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NOVEMBER 2019
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elcome to the November edition of Gigabit Magazine, where we’re telling the digital transformation and technology stories of the world’s most dynamic companies. This month’s cover story features leading data centre operator, Digital Realty, and the imminent launch of PlatformDIGITAL™, a new way of approaching digital infrastructure, a “one-stop solution that helps to interconnect their entire digital ecosystem,” enthuses Tony Bishop, SVP of Platform and Ecosystem Strategy. We sit down with Bishop and Corey Dyer, EVP of Global Sales and Marketing for Digital Realty. “We’re the best positioned in the industry to address the broadest range of requirements. We build, design, operate some of the most highly interconnected data centres in the world,” says Dyer.
Also appearing this month is our interview and in depth feature on the World Rally Championship and the role that its Director of Content and Production, Florian Ruth, is playing as part of a sea change in the way audiences around the world experience sport in the digital age. “The whole world is changing. The way people consume media has completely altered in the last five years,” says Ruth. This month’s Top 10 ranks the world’s leading robotic process automation companies. Don’t forget to check out our in-depth profiles on Atos, Microsoft, Tivity Health, Qualcomm, TELUS Digital and more… Enjoy the issue. Harry Menear harry.menear@bizclikmedia.com
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innovation in practice Sprint and Amdocs have been key partners for over two decades, delivering together innovative solutions to make Sprint the success it is today. Our joint accomplishments include modernizing billing support systems, introducing a groundbreaking customer care system, providing cost-effective payments processing and the optimization of current and future network capabilities. This strong Sprint-Amdocs partnership has won widespread industry recognition, including the 2017 Global Telecoms Business Award for Consumer Service Innovation. Visit www.amdocs.com to learn more about how you can partner with Amdocs to innovate successfully.
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Click the home icon (top right of page) to return to contents page at anytime EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
HARRY MENEAR EDITORIAL DIRECTOR
MATT HIGH CREATIVE DIRECTORS
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CONTENTS
50
12
Inside Digital Realty’s strategy for an agile, interconnected world
60
28
84
40 68
TOP 10 RPA Companies
EVENTS
88
Retail Business Services, an Ahold Delhaize USA company
110
Tivity Health
128
Qualcomm
146
T5 Data Centers
164
Partners Behavioral Health Management
196 Stora Enso
178
innogy SE
216
Saudi Telecom Company
230 Atos
246
Microsoft
260
274
294
306
320
336
Toi Ohomai Institute of Technology
Mimecast
TELUS Digital
Revolution IT
Penrhos College
WSP Canada
12
NOVEMBER 2019
Inside Digital Realty’s strategy for an agile, interconnected world WRITTEN BY
HARRY MENEAR PRODUCED BY
TOM VENTURO
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13
D I G I TA L R E A LT Y
Tony Bishop and Corey Dyer of Digital Realty discuss the data centre giant’s ongoing efforts to offer hyper-personalised data centre services from the single rack to the hyperscale
T
he global business landscape is experiencing a sea change. This transformation is permeating every industry
and market, seeing enterprises in the public and 14
private sectors swept along by a rising tide of demand for interconnected digital services. The ongoing transformation of the global economy is increasing the need for a wider array of digital infrastructure solutions, and is driving a seismic evolution on a global scale. “We’re the best positioned in the industry to address the broadest range of requirements. We build, design and operate some of the most highly interconnected data centres in the world,” says Corey Dyer, EVP of Global Sales and Marketing for Digital Realty. Arriving at Digital Realty in January 2019, Dyer can look back on a year of continued growth and strategic success. Now, he and the rest of Digital Realty are looking forward, as the company embarks on the next phase of its digital transformation voyage. NOVEMBER 2019
2004
Year founded
$3bn+ Approximate revenue
1,500
Approximate number of employees 15
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Founded in 2004, Digital Realty supports the digital infrastructure needs of more than 2,000 companies across the Americas, EMEA and APAC, with industry-leading data centre, colocation and interconnection services. Being uniquely positioned as the largest provider of data centre and digital infrastructure solutions worldwide gives Digital Realty the opportunity to not only navigate the tides of change, but also direct them to help create even more value for its customers. “The digital economy is remaking both private and public enterprises
“ The digital economy is remaking both private and public enterprises across all industries, transforming how they create and deliver value” — Tony Bishop, SVP, Platform and Ecosystem Strategy, Digital Realty
across all industries, transforming how they create and deliver value,” says Tony Bishop, SVP of Platform and Ecosystem Strategy at Digital Realty. Now more than ever, Bishop believes, companies need to operate ubiquitously, providing on-demand services to customers, partners and employees enabled by intelligent analytics. “Companies are being forced to re-architect their IT towards a decentralised infrastructure to accommodate distributed workflows, which vary by participant, application, information and location w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
17
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘AARON BINKLEY ON THE ROLE DATA CENTERS PLAY IN SUSTAINABILITY’ 19 specific needs,” he elaborates.
infrastructure, a “one-stop solution
Dyer agrees. “These customers
that helps to interconnect their entire
need a platform that allows them
digital ecosystem,” enthuses Bishop.
to augment and change things in
“Customers will get to collaborate at
real time,” he says.
scale to solve the problems of global
From this market-wide demand
coverage and capacity through one
for solutions to the increasingly
provider; tailor their infrastructure
mission critical nature of agile,
deployments to their business needs,
on-demand capability is at the
irrespective of data centre size, scale
heart of Digital Realty’s newest
or location; and operate their deploy-
offering: PlatformDIGITAL™.
ments as a seamless extension of
Scheduled for launch this month
their global infrastructure to enable
at the company’s MarketplaceLIVE
globally distributed workflows.”
event in New York, PlatformDIGITAL™ is a new way of approaching digital
Digital Realty is a genuine global partner, placing customer service w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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at the heart of its business strategy.
“From a single cabinet, up to multiple
Dyer notes that the company is
megawatts, we’re a one stop shop for
uniquely positioned to deliver a ser-
all their infrastructure needs.” This
vice that is unavailable anywhere else
will be key to Digital Realty’s creation
in the data centre space. “We’re really
of a truly interconnected infrastruc-
the only provider that operates globally
ture offering. “We’re refocusing our
at scale, but at the same time, we
business to take advantage of this
offer this highly tailored experience
unprecedented opportunity and
to each individual customer,” he says.
become the global partner that helps
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Corey Dyer Corey Dyer is Executive Vice President, Global Sales & Marketing, with responsibility for sales, leasing and marketing efforts across the organisation. Prior to joining Digital Realty, Dyer served as Senior Vice President, Sales, Americas at Equinix, where he had responsibility for sales across the Americas region. Before joining Equinix, Corey worked at Hewlett-Packard, where he served as Vice President, Storage Sales, Canada and led the firm’s Canadian storage business. Previously, he held various sales and sales leadership positions at Dell, primarily in the server, software and peripheral businesses. Corey has over 25 years of experience as a sales leader with a track record of building and driving sales and marketing operations at leading technology companies. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics from Wake Forest University.
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21
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23
companies manage their digital
and other industries. We’re bringing
transformation with their data centre
together the community that builds
infrastructure as the foundation,”
the cloud, network and internet
says Bishop.
infrastructure to demonstrate how
At MarketplaceLIVE, the company
PlatformDIGITAL™ is built to lead
will launch PlatformDIGITAL™. The
companies into the future of the
event – taking place on 7 November
digital economy,” says Bishop. This
at Spring Studios – is intended to
future that Digital Realty is helping
facilitate discussions around the
create for (and with) its clients and
future of digital transformation.
partners is defined by interconnec-
“We’ll host conversations around
tion and the ways in which coming
connectivity and connected tech-
together fosters collaboration. “It’s a
nology across AI, cloud computing
huge opportunity for us to connect, w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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“ We’re really the only provider that operates globally at scale, but at the same time, we offer this highly tailored experience to each individual customer” — Corey Dyer, EVP, Sales and Marketing, Digital Realty
not only with our customers but with our partner world,” says Dyer. In addition to being an infrastructure provider, Digital Realty acts as a facilitator of expertise and connections to its client network. Offering a full range of fit-for-purpose data center solutions, from single cabinet colocation to private hyperscale facilities, Dyer remarks that there really is no end to the variation in the relationships and support structures Digital Realty provides. “Because we have such a strong partner community, we can be very agile in how
NOVEMBER 2019
we support our customers in such a
business has also completed the
fast-paced environment.”
acquisition
Digital Realty is continuing to grow,
of data centre infrastructure
both in scale and agility, through a
company Ascenty and entered into
combination of organic and acqui-
joint ventures related to three of
sition-fueled growth. In 2015, the
its data centres.
company completed its acquisition
The past year alone has seen
of data centre solutions company
Digital Realty expand its operations
Telx in a deal valued in excess of
in Frankfurt, Tokyo, Chicago, Dublin,
US$1.8bn. “The Telx acquisition
Northern Virginia, Brazil and more,
has been a huge boost to us and
as well as announcing plans to enter
our ability to provide interconnec-
the South Korean market for the
tion, which massively helped us build
first time. A large element of Digital
PlatformDIGITAL™,” Dyer explains. In
Realty’s growth is self-funded, an
addition to the Telx acquisition, the
impressive feat given what Dyer
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Tony Bishop As part of the Digital Realty CTO team, Tony plays a central role in helping the organisation build a differentiated global platform and ecosystem strategy to enable enterprises and services providers to accelerate their digital business strategies on PlatformDIGITAL™. Prior to Digital Realty, Bishop served as VP of Global Enterprise at Equinix, Chief Strategy Officer for 451 Research and served at Morgan Stanley as Managing Director, Global Head of Enterprise Datacenter Operations & Strategy. He is the author of Next Generation Datacenters – Driving Extreme Efficiency & Effective Costs Savings ( July 2009).
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25
D I G I TA L R E A LT Y
describes as the “capital intensive” nature of the industry. In September, the company sold 10 of its Powered Base Buildings® to Singaporian real estate developer Mapletree Investments, along with the establishment of a joint venture to co-manage three more facilities. The deal saw Digital Realty generate around $1.4bn in capital. “The transaction is going to allow us to continue selffunding our growth, diversify some of our sources of equity and capital, and really let us harvest value from our 26
fully stabilised assets so that we can redeploy the proceeds into higher
“ MarketplaceLIVE is a huge opportunity for us to connect, not only with our customers but with our partner world” — Corey Dyer, EVP, Sales and Marketing, Digital Realty
NOVEMBER 2019
yielding development opportunities,” Dyer explains. “It continues to build on our global expansions, and lets us stay focused on our core markets and the assets that we think drive the most value to our customers. It also reduces our reliance on capital markets, which can be volatile.” As a leading builder and operator of data centre infrastructure, Digital Realty is aware of the role it has to play in the evolution of the market as a whole. Given that global internet
several Northern California properties, and boasting more certified green buildings than any other data centre provider. “Reducing our environmental impact is a priority for us,” says Dyer. “Our long-term goal is to pursue 100% renewable energy for our global portfolio.” The launch of PlatformDIGITAL™ at MarketplaceLIVE is the highlight of a year filled with global growth and billion-dollar deals, highlighting its importance to the company’s strategy. “The launch is going to be the big mover for us, and I’m very excited,” says Dyer. “It’s going to have a huge impact on our business, and our customers’ businesses as well.” usage has tripled since 2015, and is
Harnessing its industry leading scale,
predicted to double again by 2022,
its commitment to providing a per-
managing the amount of power con-
sonalised service to suit the needs
sumed by the world’s data centres
of each individual customer and an
and networks is key to operators’
increasingly sustainable portfolio,
sustainability goals. Digital Realty
Digital Realty is set to enter 2020 as
continues to set and exceed ambi-
a force for intelligent, interconnected
tious sustainability and renewable
digital infrastructure solutions.
energy goals, achieving 100% renewable energy for its EMEA portfolio, 100% wind power for its US colocation business unit, 100% carbon free and renewable power supplied to w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
27
D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
28
Gigabit explores the changing face of sports broadcasting as the industry moves towards an on-demand, OTT streaming future WRITTEN BY
NOVEMBER 2019
HARRY MENE AR
29
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D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
T
he rise of social media – the fact that virtually every smartphone is a mobile camera rig capable of broadcasting live worldwide at the push
of a button – is radically altering the way we obtain
information and consume content. With film and television production already moving away from traditional broadcasting models towards Over the Top (OTT – a streaming media service offered directly to viewers via the Internet, bypassing cable, broadcast and satellite) platforms, the writing is very much on the wall. Nowhere is this truer than in the global sports entertainment market, where the importance 30
of immediate on-demand coverage of the tens of thousands of live events that happen every year is becoming increasingly evident to broadcasters. In a report released earlier this year, telco giant Tata Communications slated 2019 as the “tipping point” for the global sports industry, as digital transformation is set to catalyse a new era of “unprecedented commercial growth for broadcasters, rights holders and sports organisations.” Florian Ruth, Director of Content and Production at the World Rally Championship (WRC) agrees. “The whole world is changing. The way people consume media has completely altered in the last five years. Now, it’s all about real-time communication; people want to see and learn about what’s happening directly from the source as it happens.”
NOVEMBER 2019
“THE WHOLE WORLD IS CHANGING. THE WAY PEOPLE CONSUME MEDIA HAS COMPLETELY ALTERED IN THE LAST FIVE YEARS” — Florian Ruth, Director of Content and Production, World Rally Championship
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31
D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
In response to the growing demand for on-demand sports streaming,
enables broadcasters, rights holders
established media giants and a new
and other key players in the sports
generation of challenger companies
ecosystem to maximise the
alike are entering the market, working
commercial opportunities that digital
to make the space more data driven,
platforms offer.” However, some
accessible and consumer-friendly.
sports are easier to transition towards
“Digital technologies are the friend, not the enemy, of the live experience. So, as the digital fan experience gets
32
“A holistic fan engagement strategy
a digitally-enabled broadcasting strategy than others. Ruth, who’s worked in sports
better, the pressure is increased to
broadcasting for over a decade –
ensure that fans at venues can engage
including more than five years with
with the action in new ways too,” says
Red Bull, overseeing events like the
Mehul Kapadia, Global Head of
Red Bull Air Race – came to the WRC
Marketing at Tata Communications.
in 2016 at a time when he sensed that
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘WORLD RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP (WRC) – ALL LIVE!’ 33 consumer tastes were undergoing
Over the past three years, Ruth has
a dramatic shift. “When I came to the
overseen the digital transformation
WRC, everything was produced the
of the WRC’s broadcasting strategy
same way it had been, say, 10 to 15
from the ground up. However, the
years previously,” he recalls. “For
process of digitally transforming
example, when something happened
that strategy hasn’t been without its
at a rally – a crash, a leaderboard
challenges, many of them as a result
change, etc – people were learning
of the sport’s unique nature. “When
about it immediately via Twitter,” but
I first saw how the WRC was being
the nature of the WRC’s setups was
produced... it’s a really complex and a
such that, sometimes, it would take
very difficult production. In comparison
hours to obtain and broadcast the
to a Formula 1 race or a football
footage. “This wasn’t the sort of state-
match, where it all takes place in an
of-the-art production setup the sport
overseeable space, the rally is just
deserves,” says Ruth.
absolutely crazy,” laughs Ruth. w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
“The area we have to cover during a rally weekend is sometimes more than 10,000 square kilometres.” In order to overcome the sheer scale of a rally event, Ruth and the WRC have partnered with Tata Communications, in order to support a radical reimagining of the way rally fans can access the WRC’s footage. The service, WRC+ All Live, does exactly what it says on the tin: subscribers can view dozens of hours of footage, live, covering virtually every 34
moment of each global event. “This continuous live stream has become the heart and the soul of our production,” says Ruth. This is also where Tata Communications comes in, as the Indian telco has been instrumental in executing Ruth’s plan to transform the WRC broadcast from “between three and five hours of live content to more than 25 in a single event,” he explains. “Tata helped me to reduce our onsite facilities by feeding all the individual signals to our new post-production hub we’ve set up with our technical partner NEP in London.” At an event, the WRC captures footage from a mixture of onboard, NOVEMBER 2019
“DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE THE FRIEND, NOT THE ENEMY, OF THE LIVE EXPERIENCE” — Mehul Kapadia, Global Head of Marketing, Tata Communications
35
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D I G I TA L S T R AT E G Y
DAZN – PURE SPORT ON DEMAND This London-based sports entertainment streaming company was among the first to offer a pure-sport live and on-demand streaming service. Currently, the company offers its programming in seven markets across three continents and features over 25,000 live events each year. As part of its ongoing efforts to scale, DAZN has been turning towards a network of virtual production facilities, which allows its editors to perform live logging, editing, commentary, and graphic design functions remotely from anywhere in the world. The first hub opened in Madrid in September in order to support DAZN’s production of content 36
in support of its premium sports right in the country to MotoGP, Premier League and Euroleague Basketball. “At DAZN, digital disruption is at the heart of everything we do. The ability to operate in an agile and scalable virtual environment means we can get our content localised and out to market across multiple regions much more quickly. It also enables us to tap into shared resources in whatever configuration is required to fulfil our programming needs,” said Neil Colligan, Chief Operations Officer of the DAZN Group.
AMAZON – THE NEW ESTABLISHMENT With a 100mn-strong global user base, Amazon’s Prime membership offering has seen its media library expand consistently since its launch in 2006 as Amazon Unbox. Over the last winter, it broadcast the NFL’s Thursday Night Football – on both Prime and its Twitch subsidiary – as well as professional golf, tennis and baseball across multiple markets.
