us an edge. But deciding which data and how is a whole different game. As a leader in digital technologies that help customers improve operations, we developed the ABB Ability™ Genix Industrial Analytics and AI Suite. Genix takes data from distributed control systems and devices, and combines it with data from information and engineering systems to provide multidimensional analytics that help you increase production, optimize assets and streamline business processes. Artificial Intelligence helps you produce predictive and prescriptive actions to improve. The Genix platform is augmented with easy-to-use applications and supplemented with expert ABB services to help you find the right solution to solve business challenges faster. abb.com
ABB: accelerating digitalisation with McDermott ABB is a leading global engineering company that energizes the transformation of society and industry to achieve a more productive, sustainable future. By connecting software to its electrification, robotics, automation and motion portfolio, ABB pushes the boundaries of technology to drive performance to new levels. Heather Cykoski is the Group Vice President at ABB. Having worked for the organisation since 2005 in several different leadership positions, she has a comprehensive understanding of the industry and has observed her organisation’s digital transformation journey first-hand. “It’s incredibly interesting to be where we are today. Digitalisation has been at the core of what we do for many years; however, the acceleration of implementation today is truly transformational,” explains Cykoski. “Now is the time for those who lead in this space to transform and deliver digital value to both our own operations and to our customers. Today’s challenging economy makes this more urgent than ever. There is so much more to deliver, and we need to deliver fast.” Rajesh Ramachandran is the Chief Digital Officer for ABB’s Industrial Automation business. He joined ABB in February 2019 and brings over three decades of experience in technology and business leadership to ABB, having helped to transform world-class multinational organisations such as Oracle, Siemens, PayPal and more.
ABB Partner Video
“Having established a key, strategic business relationship with McDermott, Cykoski affirms that this collaboration is influential to mutual success. “The partner ecosystem has changed. The combination of a technology provider like ABB, and an EPC like McDermott, supporting the end user, is the trifecta that creates the perfect project,” says Cykoski. “We know how important an EPC is: 80% of large projects go through an EPC. When you look at digitalisation and partnerships, what it truly means is that you trust one another and collaborate to provide value. McDermott and ABB both have very similar outlooks and values, and that is key.”
“With the future in mind, Ramachandran has a clear idea of what the partnership with McDermott could hold. “We’re actively working on how to build solutions together that have a “Different customers are at different points of lifecycle value for customers, from design through their digital transformation journeys,” says operations through continuous improvement,” he Ramachandran. “This is even true with the solution says. “The trusted relationship that we have with providers as they are learning along with the McDermott is important to ensure projects are customers on what the real value of digital is to delivered on time at the right cost. There is now a drive business outcomes. In today’s highly new normal in the industry following the pandemic. competitive landscape, industries are able to It’s the right time for partners to come together embrace digital technologies to address their core and develop, test and implement new technologies — challenges, while striving for operational excellence that challenge traditional ways of working. We’re Makes operations and asset and output of the highest quality. Digital confident that by working together, we will ensure transformation has becomeoptimization a high priority due easier safer, than smarterit and more sustainable operations looks to its promise of addressing strategic business across the industry. “It’s a great opportunity to ABB Ability™ Industrial Analytics andknowledge AI Suite imperatives. Many companies are struggling withGenix bring the combined power of domain how to leverage this potential. We believe the and leading technology to our customers. We’re In today’s trying times, we need every angle to solve business challenges faster. Analyzing data industry must adopt a clear can roadmap of how to confident this jointgame. value will help our give us an edge. But deciding which data and how is a whole different As a proposition leader in technologies that help customers improve operations, we developed the ABB Ability™ address digitalisation, from digital enabling it to customers succeed today and tomorrow .” Genix Industrial Analytics and AI Suite. Genix takes data from distributed control systems and implementing it through focused solutions, devices, and combines it with data from information and engineering systems to provide multidimensional analytics that help you increase production, optimize assets and streamline keeping in mind the longer digitalisation journey. business processes. Artificial Intelligence helps you produce predictive and prescriptive actions to improve. effectively The Genix platform is augmented with easy-to-use applications and supplemented At ABB, we can help our customers with with expert ABB services to help you find the right solution to solve business challenges faster. these challenges.” Learn more abb.com
M C D E R M O T T I N T E R N AT I O N A L I N C
“MCDERMOTT HAS CREATED AN ENVIRONMENT WHERE EMPLOYEES ARE ENCOURAGED TO ENGAGE AND PROMOTE THEIR IDEAS AND WE HAVE A MANTRA TO ‘TAKE THE LEAD” 182
Mark Lowman, Vice President of Operations, McDermott
going to move jobs eventually because there comes a time when you can no longer serve at sea,” explains Lowman. He studied at Deakin University and was awarded an MBA in Law, Finance, Human Resources, Economics and Marketing in 2001. He points to that experience as vital in providing a network of like-minded individuals. “That programme had a big influence on me as I got introduced to a number of senior executives from other companies and those conversations about opportunities really drove me to switch my career.” Lowman believes the oil and gas industry has been slower to adopt new technology than other industries, but recognises that digitalisation is beginning to have a greater influence on operations. “When I started, digitalisation was in its infancy in the industry,” he explains. “McDermott was still working in the same way it always had with adequate systems and processes while not fully understanding the benefits of digitalisation. We have created our Digital and Project Innovation Group who are supported by resources across the organisation. This allows us to educate our employees and the leadership as
AUGUST 2020
Ship-to-Ship Motion Measurement System CLICK TO WATCH
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183 we prepare to evolve to a digital culture.
we can find. Going forward, our focus
Digital disruption is very likely to upend
is heavily on technologies which help
the way we operate.” Pointing to his
us improve collaboration, expand our
organisation’s ongoing digital transfor-
project predictability through analytics
mation journey, Lowman acknowledges
and automate repetitive activities to free
that there has been a combination of
up our people.”
small point solutions as well as longer
With the COVID-19 pandemic
running programmes. “We’re leveraging
impacting businesses across the globe
cloud technology in certain areas, such
during the first half of 2020, Lowman
as our ERP and utilising technology
recognises how difficult the challenge
platforms like PLM from the aerospace
of transforming operations rapidly was.
and automotive industries,” he says. “We
“There’s no doubt that COVID-19 has
have tried to ensure that we don’t have
had a significant influence on the way
an ‘only invented here’ mentality and are
businesses operate now,” he explains.
always looking to leverage the best that
“Almost overnight, we had to switch b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
M C D E R M O T T I N T E R N AT I O N A L I N C
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“THE KEY IS UNDERSTANDING THE CUSTOMER’S DRIVERS” Mark Lowman, Vice President of Operations, McDermott b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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ServiceNow: driving digitalisation with McDermott Kevin Galloway, Director of Enterprise Sales, and Sunny Mahato, Advisory Solution, Consultant at ServiceNow discusses their firm’s partnership with McDermott. ServiceNow is an industry leading SaaS provider, helping to make the world work better for people and has a mission to improve the overall employee experience. ServiceNow has formed a key, strategic relationship with McDermott and helps the organisation with their digital strategy. Kevin Galloway is a Director of Enterprise Sales at ServiceNow. Having been with the company since February 2019, he has operated in the oil and gas industry over the past decade and has observed the rise of digital transformation first-hand. “Before McDermott brought in ServiceNow, they had a very manual process,” he explains. “If there was an issue, it would have to be passed around different employees until it reached the right person. With ServiceNow, we automate that process.” Sunny Mahato is an experienced technology leader with experience in strategic account software sales cycles, advanced enterprise software applications, business process optimisation, solution development and consultancy. He believes that ServiceNow’s solution is of significant value to McDermott as it streamlines the process considerably. “McDermott doesn’t have to worry about maintaining or managing the servers or having people go into the office to look after it. It’s all driven from the cloud.” Prior to joining forces with ServiceNow, McDermott had no way of tracking inventory or streamlining their HR processes. Galloway believes that upon the beginning of the partnership with his organisation, the cost savings have been considerable. “McDermott went from 100% manual intervention and spreadsheets to now running our platform which they now use as ERP,” he says. “They track millions of dollars of assets automatically through our platform and their onboarding process has transformed from a manual process to a workflow which streamlines that process. Sometimes, people don’t realise
ServiceNow
the cost involved with some of these manual processes and the cost savings are in the millions.” Mahato affirms the importance of displaying a compassionate and understanding approach to customers and employees alike. “Our mission is all about showing compassion to not just employees but also our customers, particularly in the current challenging environment,” says Mahato. “We want our employees and customers to know that we stand with them.” Looking to the future, Galloway has a clear idea of the next stage of the partnership with McDermott. “As we continue to grow our relationship with McDermott, we want to begin to leverage AI into our platform and machine learning to help McDermott further automate their environment,” explains Galloway. “The world is going more mobile, particularly because of COVID-19. Working from home isn’t going to go away so being a cloud-based mobile platform provider has become more important than ever. The ability to connect mobily and through an automated fashion is vital.” Mahato adds that he believes in an agile and lean approach in order to drive success in the market. “We’re hopeful we can continue to help McDermott with project management and introducing greater technology such as AI and ML,” adds Mahato. “It’s crucial to be as proactive as possible instead of reactive.”
M C D E R M O T T I N T E R N AT I O N A L I N C
188
from a normal office environment to
reassurance,” says Lowman. “We have
virtual working. Travel restrictions meant
fabrication operations where we have
that we haven’t been able to visit our
thousands of staff that work in close
customers face to face and as we’re a
proximity to one another and we need
global operation, travel was an essential
to be able to communicate and reassure
element to remain connected. COVID-
them, while ensuring they understand
19 has forced us to make the switch
the evolution post-COVID-19.” Despite
to online communications as well as
the unprecedented challenge of the
encouraged us to find innovative ways
coronavirus, McDermott managed to
of working together.” Lowman rec-
keep all sites fully operational glob-
ognised the importance of reassuring
ally. “From the beginning, our QMW
employees while undergoing significant
Fabrication operation on the Qingdao
disruption and change to everyday
coast, Shangdong province, Central
operations. “Our employees needed
China, was able to respond quickly and
AUGUST 2020
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Mark Lowman Title: Vice President of Operations Industry: Oil & Energy
Company: McDermott
Location: Texas, USA
Mark Lowman is an accomplished, highly resourceful Executive Management professional with a wealth of experience in managing multi-billion dollar construction projects in the Oil and Gas industry from inception to delivery. Prior to his career in the oil and gas industry, Mark had a successful naval career moving from the ranks to Lieutenant Commander. Mark has been with McDermott International Inc. for seven years in a variety of roles, including as the Director of Fabrication in Batam, Indonesia, Senior Director of Commercial Asia Pacific, and Vice President of Project Execution in both Asia Pacific and in Houston. Prior to McDermott, Mark held leadership positions at Technip Oceania Pty Ltd. Marks holds a Master of Business from Deakin University and has degrees in Nuclear Engineering, Naval Science and Operational Studies, from Britannia Royal Naval College and Royal Naval College Greenwich. Mark has a proven track record leading global operations, building business and setting up operations in new geographical areas and countries. He is a results-driven business leader who creates shared vision and leads from the front, to build, empower and motivate multi-cultural, cross-functional teams to achieve goals.
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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M C D E R M O T T I N T E R N AT I O N A L I N C
O N E MCDERMO T T WAY
Customers rely on McDermott to deliver certainty to some of the most complex projects, from concept to commissioning. To help provide consistency and assurance of delivery, McDermott has established the “One McDermott Way” which means the same vision, values and processes are always observed.
190
AUGUST 2020
“This particularly helped when we combined with CB&I as we put a huge amount of effort in working as coming together as one team,” says Lowman. “McDermott has created an environment where employees are encouraged to engage and promote their ideas and we have a mantra to ‘take the lead.’”
Our Vision is One CLICK TO WATCH
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191 proactively by introducing control and
McDermott currently has a backlog
mitigation measures well in advance
of US$16bn worth of projects to execute
of Government restrictions,” explains
over the next few years. “This is a great
Lowman. “This has also been the case
position to be in, particularly at a time
for all our fabrication yards including
when market conditions are so uncer-
Dubai, Indonesia and Mexico, as well as
tain,” affirms Lowman. The projects
our project construction sites in the US
in question include BP Cassia – Cassia
and across the world.” McDermott took
C Greenfield and Gulf Coast Joint
the pandemic seriously from the outset
Ventures – MEG project. “In terms of BP
and quickly established global and local
Cassia, McDermott is undertaking the
area Crisis Management Teams. “We
procurement, construction and fabrica-
very quickly and efficiently developed
tion of a 7,250 MT topsides and a 3,400
procedures and processes to manage
MT four-legged jacket and piles. That
our response to the pandemic, but more
project is progressing well and our fabri-
importantly to keep our employees safe.”
cation yard in Mexico has remained open b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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“WHEN I STARTED, DIGITALISATION WAS IN ITS INFANCY IN THE INDUSTRY” Mark Lowman, Vice President of Operations, McDermott
you can’t do it as a one- man band. You need a series of experienced, industry professionals whom you can trust to build the team and empower them to align to the project goals.” McDermott places considerable value on sustainability and has established several CSR initiatives. McDermott holds an Annual Batam International Golf Tournament which has been able to raise over US$1mn to fund the build-
during the pandemic and has responded
ing of orphanages in Batam Island in
with remarkable productivity,” explains
Indonesia, providing health kits to chil-
Lowman. “With the MEG project, we’re
dren, digging wells for a nearby island
fabricating large modules in two of our
and offering a range of other events.
global fabrication yards. The first mod-
“We have a series of sustainability goals
ules were delivered in early April and they
that we’ve been developing over time,”
are now in Texas where the construction
explains Lowman. “We like to engage
site is putting together and creating the
with the communities to ensure we
plant.” Despite the seismic shift in the
provide the support that is needed and
scale of projects, Lowman believes the
make sure that McDermott as a busi-
core foundations remain the same. “The
ness is conscious of the worldwide effort
key is understanding the customer’s
to reduce carbon footprint.” Those goals
drivers,” explains Lowman. “This will help
that Lowman mentioned centre around
execute the project successfully and
developing sustainable solutions that
provide a level of assurance to the cus-
support energy transition, contribut-
tomer. As a project director, I would want
ing to sustainable growth, reducing
to build a project management team with
operational environmental footprint and
a high-level of experience. With some of
promoting workplace and community
these larger multi-billion dollar projects,
wellbeing. Having previously focused on b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
193
M C D E R M O T T I N T E R N AT I O N A L I N C
developing natural gas power technology that produces low cost electricity while providing zero carbon emissions with NET Power, Lowman says that McDermott remains well placed to keep sustainability at the fore. “Everyone understands that climate change is an area that needs to be considered in planning,” he says. “Clean Fuels and NET Power have generated interests and we’re still providing customers with the opportunity to become engaged.” Lowman recognises the importance 194
of partnerships and believes developing key, strategic business relationships are vital to success in the oil and gas industry. “Due to the sheer size of some of the projects, it means that you have to share the risk and one partner may have a higher level of expertise in a particular area
“DIGITAL DISRUPTION IS VERY LIKELY TO UPEND THE WAY WE OPERATE”
than another,” he explains. “However,
Mark Lowman, Vice President of Operations, McDermott
as particularly important. “We’ve been
AUGUST 2020
by working together, this allows for more confidence in delivery and we rely on partners and vendors across the globe.” Lowman points to McDermott’s relationship with Baker Hughes and ABB working together on Subsea production solutions in conjunction with Subsea
195
umbilical rises and flow lines (SURF)
Onshore and Offshore business and
and by collaborating we’ve been able
is extremely supportive. They’re also
to offer solutions to the market that can
involved in some of our management
deliver savings to the customer that are
discussions with customers in terms of
potentially in the millions,” says Lowman.
providing the best lower cost solutions
“ABB is a great supporting company
that the customer is always looking for.
that provides technical solutions to help
The relationship is really built on aligned
us position ourselves to win work. ABB
goals and the ability to communicate
offers switchboard equipment for our
and work together effectively.” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
M C D E R M O T T I N T E R N AT I O N A L I N C
Striving to make the world better, for everyone To help solve the biggest flow-control challenges, customers worldwide rely on the product brands, engineering, project management and service expertise of Flowserve. We help our customers lower operating costs, optimize performance, prolong equipment life, mitigate risks and drive higher productivity.