NOVEMBER 2019
static, handheld and helicopter mounted cameras. In order to wirelessly transmit this footage live to the production suite, Ruth’s team uses RS technology to transmit any and all footage to a B200 King acting as a relay plane that constantly circles the stage. Looking back over the 2019 season, Ruth is overjoyed with the continued success of the new OTT platform. “The next big step we’re going to take in 2020 is to not only produce all the post-production content remotely, but also to produce All Live and the live television product completely remotely from London,” he explains. As traditional broadcasters like ESPN, established media entities like Amazon and challenger platforms like DAZN – as well as first party broadcasters like the WRC – all converge on this rich new distribution method, the relationship between sports fans and the content they love will undeniably never be the same.
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37
Covering every angle in the digital age The Business Chief platforms offer insight on the trends influencing C and V-level executives, telling the stories that matter
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D I G I TA L D I S R U P T I O N
40
Have seamless digital customer experiences become mission critical? Gigabit deep dives into the changing relationship between companies and consumers, and the new need for seamless digital customer experiences WRITTEN BY
HARRY MENE AR
NOVEMBER 2019
41
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D I G I TA L D I S R U P T I O N
A
cross every industry in every market, one thing has become clear in 2019: this is the year of the customer. Ubiquitous
advertising, economic discomfort in a shrinking middle class, more ways than ever for people to self-determine the companies they deal with, a hunger for on-demand and personalised products and services, and a younger consumer class grown increasingly distrustful of an unfair capitalist system, are all conspiring to firmly put the ball back in the court of corporations when it comes
42
to attracting and retaining a customer base. Back in 2018, James Paine, the Founder of West Realty Advisors wrote, in a piece for Inc, that “twenty years ago, if you paid for a product or service and you weren’t happy with what you received, the best you could hope for was that if you sent in a letter of complaint, you’d eventually receive a refund. You could tell a couple of friends and maybe they’d tell their friends, but that was about it. Nowadays, though, if a customer has a bad experience then they can post about it online, and if they post about it online then it can go viral and even seriously damage the overall value of your brand. After all, all it took was one tweet from Kylie Jenner to knock US$1.3bn off Snapchat’s valuation.” The message from consumers is clear: “treat us right or perish.” NOVEMBER 2019
43
This month, Gigabit explores the strategies being adopted by companies that want not simply to survive this age of seamless consumer experience, but to thrive in it. Victoria Holt, CEO of digital manufacturer Protolabs, agrees that customer expectations in her industry have changed over the past decade. “People expect improvements at a pretty fast clip these days. So, being able to very quickly design, prototype and launch products is a critical success factor for manufacturers w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
D I G I TA L D I S R U P T I O N
today,” she explains, adding that
customer expectations and the
“there’s more mass-customisation too,
standards are becoming more
which is another thing that not only
exacting every year as the customers
requires rapid innovation, but the
take more and more control.
capacity to produce products in lower
44
“For the last 50 years, software
quantities as you customise them for
development has been specification-
specific end uses. Again, this lends
centric. Teams created software that
itself to a more digitalised manufacturing
complied with a specification. That just
process.” This emphasis on harnessing
doesn’t work anymore,” says Antony
the power of digital transformation is
Edwards, Chief Operating Officer of
part and parcel with the ouroboric
artificial intelligence, analytics and
relationship between the company
software solutions company, Eggplant.
and customer. Companies digitally
“Software teams need to use customer
transform to offer products that are
analytics to become user-centric and
more personalised and readily
create software that delights users
available, and in return, this drives
and drives business outcomes.”
“People expect improvements at a pretty fast clip these days” — Victoria Holt, CEO, Protolabs
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘EGGPLANT – ONNECT YOUR CUSTOMER’S USER EXPERIENCE WITH YOUR BUSINESS GOALS’ 45 Edwards’ observations are backed
and “on-demand” are a good start, but
by a recent white paper from Adobe.
to better understand the specific
Noting that the most successful
things consumers want from them,
modern companies are the ones that
successful companies are doubling
have digitally transformed themselves,
down on analytics and diverting more
Adobe warns that “transformation
and more resources, both to under-
needs to be driven with a purpose.
standing their consumers and to
For top businesses, that purpose is
providing a seamless experience.
customer experience.” Companies
“Fast food stores are employing user
that place customer experience at
analytics to understand how their staff
the top of their list of priorities are more
are using point-of-sale terminals and
successful than those who adopt
then using this information to update
a ‘push’ mentality.
the point-of-sale terminal so that
But what do those customers want? High level concepts like “customisability”
customers are served faster,” says Edwards. “Retailers are using a w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
D I G I TA L D I S R U P T I O N
combination of user and technical analytics to understand how technical factors such as website speed and design factors such as high-resolution graphics, impact purchases. They then feed this automatically back into their software development to optimize revenue.” Across the board, industry leaders are moving as one towards a more informed company-customer relationship. In Gartner’s recent Customer Experience Trends Survey, it was revealed that, in 2018, two-thirds 46
of companies increased their customer experience technology investments, with 52% reporting that they intended to increase spending further in 2019. In last year’s survey, Gartner found that 81% of companies expect customer experience to be the most important competition metric by 2020. Seeking to perfect the customer experience is going to become an even greater point of differentiation for companies in the next few years. Social media is a valuable tool for companies to understand, sell to and interact with their customer bases, but the sword swings both ways. Debacles like Fyre Festival and Kylie Jenner’s NOVEMBER 2019
“ Software teams need to use customer analytics to become user-centric and create software that delights users and drives business outcomes” — Antony Edward, COO, Eggplant
Snapchat Tweet prove that brands have nowhere to hide anymore; the customer experience must be seamless, curated and on-demand. Companies that want to succeed in what may become the Decade of the Customer need expert help - a fact that means the global Customer Experience Analytics Market is expected to grow to around $12bn by 2023 - and to embrace the power of digital. Vinod Muthukrishnan, co-founder and CEO of customer experience management software company CloudCherry, lives this reality every day. “Customer retention is lower than it ever has been. The millennial audience is actually much more conscious of business ethics, the environment and corporate social responsibility than the two generations before it, mine included,” he explains. When asked about the key to a great customer experience, Muthukrishnan said: “We’re going back to the basics. In many ways, the more digitisation we do, the more humanisation the customer demands. You can use machine learning, you can use bots - you do whatever, as long as it’s aimed at actually giving that customer a more personal experience.” w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
47
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AI
ROBOTAXIS: 50
THE FUTURE OF TRANSPORT Gigabit takes a look at the dawning robotaxi revolution and profiles major players in the form of Waymo, DiDi and Tesla WRITTEN BY
WILLIA M SMITH
NOVEMBER 2019
51
w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
AI
T
he world witnessed a revolution in the taxi industry with the advent of ride hailing apps such as Uber and Lyft. Existing firms have
been forced to modernise their offerings – intro-
ducing apps, for instance – and make the process more transparent. Now, advanced artificial intelligence is giving rise to a new disruptive force in the industry: robotaxis. The technology has inspired utopian visions of the end of private car ownership, with people instead being able to rely on a fully automated fleet of 52
vehicles to take them to their intended destinations, on demand. Whether that eventually comes true
© Waymo
is yet to be seen; what is certain, however, is that robotaxis are already undergoing limited public trials across the world, operated by the likes of NuTonomy in Singapore and Waymo in Phoenix, Arizona. It seems likely that China, however, will see the first commercial use of the technology, with Chinese tech giant Baidu targeting a launch in the city of Changsha by the end of the year. The race to evolve the technology has, at times, been bitter. Google sued Uber for allegedly stealing trade secrets related to driverless vehicles in 2017 and the engineer at the centre of the case, Anthony Levandowski, was charged with 33 counts of theft and attempted theft in August 2019. The holy grail driving the frenzied competition NOVEMBER 2019
© Tesla
53
“ THE ADVENT OF AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES AND ROBOTAXIS SEEMS SURE TO HAVE A HUGELY POSITIVE EFFECT ON REDUCING ROAD DEATHS” w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
AI
is the achievement of fully autonomous vehicles ranked level 5 on the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Levels of Driving Automation Standard, meaning they are able to operate in all conditions without human interaction. There are still a number of hurdles to overcome before a true robotaxi service is put into place, however. As first reported by The Information, of the 10,500 trips that Waymo underwent in July and August, 30% received a less than five-star rating from passengers.
© Waymo
54
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘EXPERIENCING DRIVERLESS WAYMO RIDES’
NOVEMBER 2019
55 Of the trips the company provided to
WAYMO
employees in Silicon Valley, that figure
Alphabet Inc-owned Waymo began life
rose to 47%. There have also been a
as Google’s internal self-driving vehicle
number of high profile fatal incidents
project. It has perhaps the greatest expe-
involving Tesla’s SAE Level 2 Autopilot
rience with real world conditions, saying
system, as well as the 2018 death
on its website that, since 2009, its “fully
of Elaine Herzberg who was struck
self-driving technology” has clocked up
by a self-driving Uber test vehicle.
10mn miles on real-world roads.
Despite such tragedy, the advent of
The company’s aforementioned
autonomous vehicles and robotaxis
Waymo One robotaxi trial in Phoe-
seems sure to have a hugely positive
nix, Arizona relies on users utilising
effect on reducing road deaths. In a
Waymo’s app. Recently, however, the
2018 presentation, Waymo CEO John
company announced a partnership
Krafcik quoted statistics showing that
with ride-hailing company Lyft, making
human error was responsible for 94%
ten of its vehicles available outside of
of crashes in the US.
Waymo’s own ecosystem. w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
AI
DIDI
ness, and has previously announced
Chinese transportation company Didi
a partnership with the Renault–Nis-
Chuxing (DiDi) recently announced it
san–Mitsubishi Alliance to work on
is to allow customers in Shanghai to
autonomous vehicles.
hail self-driving vehicles via an app. Since its founding in 2012, the
56
Shanghai’s government has granted the company permission to test its
company has raised over $20bn, with
autonomous fleet in the Jiading dis-
investment from the likes of SoftBank,
trict of the city. 30 different autono-
Toyota and Apple, who contributed
mous vehicles will be deployed, all
$1bn in 2016. DiDi is best known for
at level four on the SAE scale. The
having bought out Uber’s China busi-
vehicles will still at times be piloted
© DIDI
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘CHINA'S FIRST SELF-DRIVING TAXIS HIT THE ROAD IN GUANGZHOU’
“ ADVANCED ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IS GIVING RISE TO A NEW DISRUPTIVE FORCE IN THE INDUSTRY”
by humans, with the company citing the complexity of the Shanghai environment as a mitigating factor. As reported by Autoblog, the service is scheduled to launch within a ‘couple’ of months, expand to Beijing and Shenzhen by 2020, and launch outside the country by 2021. “Working with our auto-industry partners, DiDi has the potential to become the first business to realize large-scale robo-taxi service in China,” said Zhang Bo, CTO of DiDi and CEO of DiDi’s autonomous driving company. w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
57
AI
TESLA The traditional conception of a robot taxi service is based on the business model of today, only with the driver taken out of the equation. Tesla, however, envisions a distributed network of personally owned vehicles sent out to perform taxi work when not in use by their owners. At the company’s 2019 Autonomy Day, the company’s notoriously unpredictable CEO said he was “very confident” that it's autonomous ride sharing network 58
“ THE HOLY GRAIL DRIVING THE FRENZIED COMPETITION IS THE ACHIEVEMENT OF FULLY AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES”
would be ready by 2020.
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘TESLA AUTONOMY DAY’
NOVEMBER 2019
59
© Tesla
update. Musk was quoted by TechCrunch as saying: “From our standpoint, if you fast forward a year, maybe a year and three months, but next year for sure, The service has long been gestating,
we’ll have over a million robotaxis on the
with Musk first floating the idea in
road. The fleet wakes up with an over
2016. One advantage the company
the air update; that’s all it takes.”
possesses over rivals is an existing fleet
Tesla is planning to take around 25%
of vehicles which can be given the new
of the revenue generated by the service,
capabilities required through a software
with the rest going to owners. w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
CLOUD
60
MAKING THE WAVES: SAMSUNG UK AND OUR 5G FUTURE GIGABIT SITS DOWN WITH KATE BEAUMONT, DIRECTOR OF INNOVATION, TECHNOLOGY & SERVICES STRATEGY AT SAMSUNG UK AND IRELAND TO DISCUSS THE WAYS IN WHICH THE KOREAN TECH GIANT IS DRIVING 5G ADOPTION WITH FUTURE-FORWARD THINKING AND CUSTOMER-DRIVEN R&D WRITTEN BY
NOVEMBER 2019
HARRY MENE AR
61
w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
CLOUD
62
A
s the Director of Innovation,
Innovation, Technology and Strategy?
Technology & Services
Well, I worked across a variety of
Strategy at Samsung UK,
industries - including insurance,
Kate Beaumont is at the forefront of
magazines, commercial electronics –
the Korean tech giant’s introduction
before coming to telcos about 18
of 5G technology to the country.
years ago. I’m naturally very curious
We sat down with her to talk about
and, especially when I can see things
gesture controls, connected living
are broken, an intuitive problem solver.
and Minority Report.
Samsung UK was the perfect home for me because when I walked into
First of all, Kate, could you tell us a
the business, it had just gone through
little about yourself, your journey
leadership change and really needed
so far, and what drew you to your
a lot of business and operational
current role as Director of
transformation. I was able to come in,
NOVEMBER 2019
63
identify what the needs were and
opportunity to be able to shape and
then work to rebuild and put into place
influence that.
the commercial operating rhythm. What I discovered as I came into the
How is 5G adoption affecting
telco business is that product really is
Samsung’s business strategy?
my first love – which I think is what
That question kind of assumes that
drew me to my current role. Being at
we’re reacting to this big trend when,
the cutting edge of tech is both
in reality, Samsung is at the forefront
fascinating and scary, because every
of these innovations. We’re obviously
sci fi movie you’ve ever seen might
collaborating with others in the
become a reality in the next
industry, but we’re focused on leading
five years, and there’s a lot of respon-
the way. We’ve had several world
sibility that comes with that, I think,
firsts in 5G because we were out
as a tech company, and I wanted the
there testing it. w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
CLOUD
64
“ BEING AT THE CUTTING EDGE OF TECH IS BOTH FASCINATING AND SCARY, BECAUSE EVERY SCI FI MOVIE YOU’VE EVER SEEN MIGHT BECOME A REALITY IN THE NEXT FIVE YEARS” Kate Beaumont, Director of Innovation, Technology & Services Strategy, Samsung UK
It’s less about catching the 5G wave and more about making it. But we’re also not doing it alone, of course. Partnerships are a really important part of how we operate, whether it’s with Microsoft or Adobe, or on the infrastructure side of things. Samsung has a huge R&D team, and we’re committed to investing $22bn over the next three years into things like AI and 5G technology in order to ensure we continue to lead the field, but also aren’t just doing innovation for the sake of innovation. We have to be doing meaningful innovation that creates meaningful experiences for our customers. It’s twofold: it’s about taking our global R&D efforts and – this is where my role comes in – bringing those fantastic innovations and developments to life for our consumers in the here and now. Communication on mobile is becoming increasingly visual. How’s that affecting your innovation strategy? Even 10, 15 years ago, we were looking into biometric engagement – using your body to power and control the device. Now, you can see some of that starting to come together:
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘SAMSUNG GALAXY: THE FUTURE’ 65 our devices have gesture controls that
We also know we need to be really
let you do things like take a selfie by
immersive and really authentic.
waving at them. Then there are things like voice control as well that are
Is it more challenging to work on
contributing to things becoming more
introducing technology, like AR or
and more interactive.
AI, that has its conceptual roots in
Whether it’s VR, AR or something
science fiction, versus something
else, the question is always: “How do
that doesn’t have that conceptual
we fuse the physical with the digital?”
baggage in the collective cultural
I think that, over the next year or two,
consciousness?
you’ll see 5G really empower VR and
That’s the ultimate question, and I’ve
AR, because if you’ve tried them, you
loved having a bit of a play with it.
know how sketchy the experience has
I’ve opened presentations by talking
been historically. Moving forward, 5G will
about Minority Report – saying things
completely change those experiences.
like “well, you thought that was just w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
CLOUD
sci fi, and now how many years are we
limited coverage like you do in the UK at
away from those kinds of experiences
the moment - and customers are
being a possibility?” I can’t decide
engaged and get it once they see an
whether we’re all going to end up
application. Tell them about something
fighting the Terminator or if we’re just
that’ll be happening in three years and it
plugged into the Matrix.
might as well be science fiction.
In reality, I don’t think the general
66
This is fundamentally what my role in
public are necessarily as worried about
the UK is: bridging the gap for Samsung
that. What we’ve found in our research
between the science fiction future and
is that, the further away it is, the less
now. It’s my job to go, “5G is definitely
real for people, obviously. Show them
worth investing in now, because within
something right now - and this is the
a year or two the experiences it
ultimate challenge with bringing 5G to
supports are going to be as fundamen-
life especially when you’ve got very
tal as Uber – a product of 4G – is now.”
“ WE’RE CREATING A WORLD WHERE CONNECTED DEVICES AND SERVICES ARE TRANSFORMING INTO TRULY SEAMLESS CONSUMER EXPERIENCES” Kate Beaumont, Director of Innovation, Technology & Services Strategy, Samsung UK
NOVEMBER 2019
What’s your top priority right now?
be connectable. Everything we
Samsung has a vision of connected
produce from sometime next year will
living; having billions of connected
be able to connect to a network,
devices all working together intelli-
whether it’s a fridge, an oven, your
gently. We’re creating a world where
phone, tablet, etc. Whatever it is,
devices and services are transforming
they’ll all work together seamlessly.
into truly seamless consumer experi-
If you think of that as our primary
ences. Imagine every electronic device
focus, everything else branches off
that you own, all speaking to each other
from it. In order to have connected
and all operating autonomously.
living you need 5G. You need the
In the UK, two out of three house-
Internet of Things. You need AI as it
holds have at least one Samsung
becomes predictive. All of those things
product. From 2020 onwards, we’ve
are going to be priorities going forward.
committed to having all of our devices
67 What’s on the horizon for Samsung and yourself going into 2020 and beyond? Samsung’s plan for the UK is to be driving 5G penetration, and by that I mean encouraging the take up of 5G devices, which means we need to work with our partners on the content and experience, because we have got to give consumers a real genuine reason to buy.
w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
68
NOVEMBER 2019
RPA companies Gigabit takes a look at the world’s top robotic process automation (RPA) companies and the products heralding a new age of digital workers WRITTEN BY
WILLIAM SMITH
w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
69
T O P 10
70
10
Another Monday
Germany’s Another Monday adopts a musical theme for its RPA solution suite, AM Ensemble, with its Muse, Composer and Conductor tools guiding the creation and implementation of RPA. Highlighting the simultaneous importance and tedium of repetitive processes, Another Monday positions its software robots as the solution. Able to mimic the inputs of a worker and integrate with existing software, Another Monday also suggests an attendant benefit of freeing employees up to perform more rewarding tasks.
NOVEMBER 2019
Hans Martens , CEO
50+
Approximate number of employees
HQ
Cologne, Germany
09
71
Edgeverve
A subsidiary of Indian multinational Infosys, EdgeVerve was founded in 2014 with a focus on enterprise. Having absorbed Infosys’ banking solution FInacle in 2015, the company offers that suite alongside its AssistEdge automation platform which features an end-to-end RPA service. The company lays out the progression of RPA as ending in “Human-empowered Automation” – a seamless interaction of human and digital workers. Retainers of its services have included Vodafone New Zealand and Curtin University.
Mohit Joshi, President
500+
Approximate number of employees
HQ
Bangalore, India
w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
How AWS is helping create a future-ready Australia We are at a fascinating point in the history and evolution of Australian organisations, where they are using technology to transform and enhance the experiences they bring to their customers.Transformation touches everyone, from government agencies including the ATO, Australia Post, and ABC, digital natives like Atlassian and Xero, start-ups like Baraja and Whooshkaa, to established players like Qantas, Woodside Energy, NAB, Linfox, and Fonterra. Having the right skills in place to drive digital transformation is critically important, as is a willingness to embrace change and shift to a more agile, collaborative culture.AWS help organisations of all shapes and sizes with their most critical issues and opportunities. Together, we create enduring change and results. Let AWS help create enduring change and strategies for you.
NAB’s Cloud Guild drives new tech skills NAB is watching a new approach to learning develop inside of the bank as it approaches the first anniversary of an ambitious program to train its workforce in the ways of cloud. The program, called the NAB Cloud Guild, was intended to enable “more than 2000” NAB employees to acquire or build cloud skills in support of the bank’s $1.5 billion “digital-first” transformation.Inside of the first year, the Cloud Guild is already tracking well ahead of that goal.“The results of the NAB Cloud Guild have been outstanding,” NAB’s Manager Engineer and Cloud Guild Founder Paul Silver said. “Within the first 10 months, we’ve had about 4000 people who’ve gone through the program so far in a one or three day course. “When we started, we had seven people in the whole organisation who were certified in AWS cloud. There are now over 400 people who are certified”.Silver can already see change as a result of the program. “What we’ve found after people have done the three-day associate courses is they’re becoming self-learners, which is fantastic,” he said. “AWS has great digital content we can consume and use inside our organisation. After people get their first certification, they’re actually going off and selflearning this content with the outcome of getting more certifications, in-turn leading to better outcomes for NAB.” The learning culture is expected to have a strong impact on NAB’s project, which includes a target of moving 35 percent of its 2500 IT applications into the cloud within the next three-tofive years. “With AWS’ help we’ve been able to drive outcomes incredibly fast. This is helping us meet our customer expectations a lot faster than we have been able to in the past,”
Silver said. NAB’s Chief Technology & Operations Officer Patrick Wright said the battle for technology talent in Australia is “fierce”. Wright sees the NAB Cloud Guild not only as a way to create opportunities for employees to learn new skills and grow their career in technology, but also as a means “to attract top talent in the industry.” “We’re embarking on a transformation that we think is fundamentally changing our ompany, fundamentally changing the way we work, and launching us into a new era,” Wright said. “If you want to build a company of builders, you have to have technology career pathways.” NAB is also taking some cues on best practices from AWS as it continues on its digital transformation journey. The bank recently tackled the AWS 50 in 50 program, which involves getting 50 applications into the cloud in just 50 days. It was a clear signal of the speed and agility that NAB now wants to operate. “AWS’s passion for customers aligns well with what we are doing at NAB and we’re also learning from them along the way as well,” Silver said. “It’s been a really good partnership to work with them.”
How AWS is helping create a future-ready Australia
Woodside Energy leveraging data to seize growth opportunities Woodside Energy is the pioneer of the liquefied natural gas (LNG) industry in Australia, and the largest Australian natural gas producer. Woodside’s producing LNG assets in Australia’s north-west Pilbara region are among the world’s best facilities, renowned for their safety, reliability and efficiency. Now, Woodside is seeking to create an integrated LNG production centre – the Burrup Hub - that would see new Scarborough and Browse gas resources processed through the Woodsideoperated Pluto LNG and Karratha Gas Plant. To help realise this vision, Woodside is leveraging gains from its data science and intelligent asset work programs over weeks and days, instead of months and years, allowing the company to make decisions sooner, using richer data. Innovation has always been part of Woodside’s DNA. Applying cloud technology is helping Woodside accelerate the traditional oil and gas project innovation cycle from years, down to months. Woodside uses AWS cloud as the foundation for optimising production in real time, by running high -speed algorithms to uncover new insights and opportunities to deliver extra value. Woodside can run 10,000 algorithms per hour, taking data from over 200,000 sensors attached to its Pluto LNG plant. The company remains focused on reaching all Woodside employees with this work. Digital at Woodside is not just about ‘gear’; it’s honing and changing the way people work, with collaborative partnerships playing a key role.
Learn more
Visit awsinsight.com.au to find out more how AWS is able to help you thrive in today’s digital economy.
08
73
WorkFusion
Emphasising the intelligent side of its RPA capabilities, WorkFusion differentiates itself from competitors with rapid deployment within 12 weeks. Highlighting its solution’s intelligence, simplicity and scalability, WorkFusion’s Intelligent Automation Cloud ecosystem comes in business and enterprise tiers, as well as a free express version for personal automation projects. Customers include Capgemini, Deloitte, Tata and Infosys. A relative newcomer, having been founded in 2010, WorkFusion has raised
Alex Lyashok, CEO
200+
Approximate number of employees
HQ
New York, NY
over $120mn from six funding rounds.
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T O P 10
74
07
Pegasystems
Pegasystems specialises in customer relationship management software. The company’s automation offerings are built around its Pega Platform, which allows for the creation of apps without code. To maximise the impact of its RPA features, Pegasystems’ Opportunity Finder utilises machine learning to find areas optimal for automation. Founder and CEO Alan Trefler first gained fame as a chess master, later using his expertise in the game to develop chess playing computers before founding the firm in 1983.
NOVEMBER 2019
Alan Trefler, CEO
1,000+
Approximate number of employees
HQ
Cambridge, Massachusetts
06
Automation Anywhere
75
Automation Anywhere operates a Bot Store – a marketplace for pre-existent bots suited for different roles. These so-called “Digital Workers” are given job titles by the company, such as the “Digital Employee Onboarding Specialist” which can identify, shortlist and onboard candidates. Also on offer are bots suited to specific tasks such as autonomously converting text to speech. Originally founded in 2003 as Tethys Solutions, the company acquired its current name in 2010, emphasising its focus on robotic process automation.
Mihir Shukla, CEO
1,000+
Approximate number of employees
HQ San Jose, California
w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
We’ve helped Australian companies such as oOh! Media to build high quality technical teams. Data & Analytics | Engineering | Information Security Infrastructure & DevOps | Product & Design
THEONSET.COM.AU | RECRUITMENT@THEONSET.COM.AU
05
Blue Prism
77
The UK’s Blue Prism counts the likes of Ebay, the NHS and Walgreens among its customers. Its intelligent RPA platform comes in both on-premise and SaaS varieties, and it identifies industries such as the public sector, manufacturing and financial services as ripe for RPA implementation. Blue Prism maintains a dragand-drop interface built around connectable objects containing actions and events, with the processes created leaving a detailed, auditable trail. The company is relatively ancient in RPA
Alastair Bathgate, CEO
500+
Approximate number of employees
HQ
London, UK
terms, having been founded in 2001.
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T O P 10
78
04
UiPath
UiPath is an RPA specialist, offering a platform for automating repetitive manual tasks, which the company claims represents the future of work. Advertising the ease of use for its automation designer, UiPath’s robots are able to operate in both attended situations, such as help desks and call centers in collaboration with humans, and unattended situations. Reflecting the increasingly important status of RPA, the company raised $568mn in its latest Series D funding round.
NOVEMBER 2019
Daniel Dines, CEO & Founder
1,000+
Approximate number of employees
HQ
New York, NY
03
79
SAP
‘Intelligent Robotic Process Automation’ from SAP come as part of its SAP Leonardo intelligent enterprise system. It emphasises its capability to mimic human workers inputs as well as interpret their communications. SAP’s offering incorporates machine learning and conversational AI alongside RPA. Its bots also have the capability to build intelligence into existing back office processes. SAP was founded in 1972 by five German engineers from the next company on this list, IBM.
Jennifer Morgan and Christian Klein. , Co-CEOs
96,500
Approximate number of employees
HQ
Walldorf, Germany
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T O P 10
02 IBM IBM sees the implementation of intelligent automation as heralding a future ‘collaborative workforce’ comprised of humans and machines working together. It advocates for a programme of change management to upskill workers with the ability to collaborate with robots. The company’s suite of intelligent automation services includes its Watson system, and its technologies have already been put to use in banking, shipping and in 80
policing. The grandfather of the IT industry, IBM can trace its history back over 100 years.
NOVEMBER 2019
Ginni Rometty, CEO
350,600 Approximate number of employees
HQ
Armonk, New York
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘IBM ROBOTIC PROCESS AUTOMATION: UNLOCK GREATER VALUE’ 81
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T O P 10
Cognizant Cognizant advertises the platform-agnostic nature of its automation offerings, which can ‘harmonise’ with legacy systems. The com82
pany identifies automation potential in tasks across the business operation, which it says its machine learning augmented robotic process automation can provide. Cognizant offers so-called ‘Robotics-as-a-Service’ systems which can free human workers up to pursue less menial tasks in sectors such as insurance, banking, healthcare, manufacturing and more. The company was founded in 1994, spun out of business information company Dun & Bradstreet.
NOVEMBER 2019
Brian Humphries, CEO
261,400 Approximate number of employees
HQ
Teaneck, New Jersey
83
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘COGNIZANT – BOTS PROMISE A BETTER ENTERPRISE INTELLIGENT PROCESS AUTOMATION’
w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
EVENTS & A S S O C I AT I O N S
We round up the biggest and best technology events and conferences from around the world… EDITED BY HARRY MENEAR
04–07 NOV 2019
VMworld 2019 Europe [ BARCELONA, SPAIN ]
84
04–08 NOV 2019
Microsoft Ignite 2019
Touting itself as “the preeminent digital infrastructure event of the year”,
[ ORLANDO, FLORIDA, USA ]
VMworld is a global conference for vir-
Microsoft Ignite is Microsoft’s annual
tualization and cloud computing hosted
meeting created for enterprise
by VMware. Attendees will learn from
professionals, services and products.
top VMware and industry experts about
Offering everything from deep product
what’s coming next in IT. Additionally,
dives to hands-on labs and immersive
attendees will be able to network with
experiences, Microsoft Ignite will cover
peers, make new connects, get direct
a wide range of topics such as deploy-
experience and training with hands-on
ment, development, architecture security
labs and discover new product break-
as well as operations and management.
throughs. Last year, 13,000 attendees
At last year’s event, the keynote speaker
and 3,500+ companies from across the
was Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella.
globe gathered to attend the event.
NOVEMBER 2019
18-20 NOV 2019
GOTO Copenhagen 2019
19-22 NOV 2019
Aimed at developers, lead teams,
Open Source Data Conference (OSDC) Europe
software architects and project
[ LONDON ]
managers, GOTO Copenhagen is an
Boasting 24 training sessions, 30
event defined by its expert speakers,
workshops, 120 speakers 230 hours of
who this year include Polhem Prize
content and around 1,800 attendees,
winner Daniel Stenberg, legendary
ODSC claims to be “one of the largest
AI pioneer Doug Lenat and Apple
applied data science conferences
Co-founder and tech icon Steve
in Europe”. Attendees can expect
Wozniak. As the organisers say,
to learn from the best and brightest
GOTO is “all about the talks. We seek
minds in the field who will cover a
interesting speakers from around the
variety of topics such as open data
world and let them shape the agenda
science, deep learning, machine learning,
— they’re the experts after all.”
and data visualisation.
[ COPENHAGEN ]
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85
EVENTS & A S S O C I AT I O N S
20-21 JAN 2020
European Blockchain Convention [ BARCELONA ] Returning to Barcelona after a successful 2018 event, the European Blockchain 86
Convention (which alternates between Barcelona and Copenhagen) is one of the defining events for all things crypto
24-27 FEB 2020
and powered by digital ledger. This
MWC
year’s event is expected to play host to
[ BARCELONA, SPAIN ]
more than 600 tech leaders, regulators,
With thousands set to descend on
investors, corporations, developers and
Barcelona for the event, MWC (formerly
entrepreneurs from the industry.
Mobile World Congress) promises
Its talks, seminars and events are
to be an unmissable technology
expected to focus on real-world appli-
congress. Hosting groundbreaking
cations for blockchain and digital ledger
innovations from almost 2,500
technology across multiple industries,
companies and over 100,000 dele-
including energy, finance, supply chain,
gates, MWC stands as one of the
government, insurance, healthcare,
largest conferences in the world
retail and mobility.
centered around mobile technologies.
NOVEMBER 2019
02-04 JUNE 2020
DataCloud World Congress [ MONACO ]
24-26 MAR 2020
Money 20/20 Asia
87
Next year, Monaco will be home to the 17th annual DataCloud World Congress,
[ SINGAPORE ]
bringing together a variety of experts in
Asia’s famously grandiose technology
the cloud, data centre and IT infrastructure
and fintech conference focuses on
markets. Touting itself as “the premier
helping entrepreneurs and large enter-
leadership summit for critical IT infra-
prises maintain the pace of innovation
structure”, the event promises to cover
and network with like-minded individuals
everything from cloud challenges to
and thought leaders. “Complacency is
edge evolution. Speakers at last years’
the enemy,” warn the organisers. Money
event included: Michel Fraisse, VP,
20/20 carefully curates its content
Europe, Huawei, Jeffrey Ferry, Director,
each year in order to present the very
Goldman Sachs and Glenn Fitzgerald,
leading edge in business and financial
Chief Technology Officer, Product
strategy to its host of attendees.
Business, Fujitsu EMEIA.
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Retail Business Services: the importance of collaboration
88
WRITTEN BY
SHANNON LEWIS PRODUCED BY
MIKE SADR
NOVEMBER 2019
89
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R E TA I L B U S I N E S S S E R V I C E S , A N A H O L D D E L H A I Z E U S A C O M PA N Y
Paul Scorza, Chief Information Officer and Executive Vice President of Information Technology, discusses collaborative approaches to grocery retail tech integration
R 90
etail Business Services was launched in January 2018 to support Ahold Delhaize USA’s consumer-facing grocery retail
companies and online grocery retailer, Peapod. Retail Business Services provides innovative solutions by leveraging scale and expertise to ensure the company’s partners can focus on developing their local brands. “Since our first day,” Scorza says, “IT has had a seat at the table of the leadership team. Which has enabled us to successfully support these brands.” Paul Scorza is the Chief Information Officer and Executive Vice President of IT at Retail Business Services, having previously worked as the CIO and EVP for Ahold USA prior to the merger between Ahold and Delhaize in 2016. He brings with him 32 years’ experience at IBM, a job he took immediately after graduating college and in which he performed several software and service-related roles.
NOVEMBER 2019
91
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EMPOWERING THE ART OF RETAIL
toshibacommerce.com
Toshiba is proud to work together with partners like Getronics and Retail Business Services to lead the way in delivering more customer-focused shopping experiences. Through these dedicated partnerships, we are transforming retail by creating unique and compelling customer experiences.
INNOVATION TRANSFORMS THE CHECKOUT EXPERIENCE AT AHOLD DELHAIZE USA BRAND STORES Retail Business Services, an Ahold Delhaize USA company, is a leader in the supermarket industry and well known for its eye toward innovation, passion for great food and dedication to delivering value to its customers. Retail Business Services had a goal from its local brand partners - to increase throughput, front-end lane utilization and improve the customer’s experience. Based on long-term relationships and proven capabilities, Retail Business Services turned to Toshiba Global Commerce Solutions and Getronics, plus other key partners to achieve their goals and vision for its stores. The result: a unique convertible lane that transforms checkout. All lanes open, all the time. Retail Business Services came to its partners with a clear vision: all lanes open, all the time. With convertible dual-use checkout lanes, Retail Business Services was able to provide a technology solution to its brand partners to make the most of the square footage in stores by replacing attended lanes that were only used some of the time, with lanes that could be used 100% of the time for either self-service or cashier-led experiences. Through this solution, the stores can reduce lines during checkout and give customers the ability to choose the way they experience checkout; whether they want the personal touch of a cashier-attended lane, or the convenience and privacy of a self-checkout lane – all while preserving the speed and full function of their existing attended lanes. “Our partnership together goes back many years, but this project exemplifies our relationship as trusted partners and leaders in the industry. Our commitment was not only to project success, but also positive impact on store operations and bottom line results,” said Bill Campbell, VP, Head of Americas at Toshiba. Leading Together To achieve this, Toshiba leveraged their extensive retail store knowledge to contribute software development and hardware engineering expertise, Getronics acted as the Systems Integrator providing project management, engineering and software testing capability, and another existing partner designed the customized cabinet. The challenge? Create software functionality that allowed store associates to switch modes from Toshiba’s Checkout Environment for Consumer Service (CHEC), a software application designed to optimize self-checkout, to their Toshiba POS Application. To ensure cashier-led transactions continued at full speed, Toshiba modified existing software application functionality to suit unique specifications. Toshiba leveraged its TCx™ Elevate digital platform ensuring a seamless end-to-end solution to power the front-end allows cash tender during both transaction types. Toshiba customized communications to create a unique solution with multiple applications and hardware devices.