“I BELIEVE WE WILL EVOLVE AND BECOME A DIFFERENT KIND OF COMPANY, BUT WE WILL ALWAYS BE HERE TO DELIVER PROJECTS TO OUR CUSTOMERS” Mark Lowman, Vice President of Operations, McDermott 197 Having been around for almost 100
the forefront of technology and the
years, McDermott has significantly
ability to continue to offer project
evolved over the years. Following the
concepts to final delivery to our
merger of McDermott and CB&I in
customers both upstream and down-
2018, the organisation has matured
stream from Petrochemical and LNG
into a company that has a presence
plants, Storage Tanks and Offshore
both Onshore and Offshore. “Despite
and Subsea. I believe we will evolve
the challenges, we’ve adjusted and
and become a different kind of com-
grown,” affirms Lowman. “We con-
pany, but we will always be here to
tinue to be a company that prides
deliver projects to our customers.”
itself on technology-led solutions and we have secured a partnership with Lummus Technology for the longer term. This relationship will enable McDermott to remain at b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
eStruxture: Canada’s leading data centre provider
198
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LEILA HAWKINS PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
AUGUST 2020
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b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
E S T R U X T U R E D ATA C E N T E R S
Todd Coleman, eStruxture’s President and CEO, explains how a strategy of staying local is resulting in more locations, more capacity and better connectivity
“W
e believe in staying very local, providing local knowledge and a local customer touch,” says Todd Coleman, the founder
of eStruxture Data Centres. “We don’t believe in being headquartered in different parts of the world 200
and running the business from afar.” This is a key aspect of the operations of eStruxture, the data centre company he established in 2017 in Montreal. It’s an approach that’s served them well, as in the three years since then it’s grown to encompass six facilities in total, each serving specific requirements. MTL-1, the flagship site in downtown Montreal, is housed in the former Montreal Stock Exchange building. “That is a connectivity and cloud-neutral hub, with 30,000 square feet and 5 MW of power” Coleman explains. “We have a lot of customer ecosystems here that require access to a large and diverse meet-me-room from a telecom carrier fibre perspective, but also rely on us to deliver significant amounts of power density.”
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b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
E S T R U X T U R E D ATA C E N T E R S
“ We’ve not only survived, we’ve thrived during COVID-19” — Todd Coleman, President and CEO, eStruxture
to be in the central business district and have extraordinarily low latency and access to a diverse group of carriers, we can offer that in our downtown facility. If they want the ability to significantly scale their space and power requirements at hyperscale economics, we have that opportunity in MTL-2, and then all our facilities are directly connected by our own dedicated,
MTL-2 is 7 km away, and is a brand new, state-of-the-art hyperscale facil202
diverse fibre ring.” Additionally, there are two sites in
ity encompassing 190,000 square feet
Vancouver, and a facility in Calgary
and 30MW of power, while MTL-3 is
that the company recently acquired
on the south shore of Montreal, and
in August 2019, ensuring eStruxture
was the first Uptime certified Tier III
has a presence in three of the top
facility in Quebec. “Regardless of the
data centre markets in Canada. They
customers’ needs, we can meet their
remain focused solely on the Canadian
requirements,” Todd says. “If they want
market. “We believe there is significant benefit in being focused and knowing a market, and having your sales and operations staff based there,” Coleman says. “Our Calgary employees are from Calgary and understand the Calgary market well, same with Montreal and Vancouver. The people we hire are industry veterans, and that resonates with our customers, they know that they can turn to us as a trusted advisor.”
AUGUST 2020
eStruxture Data Centres Overview CLICK TO WATCH
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203
2017
Year founded
360,000+
Square feet of own built and operated facilities
65
Number of employees
Montreal’s data centre market has grown significantly over the last five years due to the low cost of power and the abundance of hydroelectricity. “It took a large hyperscale cloud provider to come into the market and really put Montreal on the map. Our belief from early on was that the customer power densities were going to continue to grow, which they have. When we entered the Canadian market, it was still fairly nascent and we had a belief that data would continue to localise and customers that were largely present in the US would find their way north of the border.” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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© 2020 Vertiv Group Corp. All rights reserved. Vertiv™ and the Vertiv logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vertiv Group Corp. While every precaution has been taken to ensure accuracy and completeness here, Vertiv Group Corp. assumes no responsibility, and disclaims all liability, for damages resulting from use of this information or for any errors or omissions. Specifications are subject to change at Vertiv’s sole discretion upon notice.
When Coleman founded eStruxture,
rack without stranding space requiring
he was still an investor in Cologix, a
re-engineering of the cooling system,
data centre company he co-founded
something Coleman says is practically
in 2010. While that business focused
unheard of in North America.
on telecoms and interconnection,
eStruxture aims to provide its cus-
with sites within or near large carrier
tomers with the best service at the
hotels, the aim with eStruxture was
best cost. “We work with our manu-
to develop Tier III, enterprise class
facturers to understand what they’re
data centres with massively scalable
rolling out and drive them towards bet-
space and power in major Canadian
ter and more enhanced technologies
markets. Today, its standard offering
at the best cost performance. We’re
allows customers to go to 30 kW per
about consistency, control and proven 205
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Todd Coleman Title: President and CEO
Location: Montreal, Quebec
Industry: Information Technology & Services Todd Coleman is the President and CEO of eStruxture. Todd brings more than 25 years experience in the IT, data centre and telecommunications industries. Most recently, Todd was the Chief Operating Officer and co-founder of Cologix. Todd has also held several senior positions at Level 3 Communications, a global telecommunications company, including Senior Vice President of Data Centres, Senior Vice President of Media Operations and President of Level 3 Communications Europe. Todd holds a juris doctorate and a bachelor’s degree in computer information systems. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
E S T R U X T U R E D ATA C E N T E R S
206
AUGUST 2020
207
“ I’d say that’s the biggest innovation in the thought process that we’ve adopted in the last few years – not viewing our customers as one-size fits all” — Todd Coleman, President and CEO, eStruxture b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
E S T R U X T U R E D ATA C E N T R E S
208
quality and stability. Most importantly,
centres to ensure maximum flexibility
we understand where our customers
to meet our customers’ requirements.”
are going. I’d say that’s the biggest
Having strong partnerships with
evolution in our thought process that
companies that understand their busi-
we’ve adopted in the last few years –
ness needs is critical for eStruxture to
not viewing our customers as one-size
be a trusted advisor to its customers.
fits all. We work to better understand
“We often receive zero financial benefit
our customer requirements at the
when we work with customers as a
application level and design our data
trusted advisor, but that’s part of our
AUGUST 2020
“ The people we hire are industry veterans, and that resonates with our customers” — Todd Coleman, President and CEO, eStruxture
and grow indirectly, bringing people, resources and technology to bear to an opportunity that we might not have had access to otherwise.” Like so many organisations globally, eStruxture has been touched by the COVID-19 pandemic. In the early days of the outbreak the company took a step back to reevaluate its position
value proposition, to steer and advise
in terms of investments, customers
them as to who our partners are and
and key metrics. “Along the way, we
provide details on their offerings,
proved to ourselves that the business
so our customers are able to be put
was very resilient in these types of
in direct contact as we hand them off
economic downturns. Frankly, we’ve
in a very warm and relationship-driven
not only survived, we’ve thrived during
way. That’s been hugely beneficial to
COVID-19. Our sales funnel has never
both our customers and partners alike.”
been more robust than over the past
The company has a number of key
few months.”
partner relationships, including with
Understanding that people’s needs
Belden, a provider of network and
may have changed during COVID-19,
connectivity solutions, JAVCO, a specialist in mission critical design and engineering, and Vertiv, a mission critical equipment manufacturer, many of whom have been key partners since the company was founded. “These types of relationships speak volumes to the partners that we bring in and in how we value them, because they enable us to stretch the rubber band b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
209
E S T R U X T U R E D ATA C E N T E R S
“ When we entered the Canadian market it was still fairly nascent” — Todd Coleman, President and CEO, eStruxture
Belden Is a Proud Partner of eStruxture Watch how Belden helps eStruxture manage high ber density while saving space with the new DCX Optical Distribution Frame (ODF) System.
Speak to Sales
211 they’ve offered incentives to cus-
data centre market is a bit of a ‘build
tomers who need to quickly migrate
it and they will come’ market, so you
their IT and network infrastructure
need confidence in how it’s evolving,
or require immediate expansion of
and where new markets could turn into
capacity, and to encourage customers
data centre-centric markets that oth-
to take advantage of eStruxture’s on-
erwise weren’t previously. You really
site technicians to enable customers
need your finger on the pulse of the
to deal with issues remotely, in a bid
marketplace and their localised nature
to protect both the facilities and the
to truly understand them.”
customers’ and eStruxture’s employees while the pandemic is ongoing. Ultimately, to be successful, Coleman says you need investors that believe in you, as well as intimate knowledge of the marketplace. “The b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
212
Combating COVID-19 with rapid digitalisation WRITTEN BY
GEORGIA WILSON PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
AUGUST 2020
213
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
WSIB
Samantha Liscio, Chief Technology & Innovation Officer at WSIB, discusses industry trends, digital transformation and the impact of COVID-19
214
W
ithin the insurance industry, Samantha Liscio, Chief Technology and Innovation Officer at Workplace Safety and Insurance
Board (WSIB) has seen the sector mirror what the organisation itself is experiencing internally. “It’s that customer focus,” says Liscio. “Our customers want to be able to deal with us anytime, anywhere and however they want, so we need to ensure that our products and services support that. This trend is one of six key drivers for our 2020 IT strategy at WSIB, to develop new channels and a sustainable operating model that are digitally focused as well as digitalising our core services and developing our work-from-home operations. The other five elements of our IT strategy include business intelligence and analytics, cyber and digital security, modernising applications, providing digital infrastructure and modernising our operating models, all with the customer experience in mind.” AUGUST 2020
215
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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WSIB
“ Our customers want to be able to deal with us anytime, anywhere and however they want, so we need to ensure that our products and services support that”
218
— Samantha Liscio, Chief Technology and Innovation Officer, Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB)
AUGUST 2020
Expanding on the industry trends emerging within insurance, Liscio explains that rapid digitalisation is posing challenges for insurance companies. “Insurance companies tend to be older companies that have been around a long time and have been built on a foundation of processes developed over decades, sometimes centuries, which can be longstanding and hard to change. These longstanding business models however do need to change to be flexible and adaptable if they are to continue to meet customer expectations.”
Accessing your WSIB data just got easier CLICK TO WATCH
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b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
Leading through extraordinary times The last 3 decades of TCS Canada has been an epic journey partnering with Top Banks & Insurance �rms, Financial Market Infrastructure entities, Crown Corporations, Retailers, Manufacturing �rms, EnergyResource & Utility majors. We have participated in innovation with marquee academic institutions and exciting �ntechs. We have continued to evolve as a leading job creator on IT services and have made foundational impacts igniting the passion of the younger generation through STEM in 21 Canadian cities touching more than 8000 minds (including members of Canada’s indigenous community & other underrepresented groups).
The last 3 months saw a pronounced effect across societies, industries, and economies. During this moment of truth, active employee engagement & well-being globally has been top priority for TCS, while we continue to support mission critical technology backbones of organizations. Financial Services sector is a key vehicle for governments to navigate and heal. From our deep relationships with top �nancial services �rms, we have seen three speci�c thrusts amidst lockdown and an emerging new beginning that pivots on elastic model of Technology, Operations and Workforce.
#bfsi #newbeginning #covid19
Ready to Weather the Storm
PURPOSE DRIVEN
The pandemic has forced organizations to look beyond the products they make and sell to the purpose behind their existence. As they embark on this transformative journey, we will continue to enable our clients’ strategic intent and journey of end-customer purpose centric themes (prosperity for SME segment, wellness of individuals, �nancial health of portfolios) orchestrated through an ecosystem of internal & partner solutions and catalyzed by Open Banking move towards pan-industry collaboration.
RESILIENT
Our adoption of a Secure Borderless Workspaces (SBWS™) model has ensured service continuity for elevated levels of customer conversations and high consequence transactions (deferrals, payments, investments). Our contextual knowledge has enabled swift realignment of efforts on government (Canada, US) relief & cross-segment (individuals, businesses) customer care imperatives while sustaining paramount initiatives around �nance, risk, cyber and �nancial crime using cognitive solutions.
ADAPTABLE
We are actively participating in endeavors around accelerated intelligent responsive processes, digital parity across channels, insights driven decisioning, open & agile architecture, elastic infrastructure to be operationally nimble and strategically progressive addressing the changing environment.
We are privileged to be a key partner for WSIB, who has 106 years’ heritage and organizational purpose of wellness protecting and promoting healthy & safe workplaces. We enabled 100% of our team working remotely within �rst 2 weeks of lock-down. We accelerated digital journey transformation for low touch frictionless experiences for all - employees, businesses, and healthcare providers - for claims registration, administration, and return-to-work. To pivot this change management and organizational redesign, we envisaged a strategy for enterprise quality management and operating agility.
Manmeet Chhabra
Business Head, Banking-Financial Services & Insurance, Canada Business Head, Banking-Financial Services & Insurance, Canada
As human ingenuity embarks on a new beginning, we look forward to meaningful contributions to Canadian industries for engendering resilience, driving adaptability, and enabling customer & societal purpose.
Having lived the reality of major transformations, our highly adaptable team supports all aspects of business change, including strategy development, digital and data driven process and service improvement, program execution management and the establishment of an enabling culture.
Our services www.avenai.com
Contact us
223
When it comes to its own IT strategy,
needs met within the first MVP. Before,
Liscio explains that WSIB adopts an
that would have taken us more than
agile approach for rapid innovation
a year to develop a solution, by gather-
which encompases three key areas
ing requirements, working on those,
working together to develop a minimum
developing, testing, and then putting
viable product (MVP). “These key areas
into production. With our new approach
include service design with a human
we have been able to bring projects
centered design approach, followed
live within three months of starting an
by product owners identifying friction
MVP which immediately addresses the
points. Finally the DevsOp group takes
key customer pain points, and provides
a scrum based approach to developing
a base for opportunities to build addi-
MVPs to target customer pain points.
tional functionality incrementally. This
With this ‘digital factory’ approach you
approach has become our foundation
can get about 80% of those immediate
for the future.” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
“ There are so many opportunities for IoT in the worker’s compensation space, especially as it relates to health and safety” — Samantha Liscio, Chief Technology and Innovation Officer, Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) Many of WSIB’s new digital products are the outcome of this approach, which it has engaged with key partners for its agile-based solution development. “Within the last few months, partners such as Wipro and others have helped us develop a new service that provides secure digital access to claims information for injured workers. TCS – Tata consulting services – is our strategic partner and have been instrumental in transforming our end-to-end quality assurance process with industry best practices and innovations in the area of Automation, AI, Cloud Testing and Test Data Management,
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Samantha Liscio As Chief Technology and Innovation Officer at the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board, Samantha leads digital transformation, leveraging technology to streamline processes and modernize the business, helping the WSIB provide responsive services to customers. Samantha drives IT service excellence and directs innovation while ensuring value from technology investments. Samantha has over 20 years of experience in IT leadership roles in eHealth Ontario, Accenture, and the Ontario Public Service. Currently Samantha serves on the Ryerson University IT Business Management Program Advisory Council and the Toronto CIO Governing Body. She is a past board chair for Cornerstone Family Violence Prevention and a past board member of the CIO Association of Canada and the Institute for Citizen-Centred Services. Samantha holds a Bachelor of Science (Honours) and a PhD from Queen’s University in Belfast. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
225
WSIB
which has meant that we’ve eliminated 95% of the defects from our projects by implementing the optimized approach and methodology that TCS has helped us with. In addition to this we are also looking into opportunities to harness RPA, within our operations which is also something that we are working on with TCS.” As part of the company’s digital strategy to drive digitalisation in the heart of its operations, Liscio details the company’s adoption of cloud, internet 226
of things (IoT) and AI-enabled analytics.
CLOUD “For the WSIB, cloud is an opportunity to significantly accelerate the delivery of value, both to our internal business and to our end customers. From an IT perspective, cloud deployments can help to reduce risk. It’s complicated and expensive to host, deploy and maintain software that’s at the core of your business, and so increasingly big vendors offer those types of services better than we can ourselves. They can help us to use cloud native capabilities and drive innovations. WSIB’s cloud strategy focuses on the implementation AUGUST 2020
227
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
How CGI helped WSIB transition to a fully remote workforce When Ontario Public Health declared a ‘Work From Home’ policy due to COVID-19, the WSIB, like many organizations, faced an unprecedented challenge: How to quickly transition to a fully remote workforce while maintaining service levels for employers, and payment continuity for injured workers.