Close collaboration among the teams was the key to the successful design, development and deployment. “We are delighted to have contributed to the teamwork, integration and collaboration that supported Retail Business Services vision for helping their store brand partners transform their front-end,” said Aaron Hagler, Getronics’ Vice President of Software and Retail Solutions. To perfect the solution, Retail Business Services conducted prototype, lab, and in-store pilots, and gathered feedback from shoppers and associates. With this valuable insight in hand, the team refined functions to reduce operational risk in the rollout and prove value to the business.
Through extensive partner collaboration, we deployed an innovative technology solution that supports our strategy, Leading Together, while delivering our promise of a better place to shop.” Paul Scorza, EVP, Information Technology and CIO for Retail Business Services. When the rollout began, Retail Business Services ordered approximately 40 lanes. Less than a year later, they have placed over 435 dual-use lanes in 175 stores across Ahold Delhaize USA’s local brands, including Giant Martins (Carlisle, Penn.), Giant Food (Landover, Md.) and Stop & Shop. These convertible lanes have been met with glowing reviews from shoppers and cashiers alike. Shoppers have reported they appreciate the ability to choose their checkout method and skip the line while using the input belt to load large orders. Cashiers can scan a shopper’s cart quickly, with the added security and accuracy of cash recyclers for cash tender eliminating the complexity and time required to manage cash. In the end, Toshiba and Getronics stepped up as trusted partners and industry leaders to collaborate with Retail Business Services and partners to create a solution that exceeded expectations and delivered meaningful business value to the companies of Ahold Delhaize USA.
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“There’s a pull now where the stores are asking for innovation. Customers are demanding tech” — Paul Scorza, Chief Information Officer and Executive Vice President of Information Technology, Retail Business Services, an Ahold Delhaize USA company 95 The merger, he says, was an opportunity to confirm the company’s power of growth. While it did demand lengthy rationalization, bringing together the two IT systems, was a successful endeavour. The key was finding synergies. The merger ultimately allowed the corporation to increase investments in IT infrastructure, apply innovative initiatives, and bring new technology into its physical stores. “Ahold Delhaize USA recognizes the value of IT,” says Scorza. Collaboration is at the centre of success at Ahold Delhaize USA and Retail w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
USTGlobal
®
New Retail Experience With Frictionless Checkout Store (FCS)
Today’s customers are looking for an incredible shopping experience inside the store that mirrors the online experience of shopping in a frictionless environment and virtual assistance that makes their shopping fun, interesting and engaging. UST Global Digital Retail team is constantly working on bringing innovative, practical, and cost-effective solutions for engaging customers while they are inside the brick-and-mortar store. Towards this, we have launched and implemented multiple interactive touchpoints that improve category margin, sales and leave the customer with a WOW experience with a reference to a supermarket chain. We see tremendous value of rolling out the solution across globally in convenience stores, universities, offices, fulfillment centers, and dense metropolitan cities.
UST Global aims to be a global partner in New Retail
Frictionless Checkout Store (FCS) is a cornerstone of our digital strategy to support the “New Retail” Patented technology enables end-to-end smart store solutions that offer personalized shopping experiences to the customer as well as improved store operation and labor efficiency An innovative shopping solution for brick-andmortar stores using computer vision, machine learning, and IoT UST Global along with its strategic partners including Intel, are behind implementing ‘FCS’ solution for the first store at the RBS office in Quincy,MA Vision sensors track which products customers pick up and put back, virtual baskets are updated accordingly Redefines the way people shop by eliminating the pain points of checkout lines and cashiers with algorithms, and customers’ digital accounts are automatically charged after exiting the stores
ust-global.com
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘THE NEXT GENERATION OF GROCERY RETAIL’ 97 Business Services. “You can’t get
have a good idea of what the brand
anything done without good partners,”
represents. Retail Business Services
affirms Scorza. From partnerships
develops tech in house whenever the
with local brands to collaborations
market fails to supply. Among this is
with other tech companies, these are
frictionless checkout, which allows
an integral part of Retail Business
customers to shop in-store without
Service’s business strategy. To ensure
having to pay at a checkout lane. Using
a strong partnership with local brands,
a mobile phone or scanner, they have a
Retail Business Services created the
preselected payment method associ-
Business Relationship Manager (BRM)
ated to their loyalty card and can leave
role, an account manager that works
through a special lane as soon as
out of local brands’ headquarters,
they are finished picking their goods.
attending staff meetings, and feeding
Scorza compares it to using an EZ
information back to developers and
pass when driving on toll roads.
service providers so the IT team can
Partnerships have allowed Retail w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
Verizon k business Digital transformation never stops. That’s why businesses need a trusted partner to help them prepare for what’s next. Every day, we work with 97% of the Fortune 500, as well as other businesses big and small. They rely on us to keep them ready for every step along their digital journey. And ready for the biggest step of all, the shift to 5G with Ultra Wideband. See how at verizon.com/ready
keeps s
© 2019 Verizon
Don’t just compete. Thrive.
When all of your retail operations are connected, from your back office to the front end, from POS to payments to loyalty programs, you gain the freedom to think ahead. So you can meet customers in every moment. And stay ahead of the curve—and your competition.
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Business Services to keep on top of IT innovation. “One of the things you do as an IT organization is staff all the work you have to do,” he says. “You want a flexible workforce so that they can bring in skills that you may not have. I generally run 15-20% of my workforce using that flexible resource.” When it comes to project management needs, Retail Business Services turns to Apex and Sevenstep. To run a data center to support the
“ One of the things you do as an IT organization is staff all the work you have to do, and you want a flexible work-force so that they can bring in skills that you may not have” — Paul Scorza, Chief Information Officer and Executive Vice President of Information Technology, Retail Business Services, an Ahold Delhaize USA company
applications for Giant Food, GIANT/ MARTIN’S and Stop & Shop, both for application maintenance and support,
101
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Paul Scorza Paul Scorza is the CIO and EVP of Information Technology for Retail Business Services. Scorza has 40 years of experience in IT. Before joining Retail Business Services, Scorza was EVP, IT and CIO for Ahold USA. Prior to that, he spent 32 years at IBM in leadership positions including VP of Global Delivery, VP and Transformation Executive for Finance, Global Financing, Technical Support, and Application Portfolio Management, VP Americas, and Application Solutions Delivery Leader. Scorza holds a bachelor’s degree in computer science from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and a combined MBA and an M.S. degree in computer science from Marist College.
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Retail Business Services relies on DXC.
to change over POS systems six and
DXC has a decade long relationship
half years ago, Getronics was closely
with Ahold Delhaize USA compa-
involved. “I watched them install eve-
nies that has evolved over the years.
rything,” says Scorza. “Getronics was
Getronics and Toshiba have also been
truly a partner in the implementation
important to Retail Business Services
and cared about our business as much
both from a POS system and manu-
as we do.” The company also works
facturing standpoint. Toshiba runs
with Salesforce on its IT infrastructure.
point on the system for Giant Food,
“Salesforce is another great IT partner,”
GIANT/MARTIN’S and Stop & Shop,
affirms Scorza. “We have used their
while NCR focuses on Food Lion and
Mulesoft software for data integration
Hannaford. Getronics and Toshiba
and each brand has access to their
helped develop the customized code
Marketing cloud platform. Both tools
Retail Business Services needed
provide access to key information to
within the loyalty scheme that gave
drive business at each local brand.”
customers points off gasoline. When
Retail Business Services also works
legacy company, Ahold USA, needed
with other key partners, such as w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
103
Wipro for support and development
wedded to a ‘must be invented here’
resources with key tools,
mentality,” says Scorza. “People
like Kronos.
stepped up as trusted partners.”
When Retail Business Services
The goal, Scorza says, is to ensure
wanted to develop a dual lane system
customers have a good experience
that could double as a self-checkout or
when they visit the stores. To keep
associate checkout lane, it partnered
up with innovation, Retail Business
with Toshiba and Getronics. Toshiba
Services uses a “fast follower” phi-
provided software development
losophy as well. “We don’t always want
and hardware engineering expertise;
to be cutting-edge,” explains Scorza.
Getronics brought software test
“Sometimes we let other people do the
capability and project management.
cutting-edge stuff, spend lots of money,
Ultimately, after prototyping, lab
and then we follow closely behind
work, and in-store pilots, the pro-
with something we know works more
ject was a success. It is in 145 retail
efficiently and at a fraction of the cost.”
stores and 380 lanes. “This was a
Retail Business Service’s lunchbox
good success story. No one was
frictionless store is similar to Amazon Go. w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
105
wipro.com
Creating MEaningful Experiences Re-imagining Shopping Journeys Digitalizing Retail Unleashing Hyper–efficiency
Wipro helps retailers deliver superior customer experience and realize better business outcomes through its deep capabilities in Digital, Cloud, Engineering, Cyber-Security, Intelligent Automation, Analytics & Personalization.
107 Customers walk into a store, scan in using an app, pick what they want, and leave; no scanning of products required. UST Global was a key partner in the development of the frictionless pilot store technology. The world’s relationship with IT has changed in recent years, says Scorza. When trying to implement wireless capability in-store half a decade ago, he was met with some resistance. “In 2013, we created any kind of innovative solution because you couldn’t get the stores to adopt it,” says Scorza. “The industry just wasn’t ready. I was always trying to push solutions out w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
R E TA I L B U S I N E S S S E R V I C E S , A N A H O L D D E L H A I Z E U S A C O M PA N Y
“ You can’t get anything done without good partners” — Paul Scorza, Chief Information Officer and Executive Vice President of Information Technology, Retail Business Services, an Ahold Delhaize USA company 108
NOVEMBER 2019
2018
Year founded
$44bn
Parent company, US segment, 2018
2,700
Approximate number of employees there. However, knowing this was com-
that customize in-store experiences.
ing, we partnered with Verizon to put
“We’ve got a bright horizon here,”
wireless capability into all Ahold USA
believes Scorza. “There’s so much
stores. This was their first entry into a
technology in areas you’d never expect
grocery store and Verizon did a great
there to be. You get out of college with
job partnering with us to make it hap-
a computer science degree and start
pen.” It’s completely the opposite now.
looking for IT companies. Never in my
It’s a pull versus push. There is a pull
wildest dreams would I have imagined
now where the stores are asking for
I would enjoy IT in a retail company. It
innovation. Customers are demanding
has been incredibly exciting here.”
tech.” This change has allowed Retail Business Services to shift its focus to creating an omnichannel experience. Artificial intelligence is the next step, Scorza affirms, prediction models w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
109
110
Tivity Health: Digitally transforming healthcare solutions WRITTEN BY
GEORGIA WILSON PRODUCED BY
MIKE SADR
NOVEMBER 2019
111
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T I V I T Y H E A LT H
Paul Edmisten, SVP and CIO at Tivity Health discusses the evolution of the company and its journey towards digital transformation
F
ounded in 1981, Tivity Health is a leading provider of healthcare solutions for fitness, nutrition and social isolation. “Tivity
Health works hand-in-hand with its members, clients, partners and customers to create everyday opportunities for long-lasting health and vitality,” 112
says Paul Edmisten, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer. “Tivity Health’s goal is to be the leader in transforming healthy living for adults by empowering and engaging them to live their best lives through nutrition, fitness and social connection,” says Edmisten. Formerly known as Healthways, Tivity Health was “among the boutique darlings of the Nashville healthcare community, focused on disease management in the early years and transitioned to total population health and well-being,” comments Edmisten. “Healthways had been successful growing and transitioning the business over the first three decades, until they experienced performance challenges leading up to 2014.” Throughout 2014 and 2015 the company went through tremendous change from the board, to CEO and throughout the NOVEMBER 2019
113
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PERSONALIZING CONSUMER ENGAGEMENT AT SCALE ACROSS HEALTHCARE Healthcare organizations are increasingly treating consumer healthcare as a holistic journey. Consumer expectations have risen, driven by their experiences with digital technology in other industries. Today’s always-on, connected consumer interacts with brands across multiple channels and devices, and they expect a brand to know them across dynamic journey stages. Likewise, the always-on consumer’s health journey exists outside of the typical healthcare ecosystem. An individual’s actions, behaviors, and environment play enormous roles in continued health. Factors such as diet and exercise, access to parks and green space, and even how much natural light a person is exposed to throughout the day are known as social determinants of health, which can account for up to 40 percent of a person’s proclivity toward long-term health. Healthcare companies are now starting to use social determinants of health data to help guide consumers along their healthcare journeys; this is key with the total healthcare experience being a continuous path that reflects always-changing behaviors and environmental patterns.
KNOW ALL THERE IS TO KNOW ABOUT A HEALTHCARE CONSUMER Personalizing the consumer healthcare experience to shape a healthcare journey at an individual level is accomplished through the use of data. By ingesting and combining first-party, second-party, and third-party consumer data onto a single platform, a healthcare organization creates a unified consumer profile, or golden record, that lets the organization know everything there is to know about a consumer and informs the next-best action, or recommendation, that will help propel the consumer on the path toward continued health. The RedPoint Customer Data Platform™ connects all available data sources to create an accurate golden record that is updated in real time.
With automated machine learning and an intelligent orchestration layer, the platform recommends a next-best action or message for an individual consumer while being contextually aware of where they are in their journey.
A NEXT-BEST ACTION AND AN ENGAGED CONSUMER Data sources that create a golden record could include data from a connected device that monitors sleep and exercise patterns, for example. It could include a device that monitors a consumer’s vital signs, combined with a history of provider and care visits, future scheduled visits, gaps in care, and sources that indicate social determinants of health. The platform’s self-tuning, automated machine learning models continuously update a consumer’s health “score” based on every data source, and recommend the appropriate action in a way that is customized for the particular payers, providers, and consumer in that instance. Because the golden record is persistently updated with real–time data, a recommendation is always in the context and cadence of an individual healthcare journey. This single point of control over data, decisions, and interactions is the key to providing personalized omnichannel communications with each consumer. A number of health organizations have engaged with RedPoint to deliver hyper-personalized customer experiences to acquire new customers and manage individualized journeys that improve health outcomes, lower costs, and improve consumer satisfaction.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT HOW YOUR ORGANIZATION CAN DRIVE VALUE WITH A SINGLE POINT OF CONTROL, VISIT WWW.REDPOINTGLOBAL.COM OR EMAIL CONTACT.US@REDPOINTGLOBAL.COM.