WSIB and CGI mobilized and united the resources necessary, including senior management, technology, and expert personnel. With highly collaborative and creative thinking, WSIB and CGI were able to overcome conventional limitations and transition 4,300 WSIB workers and their IT devices into a remote workforce. Careful planning and crisis management from the deployed CGI service teams paid off when each team readily handled the spike in call volumes and increased handling times as WSIB workers moved home. It was imperative that WSIB data remained secure outside the traditional working environment, and that end users experienced no service degradation despite the increased load on technological infrastructure.
“
Together, WSIB and CGI rapidly implemented a range of risk management approaches to preserve the customer experience of the WSIB workforce. This included digitizing document handling, remote desktop re-configuration, creating a new toll-free helpline, and redeploying a number of support teams. WSIB and CGI were subsequently able to guide WSIB workers through the challenges of setting up their workstations from home while in parallel CGI quickly configured and issued over a 1,500 new laptops. In just over 3 weeks, WSIB and CGI demonstrated resiliency in crisis by transitioning all WSIB workers to remote work arrangements while maintaining critical service levels and uninterrupted payments to injured workers.
CGI’s exceptional support enabled the WSIB to maintain critical services to injured people from distributed locations while transitioning from a traditional bricks and mortar operation to facilitating employees working from home. I look forward to continuing this partnership and working collaboratively together. – Samantha Liscio, WSIB Chief Technology & Innovation Officer
ABOUT CGI
Founded in 1976, CGI is among the largest IT and business consulting services firms in the world. Operating across the globe, CGI delivers end-to-end capabilities, from strategic IT and business consulting to systems integration, managed IT and business process services and intellectual property solutions, helping clients achieve their goals, including becoming customer-centric digital enterprises.
“
WSIB engaged CGI to support their transition to the new working reality by providing tailored end user computing and service desk solutions.
of a hybrid cloud service model using
We’ve been thinking very carefully
both public and private cloud, with
about what our infrastructure needs
partners such as Microsoft Azure and
to look like when it comes to the cloud
IBM. As a result we have a specific
and we are now underway with our
software-as-a-service (SaaS) solution
key partners.”
approach that’s aligned to our application strategy. We also have database
INTERNET OF THINGS (IOT)
and integration-as-a-service offerings
“With the internet of things (IoT), it’s
and we are introducing other platform-
an interesting point on our innovation
as-a-service capabilities and providing
radar right now. There are so many
Windows and Linux virtual machines as
opportunities for IoT in the worker’s
an infrastructure-as-a-service offering.
compensation space, especially as
This is all underpinned by a restructured
it relates to health and safety. So our
network architecture and cloud man-
innovation lab is exploring things like
agement platform.
connected devices that can detect
“ When the emergency was declared in Ontario in the middle of March, the WSIB saw its remote workforce increase from about 2% to more than 99% of the workforce in the space of about 10 days” — Samantha Liscio, Chief Technology and Innovation Officer, Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB)
fatigue. Devices that can be connected to the wearer or the dashboard of a truck — or both – that can detect if they’re falling asleep and can alert them. We’re also looking at things like proper posture and biomechanics which are especially important in the construction industry where people are lifting and bending and moving. Having those kinds of devices that can be connected to people or the surroundings to provide real-time feedback rather than corrective action after, this is something really interesting that we are working on in the lab relating to IoT.” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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WSIB
AI ENABLED ANALYTICS “On the analytics side, being an insurance organisation, WSIB relies on predictive analytics for things like risk scoring, case based reserving, claims segmentation models, anomaly detection and text mining. As a result, business intelligence and analytics is a key pillar for our IT strategy and we’re investing in the capabilities, the tools and the backend infrastructure to be able to make decisions better and faster. Currently we extricate data from various data marts to create diagnostic 230
and predictive models. We’re in the progress of creating a central data store and intend to leverage in-database analytics that will allow us to execute extensive analytical workloads directly against our data. That’s going to be really important to us in increasing our decision making speed.”
CYBERSECURITY While innovations are revolutionising the insurance industry, it is important to remember that progress comes with challenges, in particular cybersecurity. “At WSIB we operate a 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year security operation center,” AUGUST 2020
“ Longstanding business models however, do need to change to be flexible and adaptable if they are to continue to meet customer expectations” — Samantha Liscio, Chief Technology and Innovation Officer, Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB)
incidents. So in total that 85 billion was whittled down to roughly 150 incidents requiring action.” In order to combat these potential threats, WSIB has a cybersecurity strategy and strong governance in place. “We’ve assessed our main maturity across security and we’ve taken an inventory of all of our critical data and assets, so we know where our crown jewels are and how those are protected and we’ve applied the appropriate controls to those protections. We also conduct regular testing via the likes of audits and penetration testing, as well as monthly vulnerability assessments.” In addition to harnessing technology to maintain security, WSIB comments Liscio. “We keep track of
has also established a breach response,
all of the security records we receive,
as well as awareness and training
these are essentially all of the potential
programs in place, cyber security intel-
hits on our perimeter from a security
ligence and cyber security insurance.”
perspective, and between January and September last year we had more than
THE IMPACT OF COVID-19
85 billion security records. Of those 85
“When the emergency was declared
billion we sent 19 billion to our security
in Ontario in the middle of March,
information event monitoring system
the WSIB saw its remote workforce
for a second look to determine if they
increase from about 2% to more than
are events that need to be monitored,
99% of the workforce in the space
events that are relevant, events that are
of a few weeks. With that sudden shift
possible threats or events that become
to over 4,000 employees working b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
231
from home, a host of issues can arise,
corporate collaboration tools such as
from inadequate video conferencing
Microsoft Office 365, Microsoft Teams
capabilities due to connectivity at
and OneDrive, as well as encrypting all
the employee’s homes or additional
hard drives so that we could protect
challenges in maintaining security
and manage data remotely.”
of confidential information outside the
In addition to these changes, Liscio
office. But we’ve been able to effectively
explains that provisions have also
direct the company on how best to
been made for specific job functions
work remotely using our virtual private
such as call centers. “You can imagine
network which is robust and secure.
that within a large company like WSIB
We also have multi factor authentica-
there is a large call center and our
tion to ensure secure logins so that
service reps need to be able to answer
those working from home can con-
the phone. So even though they’re at
nect to the WSIB systems and our
home, they still need to be in that call
Your next clearance will be simple CLICK TO WATCH
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233
WSIB
center environment. To achieve this we turned the WSIB computers into soft phones, rolling out on-screen dial pads to place and control calls from the desktop. In addition we have deployed more than 400 mobile devices in a couple of weeks since the state of emergency, so that end users working from home could maintain critical business services.” Without the support of its partners, Liscio emphasises, “would not have been able to get more than 4,000 peo234
ple productively working from home within a few weeks without the support of our partners, especially CGI and RCI Rogers who helped us expedite equipment provisioning across their supply
standard technology, providing that
chain and provide after-hours support
kind of flexibility for mobile work. We
for our IT and front-line staff.”
are also quickly digitising hard copy
While this has been a huge change
mail and things like access requests.
for WSIB, Liscio explains that now
When our customers ask for access
they are effectively and productively
to their file, we would typically go find
work from home, “the new normal
all of the paper, scan all of that paper
for us will be one where we probably
and then send them boxes of paper.
won’t be returning to our offices in
With digitised access requests we can
the same way as we worked before
share that information back with them
and things like phones and desktop
through encrypted email, making the
computers will be retired and lap-
need to do these kinds of paper-based
tops and cell phones will be the new
processes again obsolete. In addition
AUGUST 2020
1914
Year founded
$2,165mn
Total comprehensive income in US dollars (2018)
5,000
Approximate number of employees
we are pivoting to accelerate the deliv-
changes, premium deferrals, lower
ery of online services for people with
interest rates, volatile investments.
claims, as well as identify additional
Guided by our digital strategy, the
rapid-fire digital transformations and
WSIB will respond by: Creating new
we have adopted an electronic sig-
digital channels and digitizing our core
nature solution to ensure we can still
services, fully implementing a sustain-
procure, approve and authorise things
able IT operating model to support
in a virtual way.
the new digital WSIB and continuing
“Looking ahead, I see the key driv-
to support remote and flexible work.�
ers for change in the InsurTech sector and for the WSIB being very similar. Post COVID-19 there will be changes in the workforce resulting in revenue b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
235
236
The intelligent enterprise driven by 5G WRITTEN BY
MATT HIGH PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
AUGUST 2020
237
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
SAP SE
Frank Wilde, Vice President Global Center of Excellence at SAP, on the power of 5G and data to enable digital change in organisations “
W
ith 5G, our business technology platform and our IoT capabilities, we can fundamentally change how our custom-
ers operate and go to market, it’s an exciting prospect and represents a step function change for enterprises,” says Frank Wilde, Vice President 238
of the Global Center of Excellence (CoE) at SAP. Wilde is a seasoned technology leader responsible for driving innovation with SAP’s customers using the latest technologies to digitally transform, create enhanced customer experience as well as unlock new revenue streams. Given such an approach, Wilde and his Global CoE colleagues work closely with customers to use data and technology effectively, to think outside the box and to innovate in a customer-centric fashion. “We help them think differently about SAP, and think differently about technology,” he explains. “We take a data-driven approach, in doing so we bring a team of data scientists and platform architects, and we help the customer think about their data differently. It’s like a test-drive - we’re not simply driven by a particular technology, for example. Rather, we AUGUST 2020
239
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
SAP SE
“ It’s a level of intelligence and responsiveness that we can bring to life that we haven’t been able to do before” — Frank Wilde, Vice President, SAP
show how responsive our platforms and technologies can be, how rapidly we can change their business models, and demonstrate how exciting the possibilities are. Mentally, we really change the dynamic.” Central to this work with customers is a blue sky approach to innovation that runs through SAP, and is a particular passion for Wilde. “It’s the centerpiece of how we’re able to instigate change,” he explains. “Whatever the size of the customer
240
or the project, we work closely and collaboratively to drive success. I love solving problems - we all do - and working together on the strategy, the process and technology. An example is work we recently launched with Duke University in North Carolina. They asked for our help to innovate, and when we sat down together they were unaware of our offerings and had little idea we could support data science and analytics, or that we used a platform-based approach to support innovation. And that’s where open and honest conversations are crucial. Often, we see that our customers don’t always know what they need, or AUGUST 2020
SAP 5G and Edge Services Tech CLICK TO WATCH
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2:34
241 what is available, so that collaborative
- in its most basic form - is like Lego
approach we utilise is key.”
blocks. We can create new busi-
Change is an underlying driver of
nesses or concepts in a very short
our CoE’s work, in particular helping
period of time with predefined and
organisations to better understand
pre-built services, or microservices.
technology so as to navigate a suc-
“The acceleration of moving from
cessful digital transformation. “We
a mainframe environment to being on
now have the ability for business
the cusp of edge services and edge
models on demand to come to life,”
computing, makes it exciting when
Wilde says. “Look at an Uber or a
you can weave together the fabric of a
Lyft, and you’ll see the shift towards
company in short order,” he continues.
a platform-based approach opposed
“You just have to look at the Fortune
to relying on a dedicated application
500 as an example; a third of those
or system to influence change. We
businesses are slated to disappear
base our work around a platform that
from that list in five to seven years b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
5G
CONNECTIVITY
LeAD SPORT TECH A C C E L E R AT O R
GUIDEWELL I N N O V AT I O N CENTER
CISCO SMART & CONNECTED CITY
WHIT SMART HOME
AUTONOMOUS SHUTTLES
GIGABIT FIBER
LAKE NONA I M PA C T FORUM
A N
ecosystem
C OL LA B O R AT I V E
F O R
I N N O VAT I O N
Lake Nona is a 17-square-mile community built on the premise that a collaborative effort can spark profound innovation. Designed and built from scratch, Lake Nona is anchored by clusters of excellence in wellbeing, sports & performance, education and technology.
This fast-growing, neo-urban environment was created with the building blocks for the future, and is pushing the boundaries of what it means to be a forward-thinking community. Connectivity, both physical and digital, is the main engine that powers Lake Nona’s innovation ecosystem and is inspiring businesses, institutions and individuals to thrive.
From its technologically rich and innovative infrastructure to its globally recognized clusters of excellence, Lake Nona was created with a foundational strategy that guides not what is needed today, but what is going to be required decades from now to remain a healthy, vibrant and innovative community.
J U A N S A N T O S @ TAV I S T O C K D E V E L O P M E N T C O M PA N Y
SAP SE
SAP Where to Start Tech CLICK TO WATCH
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244
- there’s a rapid escalation of new busi-
it forms a powerful proposition that
ness models coming to life enabled by
can bring new technologies and busi-
technology, and it’s really the key trend
ness models to life.” This proposition
that’s dominating right now.”
is the result of a partnership between
In terms of technology, Wilde and
SAP and Verizon that was announced
SAP drive customers to innovate
in October of 2019. The collaboration
and use technology in a customer-
sees Verizon’s network and platform
centric way. To do this, he explains,
capabilities married with SAP’s soft-
the company leverages its 49 years
ware and services.
of experience. “It lets us look at our
Through this work, customers are
customers through a unique lens,” he
able to benefit from new technologies
states. “When you marry data man-
such as 5G, software-defined net-
agement, analytics, and digital supply
working, and Verizon’s Intelligent Edge
chain services into a holistic platform,
Network capabilities. The former is an
AUGUST 2020
“ With 5G, our business technology platform and our IoT capabilities, we can fundamentally change how our customers operate and go to market” — Frank Wilde, Vice President, SAP
exciting proposition for both Wilde and SAP. SAP launched its 5G Council in 2018, for example, as a cross-industry collaborative council of SAP customers to better understand the changes necessary to adopt 5G. “5G represents a step function change in terms of capability, it’s like jumping from a bicycle to a race car,” says Wilde. “You’re able to pull together various aspects - data, AI, machine learning and edge services - and build a true hub and platform for innovation. The 5G Council represents a 5G
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Frank Wilde Title: Vice President Company: SAP SE Industry: Software Location: San Francisco Bay Area Frank Wilde leads data and data science innovation focused on telecom & high tech as a Vice President for SAP’s Global Center of Excellence. In this role, Frank’s teams of data scientists and platform architects spark innovative thinking with SAP’s customers through a combination of data science and design thinking.
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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Throughout history, there have always been problems. No one likes them. But problems inspire us to make things better.
Smart loves problems. From skills gaps to blackouts, city traffic to ocean plastic. They even took us to the moon and back on a single tank of gas. Problems actually move the world forward. And the people who dare to take them on work with us every step of the way. ibm.com/smart
IBM, the IBM logo, ibm.com and Let’s put smart to work are trademarks of International Business Machines Corp., registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. See current list at ibm.com/trademark. Other product and service names might be trademarks of IBM or other companies. ŠInternational Business Machines Corp. 2019. B33820
“ We can create new businesses or concepts in a very short period of time with predefined and pre-built services, or microservices” — Frank Wilde, Vice President, SAP
on an Industry 4.0 approach for several manufacturers whereby we have created a 5G environment that can support innovations like autonomous vehicles, augmented reality technology that allows work to be digitally tracked as it flows through the shop floor, and so on. “Similarly, there’s huge potential in the retail sector,” he continues. “For example, 5G gives us the ability to use video analytics at scale as well as mixed
ecosystem comprising our custom-
reality to scan product contents or
ers, partners and companies such as
look for drug interactions; you can also
Verizon and Ericsson, that addresses
introduce autonomous checkout and
new business models and monetisation strategies. Also, we have worked closely with Deloitte Consulting LLP to create 5G ‘playbooks’ that show what can be brought to life with the power of 5G in specific industries such as retail, manufacturing and oil & gas.” The technology may still be in its relative early stages, but Wilde sees enormous potential to fundamentally change how businesses approach innovation. In particular, he explains, private deployment of 5G will likely gain significant traction over the next few years. “You look at manufacturing, for example,” Wilde says. “We’ve worked b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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SAP SE
“ Where current wireless networks enable a 2D world, 5G and edge computing coupled with SAP’s software platform enable 3D, immersive experiences for consumers and employees” — Frank Wilde, Vice President, SAP
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AUGUST 2020
other innovations. As I said, 5G forms an entirely new platform upon which we can adopt these technologies for each customer and sector across the value chain. It really is an exciting prospect in terms of transforming business.” Where that prospect becomes truly innovative, relates Wilde, is when 5G is coupled with edge services. “If I can have the processing occur on an IoT sensor or on a vehicle, then I can create a new experience or service,” he explains, “which means you remove any delays, any latency. It’s a level of intelligence and responsiveness that we can bring to life that we haven’t been able to do before. There are productivity changes there, too - you remove that complexity from the shop floor and change the experiences and effectiveness of workers and you immediately improve output. You’re going to see significant change over the next five to eight years as 5G rolls out, so we are bullish on our predictions in that regard.” Of course, many of the approaches to business and digital strategies have been disrupted as a result of the COVID19 pandemic. While the impact of a shift to remote working has been felt by many b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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SAP SE
SAP Centre of Intelligence Tech CLICK TO WATCH
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“ 5G represents a stepchange in terms of function and capability; it’s like jumping from a bicycle to a race car” — Frank Wilde, Vice President, SAP
industries worldwide, from a technology perspective there is a general sentiment that such a shift will focus many organisations on technology adoption. For Wilde, 5G and its associated technologies could play a significant role in a post-COVID environment. “It offers a significant opportunity, particularly on the retail side to remove contact or friction from the experience. So, you could introduce technology that shows optimised routes through a store based on previous shopping trips, or mixed reality
AUGUST 2020
1972
Year founded
$28bn+ Revenue in US dollars
101,150 Number of employees
technology that lets you identify the
36 months you’re going to see a water-
contents of products with an immersive,
shed moment for 5G,” he states. “If I
3D experience. Upon that is the capabil-
look to 2021-22, when customers are
ity to build AI and chatbots, or a level of
able to visualise the proof points we
dynamic content that satisfies consumer
have put in place and the potential of
needs without requiring face to face
edge services, data management and
interaction with a store’s employees.”
5G woven together, then I see a strong
While no one is able to fully predict the ‘new normal’ we face, when it
case for why they should all have it high on their agenda ”
comes to 5G Wilde feels that SAP is well placed in rolling out the technology and working with customers to remain ahead of the curve. “In the next b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
251
252 WRITTEN BY
WILL GIRLING PRODUCED BY
ARRON RAMPLING
AUGUST 2020
253
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
N I H S T R I D E S I N I T I AT I V E
Thomas Shaw, Senior Project Manager, NIH STRIDES Initiative, discusses the transformative ability of cloud and how the project fosters collaboration
I
t was in July 2018 that the first National Institutes of Health (NIH) Science and Technology Research Infrastructure for
Discovery, Experimentation and Sustainability (STRIDES) Initiative was established. Partnering 254
with Google Cloud and then, two months later, with Amazon Web Services (AWS), STRIDES was conceived as a method for the NIH to fully engage with cloud computing and explore its potential for collaborative data sharing. Part of the NIH’s wider strategy for digital transformation (the Strategic Plan for Data Science), STRIDES has and will continue to play an integral role in making the organisation’s biomedical data easier to access, use and integrate, as well as deliver a more costeffective form of data management. Joining as a Senior Project Manager in October 2018, only one month after the AWS partnership, Thomas Shaw came from a highly experienced technical background: graduating in 1986 with a BSc in Computer Science from the University of North Dakota, Shaw gained experience with the AUGUST 2020
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b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
Nereus Systems is an integral partner to the success of the National Institute of Health’s cloud migration, inclusive of our award-winning engineering team and program managers. The National Institute of Health engaged with Nereus Systems to provide logistical support as a partner for their migration of cloud data into the Google cloud (GCP) as well as providing project plans, timelines, and timeline projections on training through both in-person and remote learning for their scientist and researcher communities.
LEVERAGE YOUR GOALS
INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS FOR A NEW WORLD Cloud ATO Nereus Systems is a next-generation partner and integrator that works with the nation’s most important government customers to help them realize their goals while mitigating their risks. We do this by providing insight into the threat landscape while also working to provide XAAS or anything as a service. Our customers include the Department of Defense, Intelligence Community, Department of Energy, the Civilian government, and many of their Subcontractors. As additional support to our customers, we offer Agencies the ability to fully automate their Authority to Operate within multiple cloud environments. We are able to meet and fully automate all 6 Steps of the National Institute of Standards and Technologies Risk Management Framework (NIST RMF) while maintaining the continuous monitoring of step 6. AI/ML As we continue to innovate with our customers and partners, Nereus Systems is investing heavily in AI/ML in real-world applications to be able to utilize the benefits of these developing technologies while being realistic around their limitations. There will never be a Silver Bullet to any problem set, but there are ways in which a holistic approach to IT and Cyber will utilize the best out of leading-edge systems. Deception, lateral spread, and time to remediation through log correlation are areas that we continue to focus on, and provide real value to our customers while being conscious of their IT budgets. Our eyes are on the horizon, and we continually look for innovative partners and solutions so that we can advise and consult as opposed to being “a partner” that bothers their clients. Cyber Security and NIST We understand that any customer moving into a cloud environment is looking to be able to leverage a multicloud environment for both cost savings as well as the ability to utilize the technical advantages of their prospective cloud providers. But to be truly efficient in the use of cloud and next-generation tools a customer must have confidence in their security and their own compliance posture. At Nereus, we take both of these as the backbone of our mission with our customers. We continually innovate with our vendor partner community to bring leading-edge security technology to meet the ever-changing landscape. We also overlay this with our NIST 800-171 compliance services that bring our subcontractor community up to the necessary DoD standards required to be able to continue to support their customers. We do this by
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utilizing the best and most efficient tool sets available to assist in remediation as well as supporting you with your compliance needs. Our goal here is to bring you up to speed as quickly and as painlessly as possible so that you are able to focus on your mission objective and not your compliance posture. I own a small aerospace engineering services business, and Nereus has been invaluable for helping us get our arms around how to secure and maintain our IT environment. Before engaging with them, I really didn’t have a clear path for how to successfully verify and maintain compliance to the NIST SP 800-171 requirements. The deep bench of experience that Nereus was able to assemble for me, between their in-house employees and the personnel at their partner network of companies, was impressive and ensured that my system was in good hands. The team members were able to provide us a solid System Security Plan (SSP) update, Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) manual, and a vulnerability assessment that identified a number of areas for improvement followed by an easy-tofollow guide for shoring up these vulnerabilities. Nereus was able to provide this much-needed service for us at a price point that was far better than anything else I could find - anywhere (and I’d been very thorough in my searches in the year leading up to our engagement with Nereus). They have taken a huge weight and worry off of my shoulders, and I’m very happy that I’ve found the to work within securing my company’s systems. Tim Read, CEO T4 Engineering We take great pride in the clients that we service and adopt their missions as our own. Our collective backgrounds, histories, and work ethic speak for themselves and we hope we can leverage that for your goals.
N I H S T R I D E S I N I T I AT I V E
“ When it comes to healthcare in the US, I’m always curious about how we can advance” — Thomas Shaw, Senior Project Manager, STRIDES Initiative
American Red Cross, the National Center for Biotechnology Information and even NASA. His career has been an intermingling of technology and healthcare, but this is no coincidence: Shaw claims that the challenges of the former and the inherent significance of the latter made it an ideal combination. “What’s most important to me is ‘what am I doing? What’s the project in mind?’” he explains. “When it comes to healthcare in the US, I’m always curious about how we can advance.”
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Recognising the NIH as an organisation devoted to positive change and making a difference in people’s lives, Shaw became the first project manager brought onboard for the STRIDES Initiative and appreciated the team’s open workplace culture: “You can go to anybody and ask for help and people will, regardless of what the issue is,” he says. “At the same time, all of the cloud service providers we are working with display an identical attitude and commitment: It’s not ‘we can’t do this’, rather ‘how can we do this?’ and that’s a wonderful environment to be in.” This aspect has proven particularly crucial because of STRIDES’ sheer scope: AUGUST 2020
Next Generation Biomedical Research using AWS CLICK TO WATCH
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259 integrating data from across 2,700
and a variety of reports. Regarding
NIH-funded Institutes and organisa-
the latter, these can take the form of
tions comprising research on topics
monthly spend reports, supplementary
ranging from tooth decay to vaccines),
information and account monitoring
the amount of information necessary to
which will send timely alerts to possible
carry out the project is truly immense.
over-spending.
Offering support services to assist
The fundamentals of the Initiative
in the utilisation of cloud resources, the
rest on three pillars: access, collabora-
STRIDES Initiative covers consulta-
tion and innovation. However, large
tion, structured coordination between
volumes of data require a simplified,
the STRIDES team and the recipient’s
integrated, easy-to-access platform
project or programme, a flexible pro-
in order to be readily accessible and
ject billing setup regardless of how the
cloud computing was the vital ingredi-
research is NIH-funded, cloud training
ent which pulled STRIDES together.
(both in-person and online resources)
According to Shaw, the move to cloud b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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publicsector@hycu.com
was “a big step forward” in the sense
without cloud, such a monumental
that it liberated the sharing of informa-
task might have been too expensive
tion whilst simultaneously maintaining
to execute. “There have been prior
granular control over it. Making the
attempts to do what we’re achieving
information accessible to research
with STRIDES, but, at that time, some
staff without the need to download
of the technology just wasn’t there for
it mitigated the need for substantial
it.” Now that communicating between
investment in servers to house the
teams is easier than ever before, a
NIH’s collective data, thus saving costs
digital, cloud-powered NIH community
significantly. Indeed, Shaw states that,
can explore each others’ work in new
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
261
Thomas Shaw Title: Senior Project Manager
Location: Burke, Virginia
Thomas Shaw is a Senior Project Manager on the NIH STRIDES Initiative. He received a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science from the University of North Dakota and a minor in Mathematics. Along with the over 20 years at NIH, he has been the Director of Test Engineering and Configuration Management at the American Red Cross and worked in many different industry sectors including Secure Communications, Industrial Automation and Medical Devices. He brings his wealth of knowledge from these different arenas to the forefront to foster highly functioning teams and is valued for his ability to think outside the box to apply concepts and ideas to solve complex problems in unconventional ways. By seeing the big picture while being able to focus on the details helps mitigate many risks by addressing them ahead of time. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
N I H S T R I D E S I N I T I AT I V E
and interesting ways. “We have an ecosystem where people with access are collaborating which will lead to innovation. I think it’s really going to excite people,” adds Shaw. STRIDES’ ability to remove or lower barriers to seamless collaboration and data sharing is what Shaw calls “the golden ticket” for working in cloud space. “At this time, incurring egress is the only way to move data from one CSP (cloud service provider) to another. Resolving the barriers of 262
CSP data-sharing will take research to the next level,” he says. Shaw even postulates that a future pandemic on the scale of COVID-19 could be dealt with more effectively within a mature STRIDES ecosystem. The ability to get quick access to cloud resources, NIH-funded datasets and the ability to work closely with fellow researchers would be highly advantageous in the fight against a new virus. “No longer will that vital research remain only in the domain of major universities or organisations,” he continues. “Instead the playing field will shift to a more level place for research: large funded institutes, researchers at AUGUST 2020
underserved organisations, post-docs, doctoral candidates and even retired researchers with inspired insights could contribute towards a solution.” Although there is no way to predict when a similar pandemic might occur again, one thing appears certain: the power of cloud as a binding agent for coordinating a response will form the basis of any effective plan. The liberating potential of digital transformation is exemplified by NIH’s decision to pursue the STRIDES Initiative, something Shaw claims was the result of upper management’s realisation that its legacy systems would no longer be functional in the modern digital era. Whilst 10 years ago the Initiative’s aims would have been difficult to execute, modern technology has accelerated capacity beyond imagining. “You would not have been able to move 20 petabytes of data up into the cloud in less than a year previously; it would have probably taken a couple of years at best,” he explains. Such dynamic leaps make the team’s open style of workplace culture even more valuable, as their expertise and receptiveness make them ideal for b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
263
guiding others through the change.
focus include data protection and
Taking the time and effort to organise
monitoring software for multi-cloud
training for NIH staff is something
data centres and providing STRIDES
Shaw takes pride in, particularly for
with an effective and simplified method
those who do not properly understand
for eliminating IT issues before they
the cloud. As such, he considers
become problematic. From infrastruc-
STRIDES to be merely the latest itera-
ture assessments, security reviews,
tion of a project which will continue to
access management, training and
improve over the years: “The goal is to
many other services, STRIDES needs
maintain STRIDES and allow it to con-
collaborators who are as intrepid and
tinue in one form or another.�
inspired to expand the frontiers of bio-
Navigating the future successfully
medical research as it is. Successful
will depend on partners as forward-
partners will be those companies that
thinking as NIH itself. Key areas of
are agile, free flowing and committed to
NIH STRIDES Cloud overview: Key Concepts CLICK TO WATCH
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N I H S T R I D E S I N I T I AT I V E
PA RT N ERSHI PS
266
The STRIDES Initiative’s first partnership was with Google Cloud in July 2018. Joe Corkery, MD, Director of Product, Healthcare and Life Sciences at Google Cloud, said, “We’re committed to working with the NIH to create the best environment possible for biomedical research to f lourish across the country and across the globe. Together, we’re eliminating barriers to accessing and making meaning from the most important datasets: the ones that have the potential to advance science and human health.” Andrea T. Norris, CIO at NIH, added: “By launching STRIDES, we clearly show our strong commitment to putting the most advanced cloud computing tools in the hands of scientists. Beyond our partnership with
AUGUST 2020
Google Cloud, we will seek to add more industry partners to assure that NIH continues to be well poised to support the future of biomedical research.” Furthermore, “teaming with AWS will give NIH researchers powerful cloud-based resources to more efficiently collaborate and analyze data,” added Norris. “AWS’s long standing leadership in the cloud space will help bolster the innovative research being conducted through NIH support.” “We’re committed to providing those researchers participating in the STRIDES Initiative with access to high-value NIH datasets, enabling them to further their research to study, treat, and prevent the most devastating diseases,” said Teresa Carlson, VP at AWS.
“ The goal is to maintain STRIDES and allow it to continue in one form or another” — Thomas Shaw, Senior Project Manager, STRIDES Initiative
as interest has increased. I don’t see much changing as far as our cloud is concerned, apart from an increase in usage as more and more people use it.” Shaw intimates that the ‘new normal’, or the revised attitudes to work in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, could mean that STRIDES has come along at the perfect time. With remote working and a focus on the practical convenience of digital, organisations have awoken to the benefits of operating in a cloud-based system. Now that the collaborative ecosystem, of
the STRIDES Initiative’s mission, whilst
which STRIDES anticipated, is starting
also bringing cutting edge biomedi-
to become essential to the future of
cal information solutions to the cloud
research, Shaw adds that his team’s
space for NIH-funded research.
mission will be to optimise and make it
Looking ahead to the end of 2020
as affordable as possible. “I think, if we
and the short-term future of STRIDES,
develop a superior model, other univer-
Shaw is optimistic that over 100 NIH-
sities will pick up on the idea and buy
funded institutions will have signed
into the STRIDES programme. Then,
up and enrolled in the Initiative, citing
down the road at some point, maybe
a substantial uptick in the usage of
even corporations will do the same.”
cloud resources since the beginning of spring. The reason, he presumes, is the exponential growth of data being generated by facilities within the NIH ecosystem: “The amount of data has quadrupled in the past year b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
267
268
AUGUST 2020
SMC Corp of America: delivering competitivity through IT WRITTEN BY
MARCUS LAWRENCE PRODUCED BY
MIKE SADR
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
269
S M C C O R P O R AT I O N O F A M E R I C A
Michael Loggins, Global VP of IT at SMC of America, discusses the strategic and technological shifts driving the pneumatics leaders’ performance
S
MC, founded in Japan as Sintered Metal Corporation in 1959, is one of the world’s foremost pneumatic technology
developers and manufacturers with operations in 81 countries. In 1972, the SMC Corporation of America subsidiary was founded on the basis of providing local delivery and strategy for the 270
American market, with that expertise yielding a considerable degree of autonomy as the business grew over the following decades. In recent years and owing to shifts in customers’ technological capabilities and expectations, that localised strategy has changed. “Every subsidiary was focused almost solely on the customer base within their country,” says Michael Loggins, Global Vice President of IT at SMC USA. “Over the last several years, more and more companies have become unbound by geography - they work and get things done wherever they need to. We’ve created programmes to deal with the largest of those companies that have become global in nature to understand how we can be a better seller to them, to coordinate
AUGUST 2020
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
S M C C O R P O R AT I O N O F A M E R I C A
“ We want to make sure we continue to understand our local market, but our customers are expecting us to be and act like a global company” — Michael Loggins, Global Vice President, IT, SMC Corporation of America
our efforts from a manufacturing standpoint and so on.” These moves towards supporting global customers were only the beginning of a considerable shift in the way SMC operates. “Those major, globalised companies represent a small fraction of our customer base. We want to make sure we continue
272
to understand our local market, but our customers are expecting us to be and act like a global company so we’ve been trying to figure out the best way to do that. With changes made over the last year, we’re ready to pivot into fully becoming a globally operating company.”