T I V I T Y H E A LT H
“ Tivity Health works hand-in-hand with its members, clients, partners and customers to create everyday opportunities for long-lasting health and vitality” 116
— Paul Edmisten Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, Tivity Health
organization.” In the summer of 2015, Edmisten became involved with the company following Alvarez and Marsal’s partnership with Healthways to restructure the company and to set a course for the future. “As I partnered with the executive management team, the board and Donato Tramuto, CEO of Healthways – and today CEO of Tivity Health – as the newly appointed CIO, we eliminated tens of millions of dollars in operating expenses, and ultimately landed on three options to move the company forward. They included continuing to work with the existing business units and products, managed through continuous change and transformation (the long-haul approach). The short approach was to shut down underperforming business units of the total population health business, and the third approach was to sell the total population health business.” Small parts of the business were sold leading up to July 2016, when Healthways successfully sold its total population health services business to Sharecare. In January 2017, Healthways rebranded as Tivity Health. “With the launch of Tivity Health and its divesture of the
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘HEALTH IS MORE THAN A STATE OF BEING. IT’S A COMMITMENT TO DOING” 117 total population health business, our
a robust B2C data and technology
financial profile strengthened and
stack that align with Tivity Health’s
grew,” notes Edmisten. “Witnessing
strategy and objectives. Edmisten
first hand and being personally
highlights that, in order to align the mis-
involved in the series of events and
sion, mindset and operating model of
transactions that occurred during this
Tivity Health, the company had to
span of time was priceless. Something
transform the way they defined, deliv-
many never experience in business
ered and engineered its products to
and will never learn in business
create the desired consumer experi-
school,” notes Edmisten. Tremendous
ence. Donato Tramuto, CEO of Tivity
change occurred impacting all aspects
Health shared that “Paul Edmisten
of the company.
played a key strategic role during our
Since the divestiture, Tivity Health
transformation of Tivity Health. His
has evolved transforming its people,
pragmatic and transformational leader-
processes and technology to enable
ship has helped our company adopt a w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
WHEN EXPERIENCE MATTERS Acxiom is proud to be Tivity Health’s strategic partner as we help the company successfully navigate its technology and digital transformation journey. The customer journey is complex, yet customers still expect brands to know and understand them and provide seamless experiences at every step. Acxiom has been helping the world’s best marketers and advertisers get more out of their data and technology for more than 50 years. We deliver data foundations through data products, identity management, marketing solutions and services, helping clients create the seamless, relevant and meaningful customer experiences marketers and customers dream of.
acxiom.com
product, data-centric and consumerdriven culture within Tivity Health.” “Tivity Health has been leveraging
the customer journey. “A big part of our strategic direction continues to be how we leverage data
Big Data for years,” comments
insights generated from our advanced
Edmisten. “What AI and machine learn-
analytics coupled with OMNI channel
ing permits us to do is learn more about
technology to enable, automate and
our members and consumers.
scale our member experience,” says
Traditional statistical approaches only
Edmisten. With these advanced analyt-
get you so far when dealing with Big
ics, Edmisten combined data
Data.” Tivity Health has already bene-
augmentation and artificial intelligence
fited greatly from AI to unearth
to gain insight into how members
important user personas among its
engage with their products and ser-
members with the aim of extending its
vices. “Those who know SilverSneakers
learnings to enhance applications in
love us, the problem is not enough
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Paul Edmisten Paul Edmisten SVP and CIO of Tivity Health, is responsible for innovation, delivery and support of the company’s technolog y and data solutions that enable its Healthcare, Fitness, Nutrition and Social Connection products. In 2015, Paul was leading engagements to improve performance and restructure companies at Alvarez and Marsal. Over 18 months, A&M engaged with Healthways to sell two business units to eliminate costs, resulting in the formation of Tivity Health.
w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
119
T I V I T Y H E A LT H
120
people know us,� says Edmisten.
engagement, they continue to innovate
Understanding our members needs
and expand capabilities through wear-
and wants will help us target our
ables, IOT and 5G to enhance
engagement through digital/TV mar-
consumer engagement, improve
keting or our channels that include web,
speed, and the desired outcomes for
call center, mobile and social.
our customers. “Extending our plat-
From a product engineering stand-
form and mobility solutions to integrate
point at Tivity Health, simplicity,
wearables and IOT devices enables our
reliability and scalability are the core
members and consumers to be more
focuses for its solutions. While the
connected, and we can learn more
company continues to refine their core
about their activity and nutrition habits
platforms optimizing the consumer
while enabling the desired consumer
NOVEMBER 2019
experience and loyalty. As the industry and consumers adopt 5G, and basic internet access is extended to rural America, Tivity Health will be able to positively impact millions of people who are suffering from social isolation and loneliness.” Social isolation and loneliness are major concerns leading to a number of health issues in America today. Currently, Edmisten is working on leveraging voice assistants, as well
“ A big part of our strategic direction continues to be how we leverage data, in particular through advanced analytics” — Paul Edmisten Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, Tivity Health
as mobile and wearable technology to w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
121
DELIVER MORE PROJECTS, LEAVE WORK ON TIME.
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404.890.0107 stratfieldconsulting.com
“ In this very aggressive economy, talent and skills are hard to find, having a long-time partner in Stratfield gives Tivity Health the ability to meet this challenging demand” — Paul Edmisten Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, Tivity Health
and disciplined in the approach that you take. You must align the entire organization around a consumer centric product capability to maximize the impact on customers and the bottomline financial result.” “We buy and integrate best in class technology solutions to enable our products and services. We partner with industry leading partners that bring best practices in the areas of Marketing Automation, ERP, CRM, Data Augmentation, and Resources/
drive customer engagement and
People. Each one of our partners
deliver online virtual trainers for exer-
brings a very unique capability, and it
cise. “As part of our efforts, we are
has been critical for our success as an
constantly innovating to address these
organization to identify and enable
challenges through IoT, mobile tech-
those strategic partnerships, establish
nology and wearable technology, as
close relationships and align on clear
well as creating automated independ-
objectives,” says Edmisten. Some of
ent platforms that are flexible and
the key partners include Redpoint,
cloud agnostic.”
Nuestar, Acxiom, Oracle and Stratfield
“As a CIO, I am a big believer and proponent in maximizing the intersection
Consulting to name a few. An essential part of Tivity Health’s
of data and technology. While that
risk management is information secu-
sounds very simple and, on the surface,
rity. “Our Chief Information Security
straightforward, it’s an art to really per-
Officer, his team and his strategic part-
fect and differentiate the experience
ners are constantly assessing the
and value to a consumer,” comments
threat landscape through an agile
Edmisten. “You have to be intentional
Information Security program focused w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
123
T I V I T Y H E A LT H
1981
Year founded
920
Approximate number of employees
124
NOVEMBER 2019
on identifying and remediating risk. We are constantly reviewing, researching and evolving our processes and controls to improve our protection level against emerging threats,” says Edmisten. Looking to the future, Edmisten sees two immediate opportunities emerging for Tivity Health. “With the acquisition of Nutrisystem and the passing of the CHRONIC Care Act, Tivity Health can provide – via a sophisticated supply chain – nutritional options on a large scale to seniors.” In addition to these immediate opportunities, Edmisten sees emerging key trends in health and fitness that could provide opportunities for innovation at Tivity Health. “Health plans and healthcare organizations have begun leveraging data analytics to provide benefits that are personalized and customer-oriented. Additionally, health plans and organizations are utilizing Big Data to support clinical decision making, precision medicine, readmission prevention, chronic condition management and risk identification,” says Edmisten. Another area of focus for Tivity Health is helping to address w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
125
T I V I T Y H E A LT H
126
the social determinants of health, “the way health plans can have the most impact when identifying and engaging with the right people is through data, algorithms and technology-enabled solutions,” says Edmisten. “Many of our health plan partners have invested in development of predictive models to support those at risk of social isolation and food insecurity to name a few.” Donato Tramuto, CEO Tivity Health shared “We have a tremendous opportunity within the company as we integrate Nutrisystem, and add a NOVEMBER 2019
“ Tivity Health has been leveraging Big Data for years. What AI and machine learning permits us to do is learn more. Traditional statistical approaches only get you so far when dealing with Big Data” — Paul Edmisten Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer Tivity Health
127
nutrition business unit, into our house
the country. He concludes: “Over the
of healthy lifestyle brands to help
past three years we transformed our
address the social determinants of
people, processes and technology at
health. Paul and his team will be center
Tivity Health, and with strong leader-
stage to enable, automate and scale
ship, talented colleagues and a clear
our combined products and services
vision we have been successful in
to our customers.”
doing so.”
Reflecting on the company, Edmisten believes that “Tivity Health’s biggest strength is its team of colleagues and the passion they have for the company, consumers and customers. Their efforts are truly changing the lives of people around w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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Connecting the smart city ecosystem WRITTEN BY
GEORGIA WILSON PRODUCED BY
CRAIG DANIELS
NOVEMBER 2019
129
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QUALCOMM
Sanjeet Pandit, senior director, business development and head of smart cities at Qualcomm technologies, Inc., discusses the fragmented smart city ecosystem and how cities can benefit from innovative technology 130
F
ounded in 1985, Qualcomm Inc. is a leading multinational company that engineers, researches and develops semiconduc-
tor and telecommunications equipment used in thousands of products around the world. Its single goal is to invent breakthrough technologies that transform how the world connects, computes and communicates. “Qualcomm is a deep—down systems company, that looks at solutions with a systemic view. Making sure that not only the latest technology and inventions are implemented but that user experience is always kept in mind to deliver robust, sustainable and systemic solutions,� comments Sanjeet Pandit, senior director, business development and head of smart cities at Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.
NOVEMBER 2019
131
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QUALCOMM
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘ROBOTICS, 5G, AND AI IN THE INVENTION AGE’ 132 Pandit began his career in 1996 as
in one year, with its ecosystem part-
an engineer in the infrastructure divi-
ners robust practices. “When I entered
sion of Qualcomm, responsible for
this program, I realized that the smart
CDMA optimization of networks. In
cities space was extremely frag-
1999, Qualcomm’s infrastructure divi-
mented,” said Pandit. “When I wanted
sion was sold to Ericson where Pandit
to go and see what was happening in
began heading the Asia—Pacific
a given city, there was no single point
CDMA infrastructure sales and was
of contact covering everything it was
named salesman of the year in 2005.
implementing.” Additionally, Pandit
In January 2007, Pandit returned to
realized “there was no single database
Qualcomm heading the carrier rela-
which showed all the players that were
tions for international markets and
working on Smart City deployments.”
continued in this role for 12 years.
In response, Pandit set out to develop the
Last year, Pandit took over as Head
Qualcomm Smart Cities Accelerator
of the Smart City Division establishing
Program: “the glue between all
NOVEMBER 2019
133
1985
Year founded
$22.73bn+ Approximate revenue
35,959
Approximate number of employees w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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“ I don’t know how AI is going to shape up and change the landscape of smart cities, but I would say it is going to be the next big thing for the industry” — Sanjeet Pandit, Senior director of business development and head of Smart Cities at Qualcomm Technologies Inc.
imagined in 1996 that I would be able to order things on the internet to be delivered the next day. That’s where AI is today, and it’s only in its initial
ecosystem providers” to connect its
stage. I don’t know how AI is going to
members in their search for smart city
shape up and change the landscape of
solutions and relevant expertise.
smart cities, but I would say it is going
Smart cities are continuously evolv-
to be the next big thing for the space.”
ing. Key trends Pandit is seeing emerge
Pandit warns that the smart city revolu-
within the industry include surveillance,
tion isn’t going to be immediate. “You
edge computing, base computing, asset
won’t wake up one day to a different
management, public security, public
city; it will be a transition.” Gradual
WiFi and most importantly ‘smart tourists’, “We’ve seen a lot of cities utilizing one—stop apps for attractions, coupons and transport etc,” he explains. Looking to the future, Pandit sees the next big thing for smart cities being artificial intelligence (AI). “I never w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
135
deployment of systems with faster
zone’ – a secure zone where users can
speed, high reliability, low error and low
implement code and make secure trans-
latency will be implemented to create
actions. “This is something that we take
a high—quality framework and infra-
very seriously. We have implemented
structure for the overall deployment
unique algorithms and methodologies
of automotive, 5G and mission critical
that people can invoke and utilize when
applications to create an integrated
it comes to security on the silicon itself,”
system where everything is connected.
commented Pandit.
For Qualcomm, security is given
Pandit does, however, acknowledge
the highest importance. Within its
that, although the deployment of
chip sets the company has ‘the trust
technology will help sustainability,
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
137
Sanjeet Pandit Mr. Sanjeet Pandit is the Global Head for Smart Cities practice at Qualcomm, Inc USA and responsible for Carrier and Ecosystem relationships in this domain. His expertise in the telecom industry spans over 20 plus years. He specializes in the areas of Smart City design, creation of Smart verticals, digital transformation and go to market strategies creating an experience that would benefit public private domains and citizen engagements. Sanjeet has worked and created relationships with the Smart city ecosystem partners, resulting in multiple Smart City projects Globally. He joined Qualcomm in late 1996 and moved to Ericsson in 1999 following the sale of the infrastructure division of Qualcomm, moving back to Qualcomm in 2007. He has held various senior positions at Qualcomm and was responsible for APAC and India business development prior to leading the Smart city vertical.
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QUALCOMM
“ Our biggest success to date is making what people thought impossible, possible. From CDMA to EVDO data speeds, IT and even 5G we have proven everything is possible” — Sanjeet Pandit, Senior director of business development and head of Smart Cities at Qualcomm Technologies Inc.
138
NOVEMBER 2019
139
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Smart Lighhng Photocell replacement that provides advanced light control, utility grade metering,tilt/vibraaon sensing, connections to smart city 3rd party sensors, public WiFi and location based services.
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Visit ubicquia.com or contact smart@ubicquia.com Copyright © 2019 Ubicquia LLC. All rights reserved. Patent pending technology
141
efficiency and security, “deploying
number of separate projects such as,
technology for the sake of it is not
smart railways, ports, water parks and
something that Qualcomm promotes.
surveillance. One new project in the
When we deploy technology, we do so
discussion phase is the creation of a
with two things in mind: system—level
smart campus at the University
approach and how the technology will
of California, San Diego. “We are
benefit the city.”
trying to see how we could leverage
Currently, Pandit is working on
some of the new inventions and
a number of projects worldwide
technologies to create a framework
including a partnership with UROS
within the campus for smart park-
to develop smart water cycles and a
ing, smart transportation, smart w w w.busi ne ssc hief. com
QUALCOMM
142
NOVEMBER 2019
classrooms, remote learning, campus—wide WiFi, security surveillance and energy management.” To ensure these deployments are reliable, have low errors and low latency, the project would also involve a transition to 5G. Another significant project for Pandit, is Qualcomm’s recent implementation of surveillance solutions and public city WiFi in Mexico to improve connectivity. To complete the implementation, Qualcomm worked with JUGANU. The biggest thing Qualcomm does to ensure it stays ahead of trends is being first to market and having a solid research and development team. “We anticipate what needs to be implemented and work closely with standards bodies,” says Pandit. Qualcomm invests heavily in its team, particularly in the development and creation of new IP. “Whatever we build we try to advance our developments to be more robust and sustainable so that they are beneficial in the long run,” continues Pandit. Reflecting on the company, Pandit feels Qualcomm’s biggest strengths are its innovative mindset, its ability to stay ahead of its competitors, its w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
143
QUALCOMM
144
“ There is a lot to be done, and we cannot do it alone […] we require the ecosystem partners to deploy and adapt to the technologies we have developed at Qualcomm” — Sanjeet Pandit, Senior director of business development and head of Smart Cities at Qualcomm Technologies Inc.
NOVEMBER 2019
145
end—to—end system perspective, its
adapt to the technologies we have
culture and its people’s ability to deliver
developed at Qualcomm, which is one
complex technology. “Our biggest
of the reasons why the Smart Cities
success to date is making what peo-
Accelerator Program is so beneficial, it
ple thought was impossible, possible.
brings the entire ecosystem together
From CDMA to EVDO data speeds, IT
under one roof,” concludes Pandit.
and even 5G, we have proven that everything is possible,” enthuses Pandit. “There is a lot to be done, and we cannot do it alone. IoT is an extremely fragmented space; we require the ecosystem partners to deploy and w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
146
HOW T5 DATA CENTERS IS WINNING THE QUEST FOR UNINTERRUPTED SERVICE FOR ITS HYPERSCALE AND ENTERPRISE CUSTOMERS WRITTEN BY
DAN BRIGHTMORE
NOVEMBER 2019
PRODUCED BY
TOM VENTURO
147
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T 5 D ATA C E N T E R S
T5 Data Centers is tripling its staff to support new projects for hyperscale, enterprise and colocation customers both in construction services and facilities management.
T
5 Data Centers (T5) is focused both on real estate assets and supporting services across the global data center
arena, serving hyperscale, enterprise and coloca148
tion customers. A developer of high-quality data centers in the best markets in North America, and worldwide, T5 offers a range of services to meet the needs of the most demanding companies. “That’s why we created our Facilities Management division (T5FM) and our Construction Services division (T5CS),” explains T5’s President & CEO, Pete Marin. T5CS was established in 2014 and offers specialized construction services for missioncritical facilities and renewable energy solutions. The division excels with turnkey data hall construction, facility infrastructure upgrades, equipment procurement, project management and consulting, and green energy projects. With more than 200 mission-critical projects completed across the US, T5CS currently operates in 41 states.
NOVEMBER 2019
149
$100mn+ Approximate revenue
2008
Year founded
400
Approximate number of employees
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T 5 D ATA C E N T E R S
“ The leading hyperscale users are building large solar arrays, so we’re developing that expertise and see it as complimentary business and part of the symbiotic relationship with everything we’re doing across the industry” 150
— Pete Marin, President & CEO, T5 Data Centers
Those green energy projects are supporting hyperscale and enterprise data center operators. “We’re ready to meet the demands of the latest initiatives,” assures Marin. “The leading hyperscale users are building large solar arrays, so we’re developing that expertise and see it as complimentary business and part of the symbiotic relationship with everything we’re doing across the industry. We are providing construction services to groups that actually own the purchase power agreements, and we’ll also look at investing in those in the future.” T5 has partnered with Cherry Street Energy to expand its renewable energy expertise by adding solar array installation to its growing list of general contracting support services. This will also help further develop T5’s leadership position on an important initiative gaining increased traction in the mission-critical industry. “The solar industry has come a long way over the last five years,” says Robbie Sovie, Executive Vice President for Development & Construction at T5. “The systems have become more efficient economically and the footprint efficiency has also improved,
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘T5 DATA CENTERS – PETE MARIN, PRESIDENT & CEO, 2018 YEAR-END MESSAGE’ 151 allowing more watts-per-square-foot
design is so important; we always
in a given area. We anticipate green
make sure we utilize energy in the
energy will continue to expand within
most efficient way. If we have those
the mission-critical sector. We’re very
initiatives, then our customers are
excited to support Cherry Street
going to gravitate towards us because
Energy, and additional clients as
we compliment those initiatives. We’re
we implement solar solutions across
driving towards renewable energy to
North America.”
support data centers and help them
Among these projects will be the largest solar installation yet seen in
become more sustainable.” T5’s award-winning Facilities
the state of Georgia. “We’re always
Management and Operations division,
focused on improving the plans and
T5FM was also formed in 2014 and
reducing the amount of wasted power
now provides third-party mission-
that goes into a data center,” confirms
critical data center management and
Marin. “That’s why cutting-edge
operations services, including remote w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
Nationwide Landscape Civil Engineers Architectures Planners Mission Critical Specialist: Lawson Fanney, P.E. Lawson.fanney@kimley-horn.com 404.201.6132 | 678.333.3387
NOVEMBER 2019
hands, property and asset management,
Right now, we’re focusing on the
consulting, and training.
piece of gear that gets replaced the
The technologies T5 leverages in its
most, and that’s the battery. Knowing
data center operations help support
when they need to be refurbished
its mantra: ‘Forever On’. For a
or replaced, saves money and can
company in the space and cooling
reduce waste.” He believes we’ll see
business, Marin notes that T5 is also
more data analytics tools deployed in
in “the guaranteed lights will never go
the data center and T5 will embrace
out business”. Put simply, reliability
that, while improving BMS (Building
is everything. “We need to monitor all
Management System) and EPMS
of those systems,” maintains Marin.