Recirculating chillers and heat exchangers are installed to provide thermal stability for applications in industrial and applied sciences from laser cutting, welding, marking and plastic injection molding. Lab science and analytical equipment applications include: mass spectrometry, gas chromatography, MRIs, CT scanners, radiation therapy machines and other medical equipment AUGUST 2020
SMC Corporation Overview CLICK TO WATCH
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1:58
273 Loggins joined the firm in 2006
an IT perspective will be thorough,
as Manager of IT Operations and
considered, and effective. The crux
progressed through a handful of
of his projects and strategies, he
roles within the organisation before
says, is to use IT as the differen-
becoming Global VP of IT in December
tiator that supports SMC’s strategic
2019. The newly-created position is
competitiveness.
an expansion of his recent role as
“The responsibility we’ve taken
Director of IT from 2012 to 2019 which
in IT is to build the infrastructure on
was overlapped by an additional posi-
technological, operational, staff, policy
tion as European Director of IT from
and procedural levels; whatever it
2017 to 2019. With this experience and
takes from an IT standpoint to ensure
understanding of IT that transcends
we can share data and work with each
borders and SMC’s traditional model,
other geographic boundaries in a
Loggins’ leadership is well placed
productive manner,” he explains.
to ensure the necessary shifts from
“We want to make sure that we’re not b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
Engineering Led. Customer Focused, Women Owned Lucidia IT provides solutions to help their customers adopt and support advanced technologies within today’s cloud first world. SHOW ME MORE
S M C C O R P O R AT I O N O F A M E R I C A
276
The CQ2 compact cylinder is the world’s bestselling pneumatic cylinder and is supported globally. The CQ2 is available in 15 bore sizes from 12mm to 200mm. It comes standard with male or female piston rod threads. 42 standard options make it one of the most versatile cylinder series on the market. For mounting flexibility, it is possible to mount auto switches on any of the 4 surfaces
a global company as a facade, but that
technologies such as IoT, automation,
we actually operate as one in front of
and the data streams that tie opera-
our customers and other subsidiaries
tions together as other major triggers
whilst enabling SMC to maintain its
for the transformation. “Our custom-
status as the world leader in pneu-
ers are changing,” Loggins notes.
matic manufacturing components.”
“You’re not just solving a mechanical
Loggins highlights the infusion
problem any more, you’re also solving
of tech capabilities with sales and
a data problem, a connectivity problem,
marketing, the use of authentically
a whole range of technological vari-
produced YouTube videos showcas-
ables.” Throughout the transformation,
ing the firm’s offering, and the need to
SMC has ensured that its product
react to the growing scope of smart
delivery meets the full suite of these
AUGUST 2020
“ The cool thing, especially from an agile cultural standpoint, is that we’re not leading RPA’s implementation, the other areas of the business are guiding it” — Michael Loggins, Global Vice President, IT, SMC Corporation of America
needs, maximising value to customers by providing a single source of solutions that operate as moving parts of SMC’s product ecosystem, cutting the need for multiple vendors exerting influence on process success. Enacting change began with assessing and understanding value at a cultural level, guided by the need from a company standpoint for IT to add value both internally and externally. “One of the hardest questions from a cultural standpoint has been: how do you determine value without inherent,
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Michael Loggins Title: Global Vice President of Information Technology Industry: Industrial Automation Location: Indiana Michael Loggins is the Global Vice President of IT at SMC Corporation of America. Having joined in 2006 as a Manager of IT before rising to the Director of IT position in 2012. In 2017, this position was coupled with an additional role as European Director of IT, with both concluding in 2019 so he could assume his new and current position. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
277
M O S E R I T. C O M
CONCENTRATED ON TECNOLOGY
FOCUSED ON RESULTS LEARN MORE
quantifiable indicators of this given to us for specific projects? How do you deliver against that value? We’re not picking tasks apart or doing large, epic, seemingly endless projects. We’re trying to break that down and ensure value at the point of delivery.” Loggins says that implementing
1972
Year founded
1,160 Number of employees
KPIs to measure deliverable value is a key project and a considerable chal-
new metrics, he says, can be a point
lenge, particularly as the traditionally
of friction, but they are essential to
structured and mechanically-minded
effectively communicating the value
organisation has operated for many
that SMC delivers. “Uptime, delivery
years on the basis of metrics relative
and lead-times have always been
to those qualities. The introduction of
captured but have not previously been
AUGUST 2020
How does the SIF-400, the training system for Industry 4.0, work? CLICK TO WATCH
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4:18
279 viewed through the lens of what they
could only be scaled by adding more
mean to the culture or to the value
people.” The introduction of robotic
we provide.”
process automation (RPA) began in
From a technological standpoint,
Europe under Loggins’ leadership,
Loggins notes automation as one of
and is now being implemented for
the key and recent elements of the
the US operations as well. “The cool
transformation. “SMC’s bread and
thing, especially from an agile cultural
butter is making components that
standpoint, is that we’re not leading
allow other manufacturers to auto-
it, the other areas of the business
mate their processes. Despite that,
are. They’re assessing the processes
a lot of our back-end, knowledge-
they want to be automated while we
based processes are still very manual,
provide the guidance and solutions
time consuming and require large
for them to conduct their own system
systems to complete the work at
development and do what they need
scale. As we grew, those processes
to do.” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
S M C C O R P O R AT I O N O F A M E R I C A
280
“ We’re not picking tasks apart or doing large, epic, seemingly endless projects. We’re trying to break that down and ensure value at the point of delivery” — Michael Loggins, Global Vice President, IT, SMC Corporation of America
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281
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
S M C C O R P O R AT I O N O F A M E R I C A
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“ With changes made over the last year, we’re ready to pivot into fully becoming a globally operating company” — Michael Loggins, Global Vice President, IT, SMC Corporation of America LU CI DI A I T AN D DELL
The streamlining of processes through automation offers enormous benefits both to SMC and its customers, with faster delivery and the labour saved for its workforce being crucial. The core of the transformation, Loggins says, is SMC’s people. “Aptitude is important but attitude is critical,” he says and, as drivers of the transformation on the ground, SMC’s staff have been rewarded with an increase in knowledge-based tasks in tandem with the reduction of repetitive ones, and positive shifts in work-life
“Lucidia IT and Dell have been our infrastructure partners for around 10 years, and over the last three years they’ve been integral to designing and building our next generation end user compute platforms in the US and now, of course, globally. We’re in the process of building data centres in Europe and we’re in the architecture and design phase for Asia, and both Lucidia and Dell have done a great job of partnering with our teams to make sure they deliver exactly what we need.”
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M O SER CO N SU LT I N G
“Moser originally came in to help SMC build security, governance and compliance frameworks around three years ago. Since then, we have been leveraging Moser Consulting to help with governance, risk and compliance maturity for our projects across
AUGUST 2020
the globe. We’re trying now to scale our US-implemented framework and programmes with additional maturity across the globe, and Moser is essential to this. Moser has a great deal of talent, and its culture is very similar to our own which helps with adaptability.”
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balances. This focus on employees
behaviours that Loggins and his
ensures high retention, and there
team have been seeking to imbue
is considerable mobility between
across operations.
different business units that enable a breed of cohesion that is only possible through mutual understandings between departments. Not only that, but these qualities ensure the workforce is adaptable, emblematising the Agile methodologies and b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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AUGUST 2020
Bentley Systems’ cloud offering drives business resilience WRITTEN BY
MARCUS LAWRENCE
PRODUCED BY
ARRON RAMPLING
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BENTLEY SYSTEMS
Jeff Richardson, CDO at Bentley Systems, discusses the state of the art cloud infrastructure that benefits internal and external stakeholders
T
he global business community has responded to the coronavirus pandemic with considerably more focus on remote
working than has ever been seen before. For every industry, from media to construction, demand 288
has rocketed for technological solutions that will enable continued operations with minimal disruption. Bentley Systems, a world-leading software solutions developer serving major infrastructural construction projects around the world, has long been a proponent of this breed of tech, and today boasts a cutting edge cloud infrastructure whose benefits are more apparent than ever. In normal times, its end-to-end suite of software solutions for such large projects ensures a seamlessness of delivery for its users while cutting-edge telemetry capabilities mean development and subscriptions are current, flexible, and fair. All of that remains true during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the global crisis has revealed that Bentley’s greatest strength is perhaps in the flexibility it offers both external and internal stakeholders. AUGUST 2020
Jeff Richardson, CDO, Bentley Systems
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1984
Year founded
$700mn Revenue in US dollars
3,800 Number of employees
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“ We use the rules of compliance as foundational guidelines, and we always try to exceed those guidelines by orders of magnitude” 290
— Jeff Richardson, Chief Data Officer, Bentley Systems
Jeff Richardson, Chief Data Officer at Bentley Systems, has been with the company since 2004, rising through the ranks from an SAP developer to the head of the firm’s data lifecycle and data strategies. In Richardson’s view, ‘global mobility’ is 2020’s key trend, and it has certainly become the undercurrent for business in a world where face-to-face contact is being kept to a minimum. “Businesses have quickly tried to adapt to global mobility now that face-toface culture is out the window, and we instead need to have a culture of ‘can you do your job globally, but remotely to where you are?’” he says. The scope of the construction projects that Bentley facilitates means the capability required goes way beyond the collaboration tools and Zoom meetings that have come to pervade many industries. Building a 100-storey skyscraper, for example, comes with immense data requirements, with file sizes spanning gigabytes and terabytes. “A single BIM model, made of the structural elements of the building, could be many, many gigabytes of data. The question is: how do remote workers seamlessly
AUGUST 2020
Bentley Systems: ProjectWise Components Center Overview CLICK TO WATCH
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291 access files of that size to make edits,
on integrating a robust and industry-
updates and run analyses?”
leading cloud security platform. Along
Bentley’s state-of-the-art
with instituting a security office, we
ProjectWise 365 tools provide the
have beefed up our security staff and
answer, with distributed file sharing
infrastructure by around 800% in
and caching technology that enable
the past five years, we’re constantly
workers to easily operate within the
running penetration exercises on our
cloud regardless of where and when
cloud infrastructure, and we are just
they are, all with the confidence that
now implementing mock data breach
the system is secure and continually
scenarios with our larger cloud infra-
stress-tested against potential threats.
structure compliance and data teams.
“Living in a cloud-focused world,
As we store more and more of our
security is huge for us. Our CIO, Claire
users’ data in the cloud, it is both our
Rutkowski, came on board in October
responsibility and desire to be as safe
2016 and has been heavily focused
and resilient as possible.” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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During this period of business
‘ELS contracts’, Richardson explains:
instability and uncertainty, Bentley’s
“We were selling contracts like that as
protections for its customers have
far as back as 2006 - I’ve never heard
extended beyond its cybersecurity.
of another company that was doing
Owing to the business disruptions, the
the same that far back in time. With
company has waived the pay-what-you-
the light telemetry we had available
use subscription fees for ProjectWise
to measure usage, we were able to
through to 30 September 2020; a
do that.” Data gathered from across
measure that ties closely with Bentley’s
software suites has not only enabled
mantra that its success is measured
reactive and incisive development of
by that of its users. The firm has been
successive products, but has made
a pioneer of this payment-by-usage
the pay-for-what-you-use model the
subscription model, known internally as
norm for Bentley for over a decade.
AUGUST 2020
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Jeff Richardson Jeff Richardson is a seasoned data and analytics executive leader with a cloud-first focus on evolving technology and trends. Over a 17-year career, he has crafted a results-driven strategy for growth and delivered outcomes which have helped Bentley achieve a leading position in cloud technology, record revenue and user growth.
Today, the latest data measurements are even more precise and complex, making for a robust service model that is accurately proportionate to the user’s needs. Not only does each contract have an unlimited potential value ceiling for Bentley, they also ensure users are never encumbered with a subscription that they don’t need and actively use. The tech also paints a
A prolific speaker on the topics of cloud, data and analytics, Richardson can often be found at conferences and networking events in the Greater Philadelphia and mid-Atlantic area. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Providence College, where he was also a Division I swimmer, a master’s degree in Statistics from Central Connecticut State University and recently completed a business capstone program at Yale University.
picture of the usage increase that has come with vaster proportions of workforces working from home during the b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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BENTLEY SYSTEMS
For an open relationship with your data.
Multi-cloud Data Integration & Analytics | qlik.com
295 COVID-19 pandemic. “When the crisis hit, many companies who were using other, server-based products in offices became stuck and couldn’t access those resources. For our customers, the users of our distributed cloud products, the transition was seamless and we can actually see that in the telemetry. It shows us that our work-sharing products had no disruption in usage during the country-based shutdowns resulting from the pandemic. In fact, our collaboration tools actually saw an 8-13% increase in usage, year on year,
“ A single BIM model, made of the structural elements of the building, could be many, many gigabytes of data. The question is: how do remote workers seamlessly access files of that size to make edits, updates, and run analysis” — Jeff Richardson, Chief Data Officer, Bentley Systems
from last year.” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
BENTLEY SYSTEMS
Partners enabled us to build an analytical suite in conjunction with our Microsoft Azure partnership.”
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“Bentley tends to partner with software vendors very tightly to build solutions for things that work for us and can be fed back into the larger software development ecosystem. SAP is a great example, and we’ve been a tight partner with them since about 2005. We use SAP for all of our internal applications, such as ERP and CRM systems, to run operations internally along with its people management and success factors. We work very closely with SAP to develop products that we’re going to use, and I’m positive that development is used to enhance SAP’s only products too.”
“Over the past ten years, Qlik has been a great software vendor and partner for Bentley. We’re using the most recent release of its cloudfocused Sense technology, and it has AUGUST 2020
“I have a close relationship with a lot of the guys that started the company. As an analytics and data storagefocused cloud developer, Thoughtspot is positioned to be the market leader in cloud-based analytics.”
“We recently partnered with Snowflake to support our cloud-first approach, and it is rapidly growing to become the leader in data warehousing and storage technology. We’re going to use Snowflake internally to store our featurelevel data, which consists of huge amounts of highly detailed telemetry data. Their pricing structure is very elastic, with a fair billing model focused on pay-what-you-use, just like Bentley.”
The sheer capability and flexibility
develop solutions in collaboration with
of Bentley’s cloud infrastructure, which
its key vendors to solidify its leadership
has in recent years been a huge invest-
in the market. Not only that, but cloud-
ment focus for the firm, has been
based operations have made Bentley
predicated on CEO Greg Bentley’s
enormously flexible in how it operates,
insistence that its operations are
meaning that, of its 3,800 staff world-
cloud-first and cloud-forward wherever
wide, Richardson says that only 73
possible. This pioneering approach
were unable to dive into the working-
to cloud, dating back to the launch
from-home scenario of the coronavirus
of Microsoft Azure and the subse-
pandemic from day one.
quent close partnership that the two
Across such global operations, this is
firms have shared since, has enabled
a great indicator of Bentley’s flexibility
Bentley to both seize the opportunities
at work. As the coronavirus pandemic
of cloud-centralised operations and
gathered pace, Senior Leadership of
b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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BENTLEY SYSTEMS
298
“ Living in a cloud-focused world, security is huge for us. Our CIO, Claire Rutkowski, came on board in October 2016 and has been heavily focused on integrating a robust and industry-leading cloud security platform” — Jeff Richardson, Chief Data Officer, Bentley Systems AUGUST 2020
IT meetings were held to workshop worst case scenarios, and the preparation that resulted has ensured what Richardson calls a “totally seamless” shift to the new normal. Questions of access to vital resources from home, including licences, hardware and software were answered promptly in a show of remarkable preparedness in such unprecedented times. “We use the rules of compliance as foundational guidelines, and we always try to exceed those guidelines
299
by orders of magnitude; comply-
the next decade.” This sentiment is
ing whilst building infrastructure
reflected in Bentley’s continued ability
that supports those guidelines in a
to serve its clients and continue as nor-
best practice sense, and exceeding
mal internally, a powerful indicator that
those standards as far as possible,”
Bentley’s cloud software will retain its
Richardson enthuses, highlighting
market leadership long into the future.
the strategic focus that has ensured Bentley Systems is ready for anything. To close, Richardson shares the ethos at the heart of Bentley’s operations: “We don’t want to build cloud software that’s reliable for today, we want to build cloud software that’s reliable for b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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AUGUST 2020
World Vision: digitalising operations to help the vulnerable WRITTEN BY
GEORGIA WILSON PRODUCED BY
CAITLYN COLE 301
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WORLD VISION
Tim Covell, Supply Chain Director, World Vision on the organisation’s digital transformation, COVID-19 and its efforts to help the vulnerable
W
hen it comes to digital innovation at World Vision, Tim Covell, Supply Chain Director at the organisation explains that its strat-
egy is not necessarily ‘cutting edge’. “We’re probably more on the other end of the 302
spectrum where we are intentionally not cutting edge. Instead, we’re looking to be frugal, using technology that has the highest return on investment (ROI), as well as applications that provide the most effective impact,” so when it comes to digital transformation, World Vision is focusing its efforts on its demand planning, fulfilment and distribution. “In terms of demand planning, our stakeholders and program leaders from around the world are serving in various communities and they need to have a simple and common tool that we can pull from. Over time, we have developed a tool with a fairly simple input process, and then we aggregate all those answers into a global demand each year, and this process has continued to be refined year on year. When it comes to fulfilment and global
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WORLD VISION
“ We are probably more on the other end of the spectrum where we are intentionally not cutting edge. Instead we are looking to be frugal, using technology that has the highest return on investment (ROI), as well as applications that provide the most effective impact” — Tim Covell, Supply Chain Director, World Vision
He adds that, “Envista has been our partner for a little over four years and they have played an important role in allowing us to utilise our ERP
304
distribution, I would say that we are still
for nonprofit application. A lot of what
on a journey about how we can build
we do is non-standard, we are using
global solutions. Here in the US, we
an ERP built for profit in a nonprofit
had a big win several years ago when
organisation, so being able to manage
we introduced a common ERP system
that efficiently and effectively we are
for both managing donations as well
really thankful for Envista for provid-
as ministry executions for serving
ing the expertise.” Other technology
our communities. Now that we’re on
World Vision has adopted to digitally
a common platform, the ability to move
transform its operations include the
products around to maintain control
adoption of a new TMS system about
has really been bolstered,” adds Covell.
a year ago, “and so we are still going through the learning curves of the system and looking to be as effective as
AUGUST 2020
World Vision: supporting communities to fight COVID-19 around the world CLICK TO WATCH
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305 we can with that tool which has a huge
make to our operations when it comes
opportunity to be much more impact-
to technology to enable this in the future.”
ful than the homegrown system that
When it comes to the importance
we were using prior to that.” Reflecting on the future of technol-
of technology, Covell believes that “having connectivity to all of our
ogy at World Vision, Covell notes that
stakeholders, donors, carriers and
one area his team has been looking
customers is critical. As a team – aside
into in the last year and will continue to
from the ones who are continuing to
do so in the future is having an impact
work in warehouses and distribution
assessment of donated Gifts in Kind
– we are able to work from home.
(GIK) to understand how to maximise
The team that’s interacting with our
the freight dollar spend and where
various stakeholders are able to work
the company can use it for the most
from home and not miss a beat and
significant impact. “As a result we are
that has been excellent. However,
looking into improvements that we can
in my personal opinion, this is not b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
SERVING THOSE W H O S E RV E H IM
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going to be the new normal. I personally believe that being together as a team provides great value due to the connectedness of the team. Working from home creates challenges that you need to overcome on a day to day basis. So I don’t see this as the new normal, I think the days of the office aren’t numbered.” Since the outbreak of COVID-19, Covell explains that while its office based teams have faced minimal disruption, the operations of organisation have not been without challenges. “It’s interesting times for sure,” notes AUGUST 2020
GET A QUOTE
1950
Year founded
$2.75bn Revenue in US dollars
10,000+
Number of employees (Linkedin)
Covell, “here in the United States we
response as well as a local emer-
have had to deal with not being able
gency response, which putting all
to bring in our volunteers for our seven
these elements together makes a
sites in the US which we rely heavily
very challenging environment,” com-
on to make our operations work. So
ments Covell. He believes that “the
not having the volunteers has been
US team has done an excellent job
a significant disruption. In terms of
setting up distribution hubs at 12 dif-
distribution, we are still getting dona-
ferent sites around the country and
tions in from corporations which is
have been ramping up efforts to get
awesome, but the team has pivoted
food and essential supplies to each
to emergency response instead of
of those hubs on top of serving 17 of
normal distributions, so we are cur-
the most fragile countries impacted
rently serving a global emergency
by COVID-19.” 307
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Tim Covell Title: Supply Chain Director Company: World Vision Industry: Non-profit Organization Management Tim has a BS in Operations Research/Systems Analysis from West Point Military Academy, and a MS in Engineering Management from Milwaukee School of Engineering. After some time serving in the Army and then leading operations in transportation services, he spent over 21 years at GE Healthcare in Milwaukee, WI. During that time, he had experience in a variety of roles from Mfg and Materials leadership to New Product Development and Advanced Manufacturing Engineering. He recently joined World Vision in Seattle, WA to lead the GIK Supply Chain operation and has been serving there for 3 ½ years. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
WORLD VISION
308
When it comes to the future of the
of poverty. So for me, COVID-19
industry, Covell details that “one of the
reinforces the criticality of our min-
dynamics of poverty is the inability to
istry and services for the future.”
deal with emergencies or crises as
Reflecting on the organisation,
they emerge and you’re living paycheck
Covell explains that “World Vision
to paycheck, day to day just to get
intends to provide a total business
by. Therefore, having an emergency
solution for corporations, offering a
like COVID-19 reinforces the need for
holistic approach with team activities,
organisations like World Vision and
kit builds, cash donations, and GIK.
many others to be engaged in caring
We have an excellent team that works
for and uplifting communities that
with these corporations in terms of
are struggling to break that cycle
developing relationships and working
AUGUST 2019
309
“ Now that we’re on a common platform, the ability to move products around to maintain control has really been bolstered” — Tim Covell, Supply Chain Director, World Vision
with them. Then, once a donation is made, my team then is the execution arm, so our focus is on providing a high level of service to the donor. In particular, we focus on having a short response time to get the product off of their dock – which is typically a priority for corporations – providing a reverse logistics solution, integrating with the donor’s operations. Finally, maintaining that ministry focus and making sure that we are a pull operation is key. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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“ Having an emergency like COVID-19 reinforces the need for organisations like World Vision and many others to be engaged in caring for and uplifting communities that are struggling to break that cycle of poverty” — Tim Covell, Supply Chain Director, World Vision
AUGUST 2020
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WORLD VISION
It’s important that we’re never taking a product from a corporation and then pushing it to a ministry site, instead we make sure at every turn that we’re responsive and sensitive to what is needed at the ministry site to care for people, making sure that the product we’re sending is providing value.” However, this mission isn’t done alone. Covell explains that World Vision is a small team which relies on its logistics partners significantly 312
internationally and domestically. “In terms of international logistics MX Shipping has been a core partner specialising in access to really challenging countries and last mile scenarios. On the domestic side, we have several core partners that we work with including C.H. Robinson
“ We make sure at every turn that we’re responsive and sensitive to what is needed at the ministry site to care for people, making sure that the product we’re sending is providing value” — Tim Covell, Supply Chain Director, World Vision AUGUST 2020
313
and Radiant two key partners that
each category allows checks and bal-
we lean heavily on. My philosophy is
ances ensuring that we’re being cost
to have a few core relationships and
effective as we go forward.”
not to jump around every year to build strong relationships and grow together. However, on the flip side, I’m not a fan of being single sourced and not having options, so having a few partners in b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
314
A DIGITALLY DISRUPTIVE ORGANISATION WRITTEN BY
GEORGIA WILSON PRODUCED BY
SHIRIN SADR
AUGUST 2020
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MASTERCARD
Mohammed Kamal, Senior Vice President, O&T, at Mastercard, on the company’s unique operations, digital transformation, technology trends and its initiatives to combat COVID-19
W
hen it comes to the operations at Mastercard, Mohammed Kamal, Senior Vice President, O&T, reflects
on the history of the company. “Just looking at Mastercard’s payment network, it has a unique architecture with triple redundancy 316
built in, operating globally, peer to peer and with local AI decisioning. The way Mastercard and Mastercard’s network has been built over the years is different from some of our competitors, which I believe provides a quicker and higher quality of service for our customers. Beyond our historic payments network, I think Mastercard is in a position to disrupt itself. Where you typically associate Mastercard with credit card or debit card payments, being disruptive has taken us into areas such as account-based and bill payments, which have grown over the years. While we’ve been diversifying into services for some time, we’re also diversifying into multiple payment rails that you typically wouldn’t associate with Mastercard. For me this is one of AUGUST 2020
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MASTERCARD
“ Mastercard has very rigorous business continuity plans that are tested regularly so we are ready to respond when an unexpected crisis happens, such as COVID-19” — Mohammed Kamal, Senior Vice President, O&T, Mastercard
the big things that makes Mastercard unique compared to some of our competitors.” Kamal adds: “When I look at digital transformation and being disruptive, it is important to move from a
place where the digital and core businesses are not separate to be successful. The core
318
business itself has to evolve into being digital rather than adding a digital veneer and keeping the existing core processes in place.” This approach is something that Kamal sees as fundamental when digitally transforming business operations. “It’s visible when you look at a company, which ones have added digital as an afterthought, versus which companies actually reinvented themselves to be digitally native. Much of the time the result is a hybrid. Sometimes you’ll see competing products within an organisation, some that are digitally enabled but which obviously started off in more of AUGUST 2020
Inclusive access – Frictionless future of payments
CLICK TO WATCH
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1:21
319 an analog form, and then you have
much more data-rich, so it typically
new products, built from the ground
goes hand in hand with more
up that are digitally native. I believe
advanced warehousing and analyt-
for companies to be successful, it’s
ics capabilities. In addition, digital
important to really reimagine what’s
tends to be exposed through web
possible without the confines and
and application programming inter-
design assumptions of the non-digital
faces (APIs), which require their own
legacy products. If you build new
sets of supporting infrastructure and
products from the ground up, I think it
security capabilities.
opens up new doors when it comes
When it comes to the application
to their flexibility and agility. There is,
of cloud, data and analytics and artifi-
however, a tremendous amount of
cial intelligence (AI), Kamal states
underlying infrastructure and plumb-
that “all are obviously important but
ing needed to successfully pull off a
for various reasons and applied
digital transformation. Digital is
across different industries. For our b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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MASTERCARD
322
organisation, which accumulates
consumer banks - in a network.
large amounts of data, being able
These new, digitally native products,
to draw insights based on data is
one of their selling points is that they
extremely important and I would rank
enable a richer exchange of data
this the highest out of the three. A lot
than their analog counterparts
of our fraud engines and insight plat-
through ISO 20022 messaging
forms run on aggregated data which
standards. These standards provide
is invaluable. We’re also, however,
the capability to carry a lot more
enabling the exchange of data
information back and forth, driving
between participants in an ecosys-
value for parties in the ecosystem.
tem. Mastercard is very well
This exchange of data enriches the
positioned as a network where we
whole ecosystem, and provides for a
bring together different parties - mer-
more symbiotic relationship between
chants, billers, acquiring banks and
us and our partners.�
AUGUST 2020
Reflecting on the capabilities cloud
use cases, especially in the face of
technology can provide, Kamal
nationalism, where you may need to
explains that “you can gain tremen-
have something hosted in the cloud.
dous amounts of value. But first it is
For that reason, I have generally taken
important to determine the best use
a hybrid cloud approach when going
case for this technology. Mastercard,
down the path of cloud enabling solu-
for example, has a good footprint of
tions. The greatest value I see,
data centres around the world in dif-
however, is that the techniques
ferent regions. In some instances,
applied when using a hybrid-cloud
cloud makes sense and other times it
enabling platform generally make the
doesn’t, but the flexibility of cloud and
platform more scalable, agile and ven-
the ability to leverage an OPEX model
dor agnostic, which in itself is valuable
versus a CAPEX model provides scal-
whether actually deployed in a public
ability and flexibility. I think there are
cloud environment or not.
E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Mohammed Kamal Title: Senior Vice President, Consumer Applications Mohammed Kamal is a payments industry technologist with a passion for innovation and the Fintech space. He is currently serving as the COO of Consumer applications at Mastercard, leading a cross functional team with a mission of enabling new payment flows leveraging real-time payments (RTP). His responsibilities include technology and operations for retail payments (p2m), BillPay & p2p payment products. He is also responsible for corporate & commercial M&A integration within the Consumer Applications division. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
323
MASTERCARD
Mastercard has been leveraging AI
324
manual enrolment process
for its fraud services for over 10 years.
can take a consumer half an
“We have very advanced fraud detec-
hour - if not longer – trying to
tion capabilities that we provide our
identify and link with the differ-
customers,” says Kamal. “One of the
ent billers they have a
techniques that I think is interesting
relationship with. An assistive AI
with AI is the use of assistive AI versus
solution can bring this time down
fully autonomous AI - or a mix of the
significantly, reducing friction for the
two, depending on the use case.
customer, yet keeping them in control
There’s still tremendous value in hav-
of their personal and financial data.”
ing human intervention and making
Another technology trend Kamal
sure a human is kept in the decision
has seen emerge is the use of open
making loop, but drastically empow-
banking, “we’ve seen a huge amount
ered as a result of the AI. For example,
of action in this space. I use the term
fraud detection is sometimes one of
‘open banking’ loosely because it dif-
those use cases where selectively
fers in different regions of the world,
involving the user in the decision mak-
but it’s the idea that the bank is open-
ing process can provide for a better,
ing their ‘walled garden’ in a con-
more confidence-inspiring user expe-
trolled and secure way so that a cus-
rience. But other use cases could be
tomer can use the data for their
in the space of bill payments, where a
benefit with other products.” In some
S T R AT E GI C PART N ERSHI PS
“When it comes to our partners such as Fulcrum Digital Inc., a critical hallmark that we look for in a collaborator is f lexibility and agility. When collaborating with others we are looking for long term partners that we can share both successes and failures with and create future opportunities. We look for the type of collaborative partners that will share in the risks and the rewards and I think being able to share in that makes for a better relationship in the long run.”