(Electrical Power Management
“Among the technology initiatives
System) capabilities to guarantee
we utilize is predictive analytics.
100% uptime. T5 has served leading
Being able to predict when a piece of
companies in IT, finance, insurance,
equipment is going to fail is vital.
health care, and telecommunications,
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Pete Marin As President & Chief Executive Officer of T5 Data Centers, Pete is responsible for setting the overall strategy of the firm, maintaining client relationships, capital management, and creating and executing the firm’s vision for growth. Pete has more than 20 years of experience in the data center sector ranging from development, securing debt and equity capital, to tenant representation including site selection and incentives. Pete’s understanding of end-user needs has enabled T5 Data Centers to reduce project cycle-time and cost, which leads to successful relationships, and repeat business.
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T 5 D ATA C E N T E R S
building a strong reputation for data center reliability as a serial recipient of The Uptime Institute’s Continuous Uptime Award for uninterrupted service. T5’s Senior Vice President & Director of Sales, David Horowitz notes that, even though the data center industry is still in its infancy, five to 10 years from now many of the legacy facilities will be considered outdated. He adds: “As enterprises continue to look to monetize their data centers, either by shifting to the cloud or adopting the wholesale outsourcing 154
model, being smarter in how we design our buildings and by utilizing improvements in technology will be a key factor for us when planning the future for T5.” T5 has been investing in that future through its alliance with QuadReal. The global real estate investment, operating and development company boasts a $27.4bn portfolio spanning across 23 major cities worldwide and was established to manage the real estate program of British Columbia Investment Management Corporation (BCI), one of Canada’s largest asset managers with a $145.6 billion portfolio. In the past year T5 and NOVEMBER 2019
QuadReal have joined forces by launching a $2.5bn fully integrated platform to develop, acquire and operate data centers. “We were able to raise capital with QuadReal with a long-term view across our differentiated platform of assets and services,” explains Horowitz. QuadReal had been looking to invest in the data center industry for several years. Horowitz notes the company was attracted to T5 above its competitors for a very good reason. “We offer a full suite of data center services and solutions: asset-based development and leasing, construction services, and facility management and operations. That’s our true differentiator that no other competitor in the data center business can offer.” Marin adds: “There’s plenty of capital out there looking to invest in the data center space, but there’s a very short list of qualified management teams. Most of the providers are just aiming to construct and lease buildings, few also have the expertise to operate them. Our alliance with QuadReal is a game-changer for current and future customers in the w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
155
T 5 D ATA C E N T E R S
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enterprise and hyperscale markets, allowing us to build the world’s most advanced and customized data center facilities faster and at scale.” T5 is equipped to take on the challenges of a demanding marketplace. Marin explains it’s natural for the customer to want the highest quality product at the most competitive price. “Construction costs are increasing,” he adds. “We’re seeing upward pressure on labor costs but in the end, it’s all about our processes and our team. We have a tried and tested approach to managing the
“ We offer a full service: asset-based, construction services, and facility management and operations platform. That’s our true differentiator that no other competitor in the data center business can offer” — Pete Marin, President & CEO, T5 Data Centers
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
David Horowitz David is Senior Vice President, Director of Sales for T5 Data Centers. David is responsible for overseeing business growth and promoting T5 Data Centers’ global portfolio and full services capabilities. David’s role includes developing the go-to-market strategy for new markets and leading the national sales team with its strategic initiatives. David has led multi-market searches for some of the world’s largest companies and has closed over 300MW and more than $1bn of data center real estate transactions. Prior to joining T5, David spent 10 years managing data center practice groups for commercial real estate firms.
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T 5 D ATA C E N T E R S
C OM PA N Y S TAT S
• T5FM active in 15 US markets • T5 operating 28 data centers – mix of owned and third-party assets • 600MW of IT load managed • 200 mission critical projects completed across the US by T5CS
158
• $2.5bn platform launched with QuadReal to develop, acquire and operate data centers
NOVEMBER 2019
people at each of our facilities and the strategy we have for delivering our products and services has proven to be successful.” That success is leading T5 to nearly triple its staff (from 150 to 400) to support new projects. “After building data centers for more than a decade, we are seeing changes in the market, and so we are adapting our operations and scaling to meet the evolving needs of our customers,” says Marin. T5 is committed to supporting veterans and “we were among the first in the data center industry to recruit former nuclear personnel from the navy,” he reveals. “We find that within that talent pool we’ve been able to identify great candidates to be retrained for the data center business.” In August this year, T5 was nominated among the top ten places to work in Atlanta, so clearly Marin and his team are on the right path. “We’re a small, private company,” reflects Horowitz. “But we have the communication and the collaboration across the business from our investors, down to the folks in the field, fueling a culture I believe is superior to any of our peers in the industry. We’ve developed this from w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
159
T 5 D ATA C E N T E R S
CPGbeyondthecloud.com
the ground up by giving everyone on our teams a voice in how we grow the business, implement change and introduce tools to improve our assets while empowering them to speak to our customers.” And, thanks to T5’s ability to provide customized real estate development solutions, the customers keep coming. “After an extensive national search by a large Fortune 100 company, we were awarded a demanding build-tosuit project designed to meet a client’s exact specifications,” explains 161
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘HOW T5 SECURES LA COUNTY DATA’
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T 5 D ATA C E N T E R S
162
“ Our alliance with QuadReal is a game-changer for current and future customers in the enterprise and hyperscale markets” — Pete Marin, President & CEO, T5 Data Centers
Horowitz. “Because of our collaborative and transparent approach, the project was a great success and we exceeded expectations on all fronts – budget, schedule and now the operations on an ongoing basis.” Moving forward, T5 will continue to ramp up its efforts. “We’ve been busy acquiring additional land holdings by investing out of our new venture with QuadReal to kick off developments,” reveals Marin. “We’ve purchased land in Portland, Oregon, in Atlanta, Georgia, and we’ve got land holdings
NOVEMBER 2019
QuadReal & T5 – a data center alliance “The data center market continues to experience very strong growth, driven by the accelerating digitalization of information,” says Jameson Weber, Head of Special Situations for QuadReal. “This strategic investment ($2.5bn) puts us in a very unique position to participate in this growing market alongside a
trusted company with a proven track record in data center development, construction, and management. T5 Data Centers is the logical partner to help us build a long-term business in tech-related real estate while ensuring our users receive the highest levels of service and security for their mission-critical data.” 163
in Charlotte and in Colorado. We also
they too grow their footprint and, from
have an active data center in LA and
an operational perspective, put our
we’re getting ready to launch a new
T5FM stamp on those facilities and
project in Dublin, Ireland.” Meanwhile,
reap the rewards from the strong
the company will also focus on
platform we’ve built over the past
growing its services while looking for
decade.” T5’s platform for excellence
M&A opportunities that will support
in the data center industry looks set
the scaling of T5’s platform. “Right
to march forward, forever on.
now, we’re on target to boost our employee levels to 400 and I can see that growth triple in the coming years,”
F o r e v e r On .
says Horowitz. “We have a lot of growth in front of us. We’re ready to support the top hyperscale users as w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
164
NOVEMEBER 2019
165
Redefining healthcare through innovation WRITTEN BY
PRODUCED BY
MATT HIGH MIKE SADR w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
PA R T N E R S B E H AV I O R A L H E A LT H M A N A G E M E N T
Partners Behavioral Health Management is changing the way that healthcare is delivered, as Jamie Gianna explains
T
ransformation. It is a word that’s rapidly becoming synonymous with any multitude of industry sectors worldwide. And while
any transformation represents a game-changing journey for a business and its employees, few have the potential to be as significant as that which 166
Partners Behavioral Health Management is undergoing. The North Carolina-based managed care organisation (MCO), established around seven years ago, is currently in the midst of a digital transformation journey that has the potential to change how healthcare in the United States is defined and paid for. It is, confesses Chief Information Officer Jamie Gianna, both an “exciting and scary time” for the organisation and the state of North Carolina. North Carolina pioneered a public Medicaid managed care system for behavioral health and intellectual/ developmental disabilities in 2011. Next year, the state will move to an integrated healthcare approach for all individuals who rely on the public system for care. “We are right in the middle of developing and introducing many things that no one else has previously done before or even considered in terms of NOVEMBER 2019
167
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PA R T N E R S B E H AV I O R A L H E A LT H M A N A G E M E N T
“ We are leveraging the very latest and most innovative technologies that will position us as a true leader in managed healthcare”
168
— Jamie Gianna, Chief Information Officer, Partners Behavioral Health Management
the way in which managed healthcare services are provided. In doing so, we are leveraging the very latest and most innovative technologies that will position us as a true leader in managed healthcare, both in North Carolina and beyond.” Gianna is responsible for leading Partners’ digital transformation. He sits as a member of the Partners Operational Leadership Team, and rather succinctly describes his work as “trying to understand the organisation’s strategic targets based on the information and direction we get from the North Carolina General Assembly and North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services; while finding the right tools to fit and to meet those requirements.” In reality, Gianna is charged with strategic planning, leading mission-critical business initiatives and organisational objectives, and driving change that will result in improved customer service and go a long way towards achieving better healthcare provision for the population of North Carolina. Partners is a public, regional managed care organisation, overseeing
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘PARTNERS | SUCCESS STORY: ILIANA’ 169 mental health, substance use disorder
of the whole person, which is a big
and intellectual and developmental dis-
driver behind our transformation.”
ability (I/DD) services available through
The purpose of Partners’ digital trans-
Medicaid, state and county funding.
formation, explains Gianna, is a focus
The organisation, Gianna explains, con-
on understanding the overall health and
tracts with care providers to ensure
healthcare needs of specific popula-
that treatment options are available
tions through leveraging technologies
for eligible residents across the state.
such as procurement platforms, predic-
“North Carolina is a large state,” he
tive analytics tools, and the integration
says. “The population is close to 11
of the organisation’s services network
million, and one in every 10 is eligible
so that it can manage the right services
for publicly-funded behavioral and I/DD
at the right time for its health plan
managed care. However, the system
members. “First and foremost, we
currently in place focuses on a portion
recognise that we need to be very agile
of a person’s wellbeing, instead
and mobile,” he notes. “The first target w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
When people, systems and data work in harmony, a real, positive impact can be made on the health of individuals and populations. Learn More
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was driven from a population health and
Office 365 – so that, at any place and
predictive analytics perspective, which
at any time, anyone within Partners’
focused on understanding what our
executive team could access all the
total cost of care looks like, what do the
data and information. The transforma-
state’s population and demographics
tion journey is still ongoing, with Gianna
look like, and how that fits into the wider
outlining steps two and three, as well
financial and health strategies that we
as a longer-term vision. These steps
have. Having the ability to really get our
include “sourcing a trifecta of procure-
arms around that data and turn it into
ment management tools, including tools
something useful, meaningful and with
for population health and predictive
real purpose had to be the first step.”
analytics that can create health risk
To do this, two years ago, the organisation moved to the cloud – specifically,
scores, as well as portals for users and a platform that allows integration across 171
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Jamie Gianna Gianna is known for a tireless work ethic, energetic presentation, and hands-on approach to consultative solutions. Gianna has blazed a trail of achievement across industry sectors including healthcare, insurance, finance, legal, professional services, and professional sports. While he is an accomplished C-Suite executive, he is best known as a proven player with a history of reliable, dependable performance, innovative and future looking solutions — leveraging leadership and technical expertise. He has an MBA from the University of Maryland and engaged in his doctorate in Organizational Management. He currently resides in Charlotte, NC.
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PA R T N E R S B E H AV I O R A L H E A LT H M A N A G E M E N T
“ First and foremost, we recognised that we needed to be very agile and mobile” — Jamie Gianna, Chief Information Officer, Partners Behavioral Health Management
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NOVEMBER 2019
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PA R T N E R S B E H AV I O R A L H E A LT H M A N A G E M E N T
2013
Year founded
$326mn Approximate revenue
460
Approximate number of employees North Carolina’s ‘healthcare universe’. We have been able to find and apply all the tools we need,” he states. “We are in the process of implementing them – the first ‘finishing line’ is imminent.” The scale of change within the state has placed North Carolina at the forefront of healthcare reform which, according to Gianna, “is what everyone is trying to achieve. The whole purpose – initially – is to collect and analyse as much data as possible, to really be able to understand exactly what the costs involved are and to ensure that every member can be cared for to the very best standard. That target NOVEMBER 2019
is phenomenal, and if we pull it off it will be huge.” Somewhat understandably, such change has required a significant realignment of structure and resources internally. This, says Gianna, hasn’t been easy and has proved a challenge at times. “We’re an organisation that, for some years, has had a lot of processes. We haven’t used specific tools and systems and have required people to really get on board with the new tools and understand the scope of the change. It’s all about introducing a new perspective. It is, after all, a fundamental aspect of being human: you either change and progress, or you don’t. Of course, it helps to know that the endgoal of our transformation is to achieve something truly good for many people. Working in healthcare and understanding the impact on the families we serve definitely changes the way in which you approach your work. Everyone on my team could go and work in other places and quite easily be very comfortable, but we’d never have the same sense of satisfaction that we get from helping people’s lives. That’s what matters the most.” w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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PA R T N E R S B E H AV I O R A L H E A LT H M A N A G E M E N T
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“ I would love to be able to collaborate with other organisations and to share the lessons learned across the state so we can deliver the very best standards of care” — Jamie Gianna, Chief Information Officer, Partners Behavioral Health Management NOVEMBER 2019
As with any transformation journey, there is still a lengthy road to travel for Partners. The organisation is on the cusp of achieving significant change yet, for Gianna, other technologies could also come into play in the future. “I’m already considering how we could use AI and machine learning for managing and analysing our data, for example. As we move through our journey, we will collect so much data. We are already focused on how we really leverage the technologies available to provide the best possible answers for that data. There is still a great deal to do but, looking further ahead, I would love to be able to collaborate with other organisations and to share the lessons learned so we can deliver the very best standards of care.�
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178
NOVEMBER 2019
179
Looking across industries for inspired innovations WRITTEN BY
OLLIE MULKERRINS
PRODUCED BY
BEN MALTBY
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INNOGY SE
innogy is using digital innovations to speed up the green energy transition and help 23mn customers become more sustainable 180
I
nnogy is a large-scale energy provider based in Essen, Germany, currently serving 23mn clients across Europe.
The company spans three major industry demographics: retail, grid infrastructure and renewable energy production. It has also started to expand into the e-mobility market with one of the largest charging point networks in Europe and a worldwide number of 34,000 charging sites. Since innogy was carved out from RWE and listed on the M-DAX separately in October 2016, the business has been driving digital transformation as a key part of its strategy. Kuldip Singh, Digital & Data Director Retail International, and part of the Retail Leadership team, sat down with us to elaborate.
NOVEMBER 2019
“ Keep this planet a great place to live, not only for the current generation but for many to come” — Kuldip Singh, Digital Director Retail International, Retail Leadership team
181
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INNOGY SE
2016
Year founded
€36.9bn Approximate revenue
“We want to play a leading role in the global green energy transition and we believe that digital and disruptive new technologies are going to be at the heart of speeding up this process,” explains Singh. “Digital transformation is really at the heart of our customer facing business. We’re constantly looking for ways to optimise our end-to-end
42,000
182
Approximate number of employees
customer journeys — seeing where we can give our clients a ‘digital delight’ as I like to call it - as well as exploring new business models which are data-driven, platform-based, and highly scalable in nature.” innogy is, next to its core business of supplying electricity and gas to its customers, making services available to help customers install and maintain sustainable energy solutions such as photovoltaic (PV) panels, insulation of houses, smart home devices and e-thermostats, all with a view to “make society more sustainable.” As part of the Retail Digital Program, the focused use of digital innovations such as AI is able to grant customers a seamless and insightful journey into sustainable solutions for their home or business. “A beautiful example
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘HELLO, I AM INNOGY’ 183 is the application of data analytics
experience, completely online: enter
and artificial intelligence algorithms to
your ZIP code and house number and
make the whole journey of orientating
an algorithm calculates how many pan-
and selecting solar panels easier for
els can go on your roof, how productive
customers: looking at whether your
they will be, your payback time and
house is able to have solar panels on
investment needed, including a rental
the roof, as well as buying or renting
option,” says Singh.
them. What we have done is to bring
A key driver of the Retail Digital pro-
lots of data points and sources together
gram is our Leadership Team Digital
(through selected partners) and have
that consists of the key six markets of
thereby been able to give the customer
innogy with their local heads of digital,
a complete online journey. Several years
driving a joint roadmap and enabling
ago, this journey could have taken several
the delivery of selected digital value
months due to uncertainty. Now, we have
pools with great scaling opportunity
narrowed that down to a one-click
across all these markets. w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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Enabling the Connected Energy Customer Through Cloud and Voice Services For more than a century, electric utilities have focused on the sale of a single commodity. The proliferation of distributed and renewable energy resources, advanced analytics and increasingly connected homes and businesses is now opening up the opportunity for utilities to think and act less like traditional providers of electricity and more like innovative retailers with an array of products and services that empower and delight customers, all while ensuring the safe and reliable delivery of power. Simply put, the pressure to deliver increasing value for utility customers is mounting and non- utility players are willing to step in as intermediaries if the incumbents fail to act. Electric utilities intent on maintaining their customer base – and revenue flows – must transform how they interact with increasingly connected energy consumers. With the proliferation of distributed solar, electric vehicles and energy storage, along with the adoption of devices such as smart speakers and Wi-Fi thermostats, utilities can leverage advanced cloud analytics to build and strengthen their customer relationships – while simultaneously working to build a more resilient digital grid. Just as Amazon makes use of consumer insights to create new, highly valued offerings for its customers, next-generation electric utilities can likewise transform themselves into digital organizations that rely on advanced cloud analytics to learn far more about their customers than they ever could before, and then tailor services to improve their customers’ lives. The convergence of digitalization and decentralization provides an opportunity for utilities to tap into the capabilities of machine learning and artificial intelligence to build upon their role as a 24/7 core service provider in people’s lives. Unlike past transformations in the utility industry, redefining the customer experience through cloud analytics can start to bear fruit in months, rather than years.