AUGUST 2020
“ When I look at digital transformation cases the banks themselves are and being disruptive, it is important building new prodto move from a place where the ucts based on this digital and core businesses are not Open banking paradigm. The Consumer separate to be successful” — Mohammed Kamal, Senior Vice President, O&T, Mastercard
Application division here at Mastercard is helping our partners do just that. More generally, in the industry, I am seeing an increase in partnerships and collaboration between banks, which are well positioned with bank grade security and safety compliance built-in, with fintechs that are providing customers experiences the banks have not been able to provide in the past. At Mastercard, we want to support all members of the open banking ecosystem. We’re focused on delivering solutions that will enable these experiences, whether that is delivered just by a bank, just by a fintech, or in partnership.” With many organisations around the world being affected by the impact of COVID-19, Kamal explains that b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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MASTERCARD
1966
Year founded
$12.5bn+ Revenue in US dollars (2017)
16,000 Number of employees
“ It’s visible when you look at a company, which ones have added digital as an afterthought, versus which companies actually reinventing themselves to be digitally native” — Mohammed Kamal, Senior Vice President, O&T, Mastercard AUGUST 2020
“Mastercard has very rigorous business continuity plans that are tested regularly so we are ready to respond when an unexpected crisis happens, such as COVID-19. As you would expect, the teams are executing our operations very well. We work very closely with our customers as well as having our
provide to help them?” Since the outbreak Mastercard has been implementing a variety of initiatives in order to help its customers navigate the impact of the pandemic. When it comes to digital transformation and adopting the current trends within the technology space, Kamal highlights the importance of having the right products and services to be able to capture the opportunities innovation provides. “I think that’s the key message, it’s not always easy to predict what the market will need in one go, but much of the time we are investing in flexible underlying product infrastructure, while the use cases themselves develop more organically. I think it’s important to build with flexibility so that, while you may build a set of technology or products for a particular own VCP processes to ensure that as
use case, or you have a business case
our customers encounter challenges
in mind, you also need to be able to
within their business we are able to
pivot the technology for different use
accommodate them. Our continuity
cases if the need should arise.”
plan not only looks at how our company could be impacted but whether our customers could be impacted, what policy changes we could make, what rule changes? And what can we b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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MSU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION: DIGITAL DISRUPTION IN FINTECH
WRITTEN BY
SEAN GALEA-PACE PRODUCED BY
SHIRIN SADR
AUGUST 2020
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BENJAMIN MAXIM, ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT OF DIGITAL STRATEGY & INNOVATION, DISCUSSES HIS ORGANISATION’S DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION APPROACH AMIDST COVID-19
M 330
SU Federal Credit Union was founded in 1937 to help members achieve financial success and stability following the Great
Depression. It has remained dedicated to that same mission for more than 82 years. Its mission statement is simple: providing superior service while assisting members and employees to achieve financial security, their goals and ultimately, their dreams. Benjamin Maxim is the Assistant Vice President of Digital Strategy and Innovation for the Credit Union. Maxim is well aware of the importance of leading in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. “It’s vital that you’re a strong communicator and offer transparent messaging,” he says. “Given the situation, people are concerned and uncertain, and they need someone to speak to them with confidence, understand their fears, and try to alleviate their worries. During times like these, it’s also important to continue to invest in technological advancements as these allow the organisation to continue to move forward.” AUGUST 2020
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MSU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
The pandemic has resulted in many industries accelerating their digital transformation journeys and adopting new processes in order to avoid disruption as much as possible. However, financial institutions like MSUFCU were already ahead of the curve. “Digital has always been a focus and a priority of ours,” affirms Maxim. “We’ve built robust IT and UX teams in house to allow for greater control, which has enabled us to be extremely responsive to our members’ needs. Having the in-house teams 332
allows us to be nimble, agile and ready to
“ I’M FOCUSED ON CHAMPIONING INNOVATION ACROSS THE ORGANISATION AND ANALYSING EMERGING TRENDS AND TECHNOLOGIES” — Benjamin Maxim, Assistant Vice President of Digital Strategy and Innovation, MSUFCU
AUGUST 2020
Quickly and Easily Lock Your Visa with Card Lock from MSUFCU CLICK TO WATCH
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333 respond to the latest trends and technol-
email address or phone number with
ogies. Additionally, we have established
M2M℠ which has meant a decrease
several strategic partnerships with
in the volume of calls to our call center
vendors, allowing us to capitalise on
and chats to our eServices team,” he
their strengths to enhance our own.”
says. “This has improved efficiency
In the last two years, MSUFCU
across the organisation.”
has launched its Member2Member℠
In October 2019, MSUFCU intro-
(M2M℠) transfer solution, in addition
duced its first member-facing Chabot
to modernising its existing member-
to extend its service hours. “We have
ship and loan application process by
an international membership living and
leveraging the ecommerce experience
working in various time zones and it’s
of bundling products and services
important to us that we are accessible
together into one streamlined applica-
to all of them as well as our members
tion. “Within our membership base,
in the U.S.,” explains Maxim. “This
you can now send money through any
solution enabled us to provide a better b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
MSU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
334
experience for our members – when they need us. We continue to expand our Chatbot’s capabilities, and through this, our live chat employees and others can focus on more complex and meaningful transactions. In addition, our eServices team has grown exponentially, from just three employees when I started 13 years ago, to more than 75 employees today as our members’ behavior has changed over the years becoming more comfortable interacting through live chat and other digital touch points. AUGUST 2020
“ WE’VE BUILT ROBUST IT AND UX TEAMS IN HOUSE TO ALLOW FOR GREATER CONTROL, WHICH HAS ENABLED US TO BE EXTREMELY RESPONSIVE TO OUR MEMBERS’ NEEDS” — Benjamin Maxim, Assistant Vice President of Digital Strategy and Innovation, MSUFCU
“Whenever we release an innovation, we do so in gradual stages. First, we release it to a subset of employees and members to gather feedback along the way before going through the process of introducing it to all employees, and eventually to the full membership. Receiving feedback early in the cycle is key as it ensures we are able to address any issues successfully.” With a plethora of new innovations on the horizon at MSUFCU, the organisation’s digital drive shows no visible signs of slowing. “We’re currently investigating solutions with fintechs E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Benjamin Maxim Benjamin Maxim joined MSU Federal Credit Union in 2007 and currently serves as Assistant Vice President of Digital Strategy and Innovation. He is responsible for assessing emerging business trends and technologies, facilitating innovation throughout the Credit Union, and providing strategic direction for existing and future digital channels. Maxim began work initially as a Web Developer and in 2014, he became E-Commerce Manager before moving into roles including Assistant Vice President of Programming and Development and Assistant Vice President of Software Development. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Michigan State University. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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R E I M A G I N E W H AT’S POSSIBLE WHEN YOU UNLOCK THE POWER O F Y O U R D ATA. J O I N T H E D ATA R E V O L U T I O N W I T H T R E L L A N C E.
“ WE’RE CURRENTLY INVESTIGATING SOLUTIONS WITH FINTECHS AND IN-HOUSE INNOVATION TEAMS THAT WILL HELP US INCREASE MEMBER ENGAGEMENT WITH OUR DIGITAL PLATFORMS, REDUCE FRAUD AND CREATE EFFICIENCIES THROUGH AUTOMATION USING TECHNOLOGIES LIKE RPA” — Benjamin Maxim, Assistant Vice President of Digital Strategy and Innovation, MSUFCU
and in-house innovation teams that will help us increase member engagement with our digital platforms, reduce fraud and create efficiencies through automation using technologies like RPA,” says Maxim. “We understand the importance of improving our processes and the way we work; it’s not just a case of bringing in another person; there are ways we can leverage technology to be both more efficient and more effective. We are also modernising our employee idea submission process to encourage collaboration and engagement from
MSUFCU’s Member2Member: Send Money Effortlessly to Your Friends and Family CLICK TO WATCH
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MSU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
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AUGUST 2020
all our employees as they are the ones interacting with our members regularly, so they have a better understanding of member wants and needs.” Maxim acknowledges the challenge of a culture shift and is aware that some employees might be reluctant to change. “Our goal is to retain the employees we have and to make sure they are in the jobs that align with our business needs, while also providing the training and support they need to be successful in those roles. However, if they are unwilling to grow as individuals and learn new skills, then it will be more difficult to retain them long-term,” he explains. Maxim understands the importance of establishing key, strategic business relationships and believes his organisation is “only as good as its partners.” MSUFCU has formed long-term and mutually sustainable partnerships with Jack Henry, their core banking provider, and Visa over the past few years, and Maxim credits them with helping the organisation realise many of its ambitions. “We’ve spent several years solidifying our partnership with Jack Henry’s leadership team and developing a relationship with them. b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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MSU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
We’re at a point now where we’re cocreating solutions in many cases. We also provide feedback by beta testing solutions they’re working on. We meet with them regularly, and they provide solutions that truly work for us. This relationship is important to us because if our core banking system isn’t strong, then we can’t be as successful an organisation as we’d like to be and our members need us to be,” explains Maxim. “Our relationship with our card provider, Visa, is similar. We’ve worked 340
with them on a number of technological initiatives. We were one of their first clients to go live with their Card On/Off
“ WE CONTINUE TO EXPAND OUR CHATBOT’S CAPABILITIES, AND THROUGH THIS, OUR LIVE CHAT EMPLOYEES AND OTHERS CAN FOCUS ON MORE COMPLEX AND MEANINGFUL TRANSACTIONS” — Benjamin Maxim, Assistant Vice President of Digital Strategy and Innovation, MSUFCU
solution, which enables people to lock their credit card if they lose or misplace it. We’re also working with them on travel-related APIs and to reduce fraud when travelling overseas. In addition, we worked with Visa to develop our Visa Signature cash back credit card. Visa has been a great partner and has enabled us to add many products and services benefitting our membership.” With the future in mind, Maxim has an idea of the effect digital will continue to have in the industry in the upcoming
AUGUST 2020
341
years. “I believe there will be varying
are many services, such as Netflix or
levels of comfort with people using
Amazon, that leverage their user’s data
digital products,” he says. “People will
to tailor an experience that is unique
still want to interact with us in person
to them, providing a personalised list
so it’s about how we use digital to aug-
of options or recommendations and
ment the experience they have with
the more the user is willing to share
us. We strive to provide a personalised
the more individual the experience
solution because everyone’s situation
becomes. We want to follow the same
is unique to them. As we innovate in the
process for financial services. The
digital financial space, we are focused
influence of data is huge and its influ-
on personalisation, encouraging finan-
ence will only continue to grow.”
cial wellness, and providing superior digital service to our members. There b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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OTIP’s technology driven, peoplefirst response to COVID-19 WRITTEN BY
GEORGIA WILSON PRODUCED BY
GLEN WHITE
AUGUST 2020
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O N TA R I O T E A C H E R S I N S U R A N C E P L A N ( O T I P )
Stacey Rous, EVP & CFO at OTIP discusses the company’s people-first strategy, technology trends and its response to the impacts of COVID-19
W
hen it comes to the workforce at Ontario Teachers Insurance Plan (OTIP), Stacey Rous, EVP & CFO, shares that the organi-
zation understands that staying connected, whether with coworkers or senior leaders, is key. “Creating that sense of community at work is really important, 344
as is the ability to listen and evaluate opinions,” she says. “After anything we do as an organization, we ask for feedback to develop a safe space for people to talk about the organization in a collaborative way. This allows us to be both responsive and agile in an ever-changing world.” This mindset played a key role in OTIP’s response to COVID-19. Rous believes that relocating the majority of our workforce to home offices has been the biggest disruption to the company from the COVID19 pandemic. “We moved more than 600 people into home offices in less than two weeks, moving them onto a technology platform that is compatible with working from home. Protecting the health and well being of our employees was top of mind, but at the same time we managed to accomplish this task while maintaining our service to members.” AUGUST 2020
1977
Year founded
$1.5bn Revenue in Canadian dollars
500+ Number of employees
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Success begins and ends with people. We help organizations optimize the health and productivity of their people, through innovative and entrepreneurial solutions. Our technology, people and processes help organizations simplify administration burden and increase productivity, while providing industry-leading member support. benefits administration, Morneau Shepell takes a holistic approach to beneĂžts retirement services, absence management and employee assistance. We provide the tools and expertise to help organizations solve complex problems to improve productivity and engagement, wellbeing,and and financial security.
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HR Benefits: Technology and Experiences that Exceed Expectations As the leading provider of technology-enabled HR services that deliver an integrated approach to employee wellbeing, Morneau Shepell has been a valued partner to OTIP since 2014. We continuously deliver innovative solutions to their members that support the mental, physical, social and financial wellbeing of their people. With unmatched industry experience, Morneau Shepell has been providing plan administration services for more than 50 years. We serve mid-sized and large clients, including complex organizations with multiple locations, across all industries, in both the public and private sectors. We support nearly 9,000,000 members through our administrative solutions and have an average client size of 15,000 participants in our North American Health and Welfare client group. Our teams of industry professionals and IT specialists are trusted advisors, subject matter experts and technology enthusiasts. We provide flexible and integrated benefits and pension administration solutions, employee and family assistance, health and wellness programs, and recognition and workplace learning solutions that support organizations in helping their people be healthy and engaged, all towards delivering measurable gains in productivity and results. Morneau Shepell’s proprietary benefits administration software is a highly configurable system designed to efficiently implement and execute client-specific provisions and processes. The complexity of benefits administration can be magnified and made prohibitively costly to organizations that lack the right technology platform. Our advanced enterprise technology provides a comprehensive and innovative single system for all benefit administration solutions, and is specifically designed to support complex organizations. Our highly flexible technology seamlessly integrates with clients’ existing platforms and infrastructures while providing the security and compliance that is absolutely crucial. Integral to our advanced platform is intuitive design and navigation so participants can easily interact with the system, and gain a benefits experience that meets their consumer technology expectations.
Paul Sywulych @ Morneau Shepell
Online self-service on any device is standard, with features and functionality covering all aspects of benefits and pension administration, including decision support tools and an AI virtual assistant. “Morneau Shepell has been partnering with us for over six years. They have helped OTIP through a digital transformation process by streamlining our benefits administration solution. The value of offering a single system to our members that simplifies the administration process and delivers the services that participants want and need has enhanced the experience for both administrators and plan participants. As our organization continues to digitally transform and grow, having a proven and reliable partner that understands our culture and truly cares about our members is invaluable.” – Stacey Rous, Executive VP and Chief Financial Officer, OTIP Now more than ever, organizations need a complete benefits administration solution that utilizes the latest technology and a single platform to improve accuracy and productivity, but also helps participants improve their lives. Morneau Shepell’s solutions deliver advanced technology for simpler, more cost-effective management that improves participant wellbeing, engagement and overall financial security. Our approach spans services in employee and family assistance, health and wellness, recognition, pension and benefits administration, retirement consulting, actuarial and investment services. By improving lives, we improve business.
O N TA R I O T E A C H E R S I N S U R A N C E P L A N ( O T I P )
“ We are a people-first organisation. There will always be tweaks to how we work, but our core strategy of ‘people first’ has not and will not change” — Stacey Rous, EVP & CFO, OTIP
Achieving this incredible feat was not easy, and not done alone. Rous says that OTIP’s partners and stakeholders have been vital in adopting this work from home strategy. “Prior to COVID-19 we didn’t have the system capacity for everyone to work from home. We had been planning for 20 to 25%, but certainly not 100%. Our partners really stepped up to help us implement this capability once the healthcare sector was under control, allowing us to stay connected to our
348
employees and members.”
The OTIP Story CLICK TO WATCH
AUGUST 2020
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E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Stacey Rous Stacey Rous is the Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer at OTIP, Ontario Teachers Insurance Plan. OTIP serves the education community across Ontario, providing health benefits and other insurance needs as a not-forprofit Trust. At OTIP, Stacey is responsible for Finance and IT strategy, including financial operations of the company and accountable for the Project Management Office. Stacey is an accomplished financial executive known for achieving financial and service benchmarks by creating a compelling vision, clearly communicating strategies and providing strong leadership. Over the years, Stacey has been helping insurance and health care organizations grow and improve member experience with her finance and operational expertise. She has more than 25 years of progressive leadership experience in operational finance. Stacey has provided executive financial leadership to the Waterloo Wellington Local Health Integration Network, Allianz Global Assistance and Cowan Insurance Group of Companies. Outside of her role with OTIP, Stacey is
actively involved in building strong partnerships with communities to make a positive impact on social issues such as social isolations, poverty, inequality and mental health. She serves on the Board of the YMCA for Kitchener Waterloo, the Canadian Mental Health Association for Waterloo Wellington and International Women’s Forum Waterloo. She previously served on the IWF Canada Sponsorship Committee to raise funds for the IWF World Leadership Conference. Stacey is an MBA graduate from Athabasca University and holder of CPA designations in Canada and the US. Throughout her career, she has continued to seek educational opportunities and certifications that enhance her finance and operational capabilities, including: Chartered Professional Accountant (CPA, CMA) designation, Certified Public Accountant (US designation), Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA) designation and Advanced Health Leadership certification from the Rotman School of Management Executive Program.
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Brooklin Consulting: accelerating productivity with OTIP Brooklin Consulting is a management consulting organisation with worldwide experience in several leading industries. The firm helps companies overcome their unique business challenges, discover their greatest opportunities and achieve significant results. Brooklin Consulting has over 30 years of experience in global consulting, primarily focused on productivity improvement, strategic implementation and digital transformation. Brooklin Consulting specialises in achieving measurable results that improve their client’s performance quickly and efficiently. Michael Flemming is the Vice President of Brooklin Consulting. He leads projects to execute strategy and improve productivity, working with both senior leaders and frontline employees. Brooklin Consulting has formed a partnership with Ontario Teachers Insurance Plan (OTIP) to help improve productivity. Flemming believes this collaborative business partnership is essential and is the “archetype” of any successful consulting relationship. “We’re able to build trust, and work closely with every level of the organisation, which is the key to building solutions that drive the largest impact and are sustainable beyond the term of our engagement,” he says. “Every single change, large and small, is developed with the front-line managers responsible for the area. We work through the development and testing of solutions, but most importantly, we see those changes through to implementation. The collaboration between consultants and operating managers ensures changes are not just theoretical, but drive improvements in the real world.” When seeking to establish a mutually beneficial and sustainable partnership, Flemming has a clear idea of what he looks for. “We find that the most successful relationships are the ones where we collaborate through every step of the process, regardless if the problem is big or small,” he explains. “We’re prepared to work with clients through every step of the journey to find a solution that is going to succeed. Solutions developed together are always the most successful, and that is a key reason for the strength of our relationship with OTIP, and a key reason our projects have consistently generated 3:1 returns in their first year, while at the same time improving customer service and satisfaction.”
BizClik Media Interviews Michael Flemming, VP at Brooklin Consulting
Over the next few years, Flemming expects the future of Brooklin’s relationship with OTIP to continue to thrive as new technology shakes up the industry. “Organisations like OTIP need to be nimble and ready to change at a moment’s notice in order to stay competitive, and I expect key trends revolving around robotics and AI will push analytical decision-making to the next level and provide better quality to customers,” says Flemming. “We’ve been able to install a culture of continuous improvement with OTIP and help adopt those trends quickly and in a meaningful way. I believe the continued strength of our relationship will allow for those future opportunities to be adopted efficiently and robustly.” Stacey Rous, EVP & CFO at OTIP, says “The team at Brooklin Consulting has supported OTIP through several improvement projects over the past two years, each resulting in a significant return on investment. Their methodology has helped us transform our management operating system, allowing for better analytics, faster decision-making, and ultimately improved service to our members. Most importantly, they have helped our people to see challenges as opportunities, leaving behind an approach to continuous improvement that carries on internally beyond the term of their engagements. I would strongly recommend their services to organizations looking to improve their operations.”
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“ My best advice for girls and women looking to get into tech is to seek out a mentor or coach in the industry” — Stacey Rous, EVP & CFO, OTIP
the pandemic. “Our industry is under extreme financial pressure. People’s driving habits have changed, and there is an expectation that auto premiums will reduce accordingly. At the same time, the closure of things like dental offices and other health providers creates a mountain of questions for us and our members on how we handle things like claim limits, cancelled procedures and benefit premiums during and after the pandemic.” Rous believes that technology will be key as COVID-19 continues to change how organizations and the insurance
Rous adds that she is extremely
industry continues to operate. Post
proud of how OTIP’s employees have
pandemic, she says, a digital mindset
adapted, driving new ways of con-
should be seen as a way of doing
necting with its members, clients and
business, whether that be on-line
employees, but at the same time not
virtual doctor’s appointments, or using
exhausting them with the technology.
Telehealth and Telemedicine more
“Our members and our management
proactively. “COVID-19 should teach
teams are very accepting that there
us that it’s okay to do some things digi-
may be children in the background,
tally. We need to harness what we’ve
dogs barking or doorbell rings from
learned through this and not go back to
home deliveries, which previously
the old normal where it doesn’t make
would have been considered very
sense. Many of these technologies
unprofessional.”
are so powerful, and they will be cost
She adds that the insurance industry itself has not escaped impact from
effective for both our community and our healthcare system .” b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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O N TA R I O T E A C H E R S I N S U R A N C E P L A N ( O T I P )
While Rous thinks that we are a long way from a post COVID-19 world, she does believe that “we are entering into a new normal and that the industry is going to have to settle. For me the future is about the financial stability of a company going forward. I think the finance and the tech folks are going to have their hands full for quite some time.”
TECHNOLOGY TRENDS IN INSURANCE Looking past the current pandemic, Rous highlights that digital innovation, 354
artificial intelligence (AI) and data are still the overriding trends in the insurance industry, adding that “these are the technologies that allow us better understand and service our members.” She details that, at the core, OTIP’s digital transformation strategy is designed to streamline communication and harness data analytics, using a data warehouse and data mapping to provide a seamless service to its members. “This is something that is still ongoing for us at OTIP. We have only just scratched the surface of this journey, however, the recent hiring of a new director of data and digital technologies supported by a dedicated team is going to allow us to really grow this potential.” AUGUST 2020
“ COVID-19 should teach us that it’s okay to do some things digitally” — Stacey Rous, EVP & CFO, OTIP
When it comes to adopting innovative technology to drive this strategy, Rous explains that the organization started using robotics in collaboration with RPAI and Blue Prism Software. “We were one of the first in Canada in 2016 using robotics to reduce the amount of non-value-added tasks from our people,” she explains. For OTIP, Rous continues, the use of robotics is seen as an extension of its workforce. “Our employees like it because they can focus on the valueadd work for our members.” Rous continues, saying that even though OTIP was one of the first in Canada to use robotics, it was doing very small projects. “We were more in the investigation stage, using it to understand how our members wanted to do business with us. Now, with our new director and dedicated team, we are ramping up our innovation and adoption of robotics for automation.” With regards to developing these technologies, Rous stresses the importance of strategic partnerships. “Our strategic partnerships with Rogers, our internet provider, or Central Logic, lay the foundation and b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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our insurance partners like Morneau,
“From a woman in tech perspective, we
Manulife, Economical and Aviva, are
have a number of BSA and data spe-
all intertwined. We don’t want to build
cialists – at least 50% – that are women,
our own tech, we want to build our own
which we are doing very well in,” she
intelligence around our members with
explains. “On the traditional side of
the help of the technology our strategic
tech, such as networking systems, the
partners provide. You don’t need to
figures are slightly less with about 25%
own those technologies, you need to
being women.”
leverage those technologies.”
Outside of the working environment, Rous explains that the organization has
WOMEN IN TECH
key people helping young girls learn
Rous believes strongly in the inclu-
code, known as girls for coding, to
sion of women in tech, a mindset that
promote females joining the industry.
is shared by the entire organization.
“However, I think it is still a generation
OTIP Sponsorship of Schools Projects and Initiatives CLICK TO WATCH
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away. Currently schools are working
is about finding people who you trust
to get the materials needed to show
and are willing to help you navigate the
girls the opportunities within the STEM
challenges you will face in this industry.
industry, but it is going to take time for
Don’t try and do it alone. You need
young girls to see themselves as coders.”
people out there advocating for you.”
Rous, seen by many as a leader and a mentor herself, shares that she did
WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS
not get where she is today by herself.
Returning to the organization’s strat-
“My best advice for girls and women
egy, Rous reiterates that regardless of
looking to get into tech is to seek out
COVID-19 or changes in technology,
a mentor or coach in the industry. I
OTIP’s member-first approach has not
cannot underscore the importance of
changed. “We are a people-first organi-
finding people to help you through your
zation. There will always be tweaks to
career. Gender isn’t important here. It
how we work, but our core strategy of
AUGUST 2020
‘people first’ has not and will not change.” Throughout the pandemic, OTIP has been active in the communities it serves, donating more than $250,000 to food banks and mental health associations across Canada. “I’m on the Canadian Mental Health Association of Waterloo Wellington and a recent study highlighted that 70% of us are feeling isolated due to that lack of connectivity, which is having a detrimental effect on all our mental health right now.” In addition, she continues, 70% of those same survey respondents said they were concerned about becoming
“ The recent hiring of a new director of data and digital technologies supported by a dedicated team is going to allow us to really grow this potential”
sick from COVID-19, or losing someone close to it. “This crisis remains at the top of everyone’s mind. Given the corresponding mental health challenges we are going to see from an industry perspective, we need to be ready to help the people that maybe unwell, and be there for both employees and members to help them.”
— Stacey Rous, EVP & CFO, OTIP
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T-Systems: agile transformation on a global scale WRITTEN BY
LEILA HAWKINS PRODUCED BY
BEN MALTBY
AUGUST 2020
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b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
T- S Y S T E M S
Ciara Mullan, VP of Transition and Transformation, discusses implementing transformation in a challenging climate
T
-Systems is one of the most renowned IT service providers of digital services in the world. Headquartered in Europe and
founded in 2000 in Germany, today the company operates in 30 countries, helping organisations to successfully navigate the digital transforma362
tion of their operations, something that’s become crucial for many since the Coronavirus pandemic began. Ciara Mullan, VP of Transition and Transformation, tells us about implementing change in a challenging climate. Mullan says her top priority is the customer. “It’s about getting it right for the customer. When we get it right for them, everybody wins.” T-Systems’ strategy focuses on four key areas: digitisation, the cloud and infrastructure and moving people onto it, security, and connectivity. “We leverage these areas to drive the strategy for our customers,” she says. Mullan explains that T-Systems’ CEO, Adel Al-Saleh, who joined the company in 2018, came with a real drive to transform the organisation internally. “He’s brought in a transformation and change
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“ We know the speed of change will be rapid, so we need to think about how we manage that” — Ciara Mullan, VP of Transition and Transformation 364
agenda, focusing on our customers, lining up what we do internally with what our customers do and what they need. We can see this most recently in what’s happened in response to the coronavirus with our customers. It’s been a really trying time and an opportunity to test ourselves.” The pandemic led them to some positive outcomes. “If I think about what we’re able to do for customers, we had to quickly rise to the challenge of responding to coronavirus. We found that we have the procedures to work from home, we can quickly get our people to work this way, and we’ve also been able to see how capable we are when reacting to a crisis in an agile way.” It also had to act quickly to provide solutions to customers. “Over the course of one weekend a customer needed to double their network capacity in response to people working from home, and we could do that,” Mullan explains. In another case, a very large logistics company quickly received 15,000 encrypted connections for employees who needed to work securely from home, and it was also able to provide a US healthcare
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company with 500 laptops and a thou-
transformation. That is leading to a
sand VPNs. “These examples show
focus on reducing complexity, optimis-
what we’ve been able to do for our
ing speed and giving the right focus
customers as a result of our transfor-
to our customers.”
mation. And that’s what has to happen
The organisation’s Zero Outage
– we don’t know what’s going to happen
programme has been developed with
in the future, but we know the speed
the aim of minimising downtime and
of change will be rapid, so we need to
maximising business continuity. It
think about how we manage that.”
involves clearly defined processes with
“We’re transforming our tools and
fast recovery times, using state-of-the-
our operations. That means having
art platforms, and ensuring staff are
programmes in place, being of an
fully trained. “Everybody is trained in
open mindset and working with people
Zero Outage procedures which is all
that share our culture, on a cultural
about stability. On one hand we need b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
NAVIGATE YOUR DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION WITH THE LEADER IN SD-WAN
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VMware and T-Systems partner on managed SD-WAN services We hear from Sasha Emmerling, Head of Marketing for the VeloCloud business unit at VMware, on changes in connectivity it is facilitating with T-Systems. When embarking on a digital or network transformation journey, enterprises need trusted partners to assist them in their endeavours. Sasha Emmerling is Head of Marketing for the VeloCloud business unit at VMware, which, via its SD-WAN product and other offerings, facilitates cloud connectivity at a time when it has never been more necessary. “Now, companies have applications trying to reach the cloud versus just the corporate data centre,” says Emmerling. “The old conception of branches connecting in a hub and spoke manner to the data centre just doesn’t make sense anymore. What we offer is direct connectivity to the cloud. So the applications don’t have to go this route of backhauling through the data centre to reach the cloud.” The convergence of network and security services is happening in the cloud. “The term is ‘secure access service edge’ or SASE,” says Emmerling. “What this means is customers can now get their network and security from a single vendor, but your architecture has to be designed for scaling in the cloud. That’s something we have been focused on from day one— providing customers with a way of reaching the cloud in a scalable and easy way.” VMware SD-WAN™ by VeloCloud® works with leaders in the field, including IT services consultant T-Systems. “Over the years, we have forged alliances with multiple service providers where they take our solution and integrate it into their service,” says Emmerling. “A service provider can take our SD-WAN solution and offer it as a managed service together with the connectivity services, but it goes beyond connectivity to
Sasha Emmerling @ VMWARE
upstream, managed services—such as security. That’s our relationship with T-Systems—they’re offering SD-WAN as an integrated, managed service to their customers in the European markets. We announced the partnership in September and right now we’re working on a joint go-tomarket strategy.” The collaboration of VMware and T-Systems represents a true partnership, as Emmerling explains. “Collaboration on go-to-market projects is important in general, but with telecom service providers and T-Systems in particular, it is critical. That’s because it’s a managed service. We are successful only if T-Systems is successful.” The partnership goes beyond the technology, running the gamut of services such as legal, operations, enablement and marketing. “Right now, with T-Systems, we’re going through this process and we expect astrong market showing—so stay tuned.”
Learn more
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to do things quickly – and we can do
in joint developments and projects,
them – but we have to do them safely.
as well as technology and sales
By leveraging those fundamentals to
alliances. So we’re really getting
the company it helps ensure the digital
genuine benefits.”
transformation goes smoothly.” Also important is having a strong
It has a particularly long-standing relationship with VMware, which it has
partnership model in place. Mullan
been working with since 2005 on
explains this ensures the company
virtualisation and cloud solutions,
is doing the right things both for its
helping T-Systems customers expand
customers and itself. “Our partner-
and secure their virtualised IT.
ships with leading technology and
“The point of these partnerships is
software enterprises are really one
to pave the way for digitalisation, pro-
of our strengths. For customers,
moting growth and innovation for the
we’re collaborating with specialists
enterprise, and T-Systems is certified
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E X E C U T I V E P R OF IL E :
Ciara Mullan PhD Title: VP Transition & Transformation
Location: Bristol, UK
Ciara Mullan began her career as a Research Fellow at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, where she first started enjoying working on technological innovation. After a couple of years there she moved back to the UK and into industry, working on customer facing programmes for HP. She then moved into IT and worked on the delivery of multi-million pound technology programmes across various industry sectors. Throughout her career Mullan has worked on delivering programmes, particularly focusing on customer delivery, but says her current role as VP for Transition and Transformation is “really taking it to another level”, working with customers across different geographies and cultures. Mullan describes herself as having an open mindset, whether it’s being open to challenging the business, to getting the ideas from colleagues and her team, learning and moving on quickly, and having an agile, flexible approach. Rather than manage people she believes in leading and guidingpeople through the business and steering them in the right direction. “It’s about moving away from management and being pragmatic, thinking of the big picture and being objective in what we need to do. Get the right people in and let them do the right job.”
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2000
Year founded
$8bn Revenue in US dollars
to participate in key strategic partner programmes by industry leaders like SAP, Microsoft and VMware. In addition, because these are two-way partnerships, we need to make sure that our own high quality standards are
45,000 Number of employees
met, and we work with more than 20 partners who contribute to our Zero Outage programme to improve customer satisfaction.� Customers give T-Systems their feedback via its annual TRI*M survey,
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“ Our partnerships with leading technology and software enterprises are really one of our strengths” — Ciara Mullan, VP of Transition and Transformation
and in 2018 it was in the top 10% of the European ICT benchmark. COVID-19 has made people think differently about the way they work, which Mullan believes will continue to drive plenty of change. “It presents a real opportunity to challenge what is normal. Even people who were maybe reluctant to change will think that because they were able to and did it very quickly, they should continue to challenge themselves.” Looking ahead, Mullan believes things will continue to move at a fast
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“ Technology itself is going to increase its digital position with mobile, Big Data analytics and the Internet of Things” — Ciara Mullan, VP of Transition and Transformation 372 pace. “The market for IT and telecommunications was undergoing radical transformation, and that will continue. There’ll be more focus on quickly moving to the cloud and outsourcing business. We’re seeing more demand for transmission speed, mobile services and increasing 5G. We’ll continue to bring connectivity and intelligence to help our customers with new business models, and focus on new levels of productivity and transforming the customers’ experience. “Technology itself is going to increase its digital position with mobile, Big Data analytics and the Internet AUGUST 2020
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“ I think the next five years are going to be very interesting, with lots of opportunities” —Ciara Mullan,
VP of Transition and Transformation
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of Things. We’ll continue to be in there
by mobility, and also by cybersecu-
with high expectations for the business
rity, which of course is in the DNA of
technologies, some of which are in
T-Systems. I think the next five years
the earlier stages of adoption, such
are going to be very interesting, with
as robotics and AI, or even blockchain,
lots of opportunities.”
but they’re all coming to the fore. “What we can see, along with other suppliers and other people we work with, is that the traditional IT business will decline and will be taken over by the digital transformation, by the cloud, b u s in e s s c hie f. c o m
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