For some of the largest utilities around the world, such as Centrica, Enel and Pacific Gas & Electric, the journey to the cloud is already well underway. But there is ample opportunity for utilities of all sizes and under all regulatory frameworks. For energy providers that have not yet mapped out a transformative customer experience, now is the time to embrace an agile platform and chart a course. Making the most of the cloud requires much more than just a technology change; it requires evolving processes and transforming the business culture. Amazon Web Services (AWS) gives power and utility companies the foundation to focus on delivering the best customer experience and achieve operational and cost efficiencies while meeting demand securely and reliably; the flexibility to evolve their business model and innovate in a rapidly changing industry; and the critical business insights to transform the industry. AWS Power & Utilities solutions address the industries four core business categories and are centered around IT and OT Transformation, Workforce & Asset Management and Customer Engagement. These are underpinned by Data Insights and core cloud services consisting of database, edge technologies, AI/ ML, IoT, analytics and voice services. WATCH Innovation in Power & Utilities with AWS Digital Transformation to Drive Customer Innovation in Energy Efficiency
Learn More
INNOGY SE
“ Digital transformation is really at the heart of our business” — Kuldip Singh, Digital Director Retail International, Retail Leadership team
186
An important pillar of the Retail Digital
a seamless and consistent mobile
program is the delivery of a joint Mobile
experience within all innogy brands,”
Strategy across markets, in which innogy
says Sebastian Schmelz, Team Lead
realises smarter and faster app develop-
Digital Program.
ment, improved life-cycle management
To achieve a comprehensive view
and best practice sharing in all aspects
of a client’s needs, innogy has worked
including a joint asset library for UX
with several partners outside the energy
and design. “We work closely with
sector to integrate innovative technol-
all our markets to give customers
ogy into its platforms and processes.
NOVEMBER 2019
Through tried and tested applications,
Through adaptation and innovation,
developed in other industry sectors,
innogy is catering to businesses and
innogy avoids reinventing the wheel
individuals looking for sustainable
when it comes to meeting the demands
energy solutions. As the global industry
of its business. A successful example
becomes more interconnected,
is AI-based online experimentation
customer expectations are founded
to improve the sales funnel for innogy
on the achievements of disparate
products and services. By testing a
sectors. The Amazons and Googles
multitude of changes in the different
of the world are setting those expec-
online pages, innogy can in a short
tations and, by looking at them for
period of time increase sales conver-
forward-thinking and rapid innovation,
sion significantly, as proven by great
innogy is able to stay ahead of the curve
impact achieved by the energiedirect.nl
within the renewables energy industry.
digital team. This way of working (“testing
Singh explains: “We should not be
and validating customer flows at scale
benchmarking ourselves against what
using AI based tooling�) is now being
energy companies are doing, but rather
scaled to other innogy markets, too.
look at what other industries that are
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Kuldip Singh Kuldip Singh is a digital executive with a strong grounding in digital technology adoption and digital business scaling. He has been a digital executive in CXO roles in reputed global media companies and is now leading the digital transformation at innogy in the international retail business.
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187
Empowering those who power our world Wipro is helping Utilities across the globe move towards a sustainable energy future. Get started on your digital transformation journey today.
Click here to know more
INNOGY SE
190
NOVEMBER 2019
“ We can be more relevant, more personalised, and more real-time in our offering” — Kuldip Singh, Digital Director Retail International, Retail Leadership team
clear roadmap to further improve our
forecasting, which is a very important aspect of energy management,” states Carsten Kleewald of the Retail Energy Management team. In addition, innogy uses the AWS
ahead of us are doing as also the big
data analytic solutions for a “Full
tech companies.”
Household View” platform in the Dutch
Amazon Web Services (AWS) has
and Belgium markets. The platform
been able to provide intricate AI,
provides the Essent business with the
originally used in its online services,
opportunity to do real-time personalisa-
to provide an efficient data farming
tion using customer profile data and
solution. “AWS is a partner we are
actual online behavior combined with
working with very closely to see how
a best-offer matrix. This allows for
we can leverage advanced analyt-
accurately advising on which products
ics and artificial intelligence in several
could have the most relevance and
complex use cases and, by work-
impact for a customer. The Essent
ing with them, use algorithms to be
Commercial Director Boudewijn den
predictive,” Singh explains. One of the
Herder is working very closely with
very impactful use cases is centered
Singh’s team on this and states: “I
around retail energy management
believe we can nurture customer
and demand forecasting. “By using
relationships much better with this
the Amazon Sagemaker DeepAR
kind of technology that can enable
forecasting algorithm in a success-
us to work in an omnichannel approach.
ful pilot, we were able to develop a
We can be more relevant, more w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
191
NAVIGATE THE FUTURE OF ENERGY WITH INFOSYS
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Š 2019 Infosys Limited, Bengaluru, India.
INNOGY SE
“ We should not be benchmarking ourselves with what energy companies are doing” — Kuldip Singh, Digital Director Retail International, Retail Leadership team
194
NOVEMBER 2019
personalised, and more real-time in our offerings, whenever that needs to be done.” Singh adds: “We apply digital innovations to our sustainability products and services with the clear ambition to keep this planet a great place to live and work, not only for the current generation, but for many generations to come.” The acquisition of innogy by E.ON has also given it a much wider scope to expand. “Together with E.ON, innogy is going to be even bigger; we will grow from 11 to 15 countries, in which we service 50mn+ customers with more than 70,000 employees. I believe that we are even better set up for scaling digital in the future,” says Singh. “My intention is to build upon the good things we’ve done in this retail digital transformation and, of course, learn from the great things that E.ON is doing and ensure that together one plus one becomes three.”
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196
Stora Enso: the future of manufacturing just got smarter WRITTEN BY
DAN BRIGHTMORE PRODUCED BY
MANUEL NAVARRO
NOVEMBER 2019
197
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STORA ENSO
Stora Enso’s digitisation programme is realising the benefits of automation and 5G to optimise efficiency, flexibility, and availability in production
S
tora Enso is among the world’s oldest companies with more than 700 years of heritage, encompassing mining, iron and
wood activities, stretching back to the 13th century. Today it focuses on all of the possibilities to manu198
facture a diverse range of products made from renewable materials with the forest and the trees as their foundation. Marko Yli-Pietilä, Head of Smart Operations at Stora Enso, is in charge of driving the digitalisation and transformation programmes allied to global smart operations in all areas of the business: consumer board, bio materials, paper, packaging solutions and wood products. “The Smart Operations team is responsible for accelerating digitalisation in our operations, but that is only one part of Stora Enso’s overall digitalisation programme. We also look at digitalising the customer interface, supply chain digitalisation and back office digitalisation with HR and finance processes,” he says. “In addition to this, we work with the startup community to develop new digital solutions as well NOVEMBER 2019
199
as nurturing our own internal startup initiatives to develop new digital products.” One of those successful solutions is the new retail solution for unmanned retail, which was launched during 2019. The digitisation of Stora Enso’s manufacturing fleet comprises around 100 production lines across many factories and is vital to achieve higher operational efficiency. “Operationally, we manufacture a diverse range of wood-based products. We’re also producing many w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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ABB is proud to support Stora Enso’s digitalization journey ABB Ability™ Collaborative Operations Designed to unite autonomous digital technologies and decision making, ABB Ability™ Collaborative Operations is built on ABB Ability™, ABB’s unified, cross-industry, digital platform that securely collects data on the health and performance of equipment from onsite smart devices and operation-critical systems. ABB experts monitor this data remotely while applying advanced data analytics to isolate trends and pinpoint issues. The result is actionable recommendations that address potential problems, advise on preventive maintenance priorities, and illuminate ways to improve performance. ABB Ability™ Collaborative Operations is a true Industrial Internet of Things application and is part of the company’s portfolio of ABB Ability™ digital solutions. Collaborative Operations provides performance management, remote monitoring and preventive analysis technologies to improve security, efficiency and productivity. ABB Ability™ Collaborative Operations for paper mills identifies and addresses production, quality and cost issues
that can inhibit peak performance. This improves return on capital. In particular, ABB’s solutions are helping to: • Centralize and streamline operations. By applying remote connectivity and analytics to process and equipment data, producers can empower teams in centralized control rooms, which have the automated tools and visualization capabilities to help teams make decisions and process improvements, throughout the mill and also the enterprise. • Increase energy efficiency. Technologies that enable the alignment of production schedules to energy supply and demand help optimize energy usage according to fluctuating energy costs. • Achieve safety goals. Using technologies that increasingly automate tasks within the space of rotating and moving machinery reduces the risk of injuries. Meanwhile, remote services and augmented reality can help avoid human contact with live current. • Reduce costs through advanced process control (APC). Delivering APC using a performance-based approach and business model allows mills to stay ahead of problems and continuously optimize processes to make more with less. This also allows mills to focus improvements on known areas of complexity like the pulp mill and the wet end of the paper machine. The future, today Whatever the specifics of an operation or solution, ABB is supporting and guiding the pulp and paper industry on its journey toward ever more effective use of digitalization, creating next-level operations and realizing significant cost benefits. With its forward-thinking approach and industry-leading solutions, such as ABB Ability™ Collaborative Operations and ABB Ability™ Advanced Process Control, ABB is ready to be your partner in shaping the future, today.
STORA ENSO
completely new products, such as fiber- based composites,” says Yli-
202
“ The Smart Operations team is responsible for accelerating digitalisation in our operations, but that is only one part of Stora Enso’s overall digitalisation programme. We also look at digitalising the customer interface, supply chain digitalisation and back office digitalisation with HR and finance processes” — Marko Yli-Pietilä, Head of Smart Operations, Stora Enso
NOVEMBER 2019
Pietilä. “My role is focused on smart operations, which means the digitisation of production and maintenance needed to keep our factories running efficiently also in future.” Stora Enso started investing in its digitisation programme three years ago and has now completed around 160 different projects including artificial intelligence (AI), augmented reality, machine learning (ML) and virtual reality (VR). “We’ve tested almost all of
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘DRONE WOOD YARD INVENTORY’ 203 the technologies on the Gartner hype
Whatever you need to do in your work
curve,” reveals Yli-Pietilä. “We’re using
here, you can do while on the move.”
big data and examining different kinds
Yli-Pietilä believes people are a hugely
of wearables, including smart glasses.”
important aspect of this transforma-
He adds that analytics is probably the
tion. “They need to learn new skills to
strongest area of focus at present. “We
understand how analytics works and
have company-wide mobile maintenance
be familiar with different mobile tools,
tools available both for maintenance
because there will be many applications
personnel and operators when they do
used in the field, and also in different
maintenance-related tasks. Our peo-
operating rooms. It’s very important
ple can also do safety notifications on
we create a unified user experience to
the move, and we also visualise things
teach users,” he says of the company’s
already in 3D formats. The use of 3D
quest to develop unified UIs.
models makes it’s very easy to under-
To support these transformation
stand where things are happening.
goals the company has created a Stora w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
OUR INDUSTRIAL INTERNET OFFERING Advanced reporting and guidance
Asset reliability optimization
Operations performance optimization
Valmet Performance Center
A meaningful dialogue with data Accumulation of high-quality data will be a key source of future business value. While machines and equipment are one part of a wider, intelligent production system that creates value, software and analytics will play an increasing role in transforming data into digital services and solutions. At Valmet, the offering of Industrial Internet applications and services is based on know-how in process technology, automation and services. This unique combination gives industry specific, proven solutions.
Ultimately, data analytics is just one of many methods available to support decision making. Other methods must also be brought into play to enable the analysis of variations and the comparison of different options.
Improved predictability, profitability and quality
From system-level control to a holistic process approach
Advanced analytics provide good tools to evaluate indicators signaling a need for predictive maintenance, such as temperature and vibration measurements or energy consumption. A good example of the capabilities of advanced analytics is paper machine web break prediction, where root causes for breaks are analyzed and a prediction model is developed. This enables monitoring the parameters affecting a web break and issuing early warnings so that corrective action can be taken before the break happens. Another example is paper strength modelling, which allows controlling of raw material parameters so that a specified paper strength is achieved while optimizing the raw material usage from a cost point of view.
Thanks to the accumulating data, it is possible to take a holistic approach and optimize production by evaluating the entire production chain. Industrial internet also enhances asset management and brings value by making both processes and operations more effective. → www.valmet.com
STORA ENSO
206
Enso design concept called SEEDS
an environment capable of fostering
(Stora Enso Design System). “SEEDS
a collaborative ecosystem. “We aim
is a publicly available set of instructions
to build data assets, like the Stora Enso
and code which enables designers and
IIOT platform, which our partners can
developers to build a user experience
access. In that way we can use the
aligned with Stora Enso requirements,”
same data in the applications they
explains Yli-Pietilä. “The companies we
co-develop with us and deliver to us,”
partner with in the digitalisation area
explains Yli-Pietilä.
can access these assets to help them
Three years on and the success of
develop the services they are deliver-
Stora Enso’s approach is already
ing to us.”
apparent with the company achieving
Stora Enso works with a variety of
second place for ‘Best implementation
partners, from agile startups to larger
of IIoT on the shop floor’ at the 2019
companies, with a focus on creating
Industry of Things World Award. “We
NOVEMBER 2019
are the first company in our industry
Stora Enso’s efforts to achieve key
to have implemented 5G to enable
targets such as “optimising efficiency,
real-time 360° camera solutions in
flexibility, and availability” in production.
our production environment,” says
During the acceleration of its digital
Yli-Pietilä. “This allows experts all over
transformation, Yli-Pietilä reflects on
the world to monitor certain areas
the biggest challenge he and his team
of the production and give guidance
have had to overcome over the past
when needed – ultimately making our
few years. “Handling the massive
production environment more efficient
amount of data we generate in the
and safer.” The 5G solution will support
process industry is always a challenge,”
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Marko Yli-Pietilä I spent more than a decade at Nokia, in a variety of telecommunications roles and then worked in data management, and data warehousing,” recalls Stora Enso’s Head of Smart Operations, Marko Yli-Pietilä. “This experience was perfect preparation for my role at Stora Enso.” Communication and data will be the cornerstone for the 5G revolution, one that Yli-Pietilä is excited to welcome in with the wealth of opportunities it will provide for efficiency and productivity. “My background helps to understand what you can actually do with the data and how you need to organise the data in order to have it in use in the best possible way. And with my experience in management consulting, I appreciate the value in combining digital assets or data assets, how you use the data across distances, and how you then transform this data into something valuable.” He believes organisations can utilise the new capabilities offered by digital transformation to achieve many business targets including revenue growth, better operational efficiency and improved customer experience management.”
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STORA ENSO
700+
Years of history
€10.49bn Approximate revenue
26,000 208
Number of employees
NOVEMBER 2019
209
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sustain peak performance.
Benchmark your actual process and asset performance data against your expected performance with Honeywell Forge for Industrial, for better decisions that impact reliability, safety and profitability. For more information, please visit: www.honeywellprocess.com/iiot
he admits. “We’re constantly looking at how we can get the data to be available for these advanced intelligent applications and is why we decided to build a Stora Enso IIoT (Industrial Internet of Things) cloud-based platform. We are using a lot of resources to organise the data in the cloud so that we can have this integrated data asset in use by these applications that we are building in collaboration with different vendors.” When Stora Enso needs to communicate across operations in real-time this is achieved by the close proximity of its digital tools to the production
“ SEEDS is a publicly available set of instructions and code which enables designers and developers to build a user experience aligned with Stora Enso requirements” — Marko Yli-Pietilä, Head of Smart Operations, Stora Enso
line. Now, Yli-Pietilä is keen to take things a step further. “We want to predict what will happen in the future, and
reliability. “We want to be able to
we also want to prescribe. We’re trying
advise people to take actions to make
to do prescriptive analytics, not just to
the future look like we want it to look,
tell users what will happen in the future,
with product quality, machine perfor-
but also advise them what they need to
mance, and the reliability of equipment
do to perform in their work in the best
related to the maintenance,” confirms
possible way. We’re building prescrip-
Yli-Pietilä.
tive analytics solutions using AI and
“How we measure the success and
ML, because then you’re not actually
performance of these tools is actually
in real-time — you’re in the future.”
through the business KPIs that we use
Stora Enso already has AI-based
to measure our operational efficiency
applications in use that can see
in general. We start following up those
12 hours into the future with good
business KPIs, so that our digital w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
211
STORA ENSO
SU S TA I N A B I L I T Y AT STO R A EN SO
Stora Enso supports all 17 of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs); the following three goals have been identified as the most strategic to the business: SDG 12: The use of renewable materials. Involvement in the bioeconomy and circular economy. Innovating to improve resource and material efficiency.
212
SDG 13: Renewable materials are an important part of the carbon cycle. They grow back and keep absorbing carbon dioxide and storing carbon. Identify and analyse carbon risks and opportunities to establish their financial and non-financial impacts, the likelihood of their occurrence, and their root causes. Stora Enso the first to set ambitious science-based targets for reducing its greenhouse gas emissions in 2017. SDG 15: 100% of Stora Enso’s main raw material, wood, comes from sustainably managed forests that grow back. Safeguarding forest biodiversity. As wood is its most important raw material, Stora Enso’s key risks cover forest and land use.
NOVEMBER 2019
transformation becomes a normal part of our business development also linked to profit and operations improvement.” Yli-Pietilä explains how prescriptive tools can help maintain ongoing production quality. “Paper is produced at around 100km per hour and you need to be able to adjust the process in real-time to maintain the quality our customers expect. Those tools require calculation and predictive capabilities for us to be able to advise the operators that are running the machine to do the process changes necessary to keep production at the optimal level for as long as possible.” The company is also considering testing more flexible and intelligent robots, such as exoskeletons, to assist production workers. Elsewhere, testing is underway to examine the potential benefits of audio analytics. “Based on the sounds we are hearing, we’re analysing how machines are running and if there’s any evidence of a potential malfunction in the future,” he explains. Across its business development the two most important trends for Stora Enso are climate change and sustainability. “After all, we are in the w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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STORA ENSO
214
business of replacing fossil-based material with materials that are made
“ We’re building prescriptive analytics solutions using AI and ML, because then you’re not actually in real-time — you’re in the future” — Marko Yli-Pietilä, Head of Smart Operations, Stora Enso NOVEMBER 2019
out of wood,” says Yli-Pietilä. “We have been transforming our product portfolio for years towards that goal.” Though in smart operations Yli-Pietilä’s team have focused on the operational efficiencies of the manufacturing fleet, their efforts are still contributing to sustainability targets with energy efficiency for example. “We are very keen to develop our water treatment processes to be more sustainable every day and CO2 is something we
215
are looking at really carefully and how
and availability of the machinery
we can bring those numbers down to
because by increasing the automation
contribute positively to our climate
level we can then affect these key KPIs
change targets,” he confirms.
positively. While we’re doing this, it
With automation levels in its mills
automatically makes the workplace
already high, Stora Enso aims to raise
safer every day.” With automation on
automation levels further while making
the rise, Yli-Pietilä believes the concept
work safer. “If we can automate more of
of ‘dark mills’ is firmly on the agenda
the potentially dangerous operations,
for helping to build a sustainable future.
we will also be increasing our overall
Digitisation has unlocked the door;
operational efficiencies (OEE),” adds
Stora Enso is taking steps to shape the
Yli-Pietilä. “OEE is our most important
corridor beyond.
KPI when it comes to operations. We will then look at performance, quality, w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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Teaching emerging technology and adaptable mindsets at the STC Academy NOVEMBER 2019
217
WRITTEN BY
HARRY MENEAR PRODUCED BY
JAMES PEPPER
STC ACADEMY
Dr Moudhi Aljamea, General Manager of the Digital School at STC Academy, talks innovation in education, and how she is helping to reinvent the culture of Saudi Arabia’s largest telco
T
he technology landscape is always changing. New technologies like quantum computing and 5G surge into the mar-
ketplace, while trends like cloud and IoT adoption 218
barely transition into the mainstream. As it was theorised by Charles Darwin, “it is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change.” In the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, it is a time of upheaval and rapid advancement, as the nation continues its supercharged adoption of digital technologies and strategies in preparation for Vision 2030 - the central goal of which is to reduce the Kingdom’s dependence on oil and petrochemicals, diversify its economy and develop sectors like health, education, infrastructure, recreation and tourism. “This is an exciting time for us in Saudi Arabia. I think that, with the support of our company and our government, we will reach the goals we are aiming for,” enthuses Dr Moudhi Aljamea, General
NOVEMBER 2019
219
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STC ACADEMY
“ Because I have this mixture of technical and academic backgrounds I found the idea of working in a corporate academy very interesting”
Manager of the Digital School at the STC Academy. As General Manager of the Digital School in the STC Academy, Aljamea is at the centre of a digital operation that will have a perceptible effect on the Saudi telecommunications space for decades to come. We sat down with her to find out more about her role in reinventing the culture of the Kingdom’s largest telco. “My father was an electrical engi-
220
— Dr Moudhi Aljamea, General Manager, Digital School, STC Academy
neer, and my uncle was the person who introduced the Arabic language to computing, so I come from a very technologically-oriented family,” she
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘TC – GITEX 2019’ 221 recalls. After obtaining a bachelor’s in
I have this mixture of technical and
Computer and Information Systems
academic backgrounds, I found
from King Faisal University, and
the idea of working in a corporate
following a stint running her own
academy very interesting,” she
software business, Aljamea accepted
remembers. “I think it’s a known prob-
a government scholarship to travel
lem that there’s this gap between
to London where, after completing
academia and industry. Working at
a Masters and obtained her PhD
the Academy presents the opportu-
in Computer Security from King’s
nity to do both at the same time and
College in 2016. Specialising in algo-
help fill this gap, which is exciting.”
rithm design for cyber security, she is
The role of the STC Academy as an
a certified Ethical Hacker, a veteran
education provider to the company’s
of working in academia, and became
executive staff presents Aljamea and
the first woman to join STC’s execu-
her team with an interesting set of chal-
tive team in February 2019. “Because
lenges. “They are almost all experts w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
STC ACADEMY
222
in their own field,” she explains. “It’s
with STC’s partner companies. “We
not like working with a student, or in a
don’t use off the shelf programs from
university, or running a training course.
third party vendors; we always cus-
They’re executives that are taking time
tomise our programs. The customer
out of their busy days, so in order to
experience of our clients within the
engage them, they need to see some-
program is paramount, so the STC
thing worth leaving work for.”
Academy makes sure that what we
In order to create educational
are delivering is custom tailored to our
courses that engage STC execu-
executives,” Aljamea explains. “We try
tives, the STC Academy’s curriculum
to avoid traditional methods of deliv-
is focused around introducing them
ering courses, instead focusing on
to new technologies through highly
interactivity. We’re designing cyberse-
customised and immersive training
curity labs, for example, in order to run
courses developed in conjunction
simulations that allow our executives to
NOVEMBER 2019
2018
Year founded
10.8mn+
Revenue in Saudi Riyal, generated by STC
47
Number of academy employees
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Dr Moudhi Aljamea Dr. Moudhi Aljamea has a PhD in Computer Security Algorithms Design from King’s College London, Dr. Aljamea currently is the General Manger of the ICT School at STC Academy (Saudi Telcom Company). She is the first Saudi woman to occupy an executive position in the company and has vast experience in cyber and information security. Prior to joining STC, she was the president of an entrepreneurship unit and business incubator and an assistant Professor in cyber security at Imam Abdurrahman Bin Faisal University, she is considered as one of the Saudis experts in the computer security field.
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223
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225 live through the experience of a cyber attack.” Increasing cyber threat awareness and readiness in its executives is a top priority of STC and the Academy. “The more connected we become, the more we are exposed to cyber risk. The weakest link in every system is the human aspect, so, as an executive, increasing awareness of this type of threat is critical,” Aljamea says. In addition to cyber security, Aljamea explains that the Academy’s program also delivers education in the fields of data analytics and artificial intelligence (AI). “I have a vision that
“ We try to avoid traditional methods of delivering courses, instead focusing on interactivity” — Dr Moudhi Aljamea, General Manager, Digital School, STC Academy w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
STC ACADEMY
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NOVEMBER 2019
every employee at STC should have at least a basis of knowledge regarding cyber security and data analytics. It doesn’t require a technical background; it’s something that they should know about. So, one of the things we’re doing is developing our executives knowledge of data analytics,” she says. “We also focus on AI. We just launched an AI competition for our employees to encourage them to come up
227
with, develop and prototype an idea relating to AI.” Across
“ You never know what the future will bring. Maybe tomorrow we’ll be dealing with new technology that we don’t know anything about today” — Dr Moudhi Aljamea, General Manager, Digital School, STC Academy w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
STC ACADEMY
228
NOVEMBER 2019
multiple digital disciplines, Aljamea and the STC Academy is constantly pushing to increase engagement in digital sectors and new technologies. Aljamea notes, however, that the rapidly changing pace of technology means that, more important to the Academy and STC as a whole than educating executives on technology applications, is helping cultivate an agile perspective and approach. “You never know what the future will bring. Maybe tomorrow we’ll be dealing with new technology that we don’t know anything about today.” As a result, while introducing its executives to new use cases for technologies such as 5G, quantum computing and AI, the deeper goal is to develop an executive team to whom adaptability is a second nature survival trait. Looking to the future, Aljamea is confident that although “what our executives are learning today might not be important tomorrow, with this agile mindset, they can easily adapt to whatever tomorrow may bring.”
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230
NOVEMBER 2019
231
Answering the questions of a fast-changing world WRITTEN BY
WILLIAM SMITH PRODUCED BY
NATHAN HOLMES
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AT O S
Uli Braun, CTO, Asia Pacific, at IT service provider Atos, discusses the ways in which Atos is future-proofing companies in Asia and beyond
A 232
s a global IT services and solutions leader, Atos has experience in digital transformation across the world. Its services are
tailored to the areas in which they are offered, a function performed in Asia Pacific by Uli Braun, CTO for the region. Braun’s role sees him lead several complementary departments in the Asia Pacific region. “As CTO, I’m leading portfolio and pre-sales for Asia Pacific and I’m also in charge of analyst relationships in the region. Basically, we take our global portfolio, apply it to the Asia-Pacific market and make it work in a local context.” It’s a region that brings its own unique set of challenges and possibilities, as Braun explains. “There’s two key challenges. Firstly, more than any other, AsiaPacific is large, complicated and extremely diverse. Adapting to the economic and cultural diversity is a real challenge. Secondly, there are low cost
NOVEMBER 2019
233
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INNOVATE WITH THE MODERN DATA EXPERIENCE
Pure Modern Data Experience: Transforming the Customer Approach to IT Pure Storage was founded with a simple mission: make powerful IT infrastructure that works like the best consumer technologies. That vision enabled our incredible growth story, because this new way of doing things gave customers things that they had not expected. For some, it was as simple as getting their nights and weekends back because they didn’t have to worry about the reliability of their systems. To others, it was fundamental enablement of their DevOps transformation. We are continually looking to improve our customers’ experience. We know customers see our investments in innovation as an investment in their futures. Our customers want services that grow and change on pace with their needs. They want all of their infrastructure to be delivered on-demand, as a service by API. And experience is a critical factor: Ease of use, interoperability, and a risk-free, smooth upgrade path drive our long-term strategic relevance. This is why we started talking about the need for a Modern Data Experience. Why are we investing in a Modern Data Experience? We see our customers facing multiple challenges, including executing ambitious plans for digital transformation. Technology leaders are rejecting excessive system complexity and technical debt that hinder infrastructure modernization efforts. The approach to Ops is changing: DevOps and AIOps are enabling companies to focus on managing
their business rather than managing infrastructure. And they’re hiring more developers. CIOs have a mandate to develop cloud initiatives that drive corporate value while addressing application performance bottlenecks. And every business wants to extract more intelligence from their data. The idea of a Modern Data Experience is core to who we are as a company – when our customers succeed, we succeed. And that’s why our vision for our next decade is to remake data storage and management in a way that serves an increasingly dynamic market. Simple. Seamless. Sustainable. A Modern Data Experience starts with a storageas-a-service approach to enable organizations to leverage more of their data while reducing the complexity and expense of managing infrastructure. Pure’s solution is simple to manage, effortless to customize and integrate, and creates seamless service levels and protocols—all operating in a multi-cloud environment. Most important, it delivers a sustainable infrastructure with our constantly improving Evergreen™ philosophy and programs, consumption based business models, and unified AI-driven management.
WRITTEN BY CHARLIE GIANCARLO
CHAIRMAN AND CEO, PURE STORAGE.
ABOUT PURE STORAGE Pure Storage (NYSE: PSTG) helps innovators build a better world with data. Pure’s data solutions enable SaaS companies, cloud service providers, and enterprise and public sector customers to deliver real-time, secure data to power their mission-critical production, DevOps, and modern analytics environments in a multi-cloud environment. One of the fastest growing enterprise IT companies in history, Pure Storage enables customers to quickly adopt next-generation technologies, including artificial intelligence and machine learning, to help maximize the value of their data for competitive advantage. And with a certified NPS customer satisfaction score in the top one percent of B2B companies, Pure’s ever-expanding list of customers are among the happiest in the world.
AT O S
“ Analyse the data, find the question, augment whatever is missing and then generate value from it – that’s the sequence”
markets where it can be very difficult to obtain the prices that we must charge in a global context for leading edge technology solutions. As a result, we deal mostly with multinational corporations.” The service that Atos offers goes beyond a simple hands-off IT transaction. “It’s a business conversation,” says Braun. “We need to first understand the customer’s business, and then match the IT challenges that they face with a solution that we as a company can offer them.” In Braun’s
236
experience, some of the biggest difficulties clients are running into stem from legacy systems. “In this region it’s most likely the biggest challenge of all, because it prevents IT departments from becoming more agile and business-focused. That legacy burden is very heavy, and it’s very difficult to fix for companies that are operating systems dating back to the 1980s or 90s.” Coming hand in hand with outdated systems can be legacy ways-of-thinking. “It’s not just a question of infrastructure. It holds back the entire business transformation, because the case is made NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘CONNECTING THE DOTS’
that ‘we have always been doing it
transformation. Whether imple-
this way, it has always worked, so
menting private, public or hybrid
why should we change to something
multi-cloud models, it’s a technology
else?’ That resistance to change can
that can significantly increase agility
be quite significant, because many
while reducing capital expenditure.
organisations are still very tradition-
But Braun is clear that the case for
ally structured. Quite often, the CIO
cloud is far more comprehensive.
reports to the CFO and IT is seen as
“Cloud computing enables you to do
a cost centre rather than a business
things faster and with less of a time
enabler. There’s nobody who owns
commitment. In the past you had to
the digital agenda.”
get the budget for a project and you
Atos is well placed to solve such
were then stuck with it for five years
challenges. One of the premier solu-
because you had invested in hard-
tions Atos can offer is in the cloud
ware, software, whatever it may be. w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
237
The cloud is not just infrastructure.
provide. Of course, Atos also offers
Yes, it’s storage and compute and
its own suite of cybersecurity prod-
memory and these kinds of things.
ucts extending beyond this basic
But it’s also APIs to tap into functions
level of protection. “We are a large
that you otherwise would have to
cybersecurity vendor with our own
build from scratch. Entire application
cybersecurity products. We have a
systems can be deployed in minutes
business unit that produces secure
or hours, versus weeks or months in
phones, chip sets, security products,
the past.”
identity management systems, as
The cloud also offers the atten-
well providing security monitoring
dant the benefit of improving
services. My standard answer to
cybersecurity beyond the level that
a client who asks why they should
internal servers and data centres can
come to Atos for cybersecurity is 239
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Uli Braun Uli Braun is leading Atos’ technology strategy, portfolio and presales organisation in Asia Pacific. As part of this role, he is responsible for the technology and service roadmap and its application to real-world customer situations. Prior to joining Atos, Uli has been leading Dimension Data’s consulting services in Asia Pacific, focusing with his team of technology consultants on advising enterprise clients on IT strategy, cloud migrations, virtualisation and cybersecurity. Braun previously worked at HP Enterprise Services where he has been leading HP’s network services in Asia Pacific and held various roles in service delivery, presales and transformation since 1996.
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“ Cloud computing enables you to do things faster and with less of a time commitment”
combination of various data sources.” But data remains meaningless when not interrogated by the correct questions. Sometimes these questions are self-evident, but often they prove more elusive. “Sometimes we don’t know the question. We can only find out what the question is by exploring the data. That’s why it’s complicated, and that’s why you need the expertise companies like Atos bring to
that we run the IT integration for the
the table. Analyse the data, find the
Olympic Games. It is one of the most
question, augment whatever is miss-
visible events in the world and yet
ing and then generate value from it
we have had zero security incidents
– that’s the sequence.”
since the partnership began.” Data, meanwhile, is the lifeblood
Atos always has an eye on the future of technology to ensure that
to many a modern organisation. Atos
what it is offering is future-proof.
specialises in ensuring that maxi-
“There are two areas where most of
mum value can be created from the
the R&D spending goes. One is in
data which clients have as well as the
cloud computing, and the other is in
data they do not. “Without data, there
AI and machine learning technolo-
is nothing to generate additional
gies – that’s across the spectrum from
business value from. Today, you don’t
hardware, such as IoT and edge
have to own all the data anymore,
devices, all the way to the software
because you can buy it and merge or
and application side. We also have
blend it with the data that you have
a Quantum Learning Machine that
within your own company and then
lets you test and prepare the devel-
generate value from that. The value
opment of quantum algorithms on
is not only in the data itself, it’s in the
traditional hardware.” To ascertain the w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
241
AT O S
The Power of Partnership
Health & Life Sciences Financial Services & Insurance Energy & Utilities
• 100 billion devices are coming online • Data at this scale will change your industry • Adapt now - accelerate your growth • Digital transformation with Dell EMC and Atos • No. 1 in every technology category from edge, to core, to cloud. • Pre-engineered solutions cut time, cost and risk
Manufacturing Public Sector & Defense Telecom, Media & Technology Retail Transport & Logistics
Visit atos.net/contactus
243
“ We need to change to stay relevant in the market of the future�
technologies of the future, Braun is part of a 150 member-strong scientific community at the company. Emerging technologies are being deployed in the real world, with Braun giving the example of deep learning being used for claims management in the healthcare sector or quantum algorithms that are used for the development and testing of new pharmaceuticals. Ultimately, in a rapidly changing world, Atos is ensuring that its clients and itself are in positions where they can thrive in a safe, secure and sustainable w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
AT O S
244
1997
Year founded
£11.bn+ Approximate revenue
110,000
Approximate number of employees NOVEMBER 2019
© RomiREA
CO MPAN Y FACT S
• Atos runs the cybersecurity operation for the Olympic Games • A 150 member-strong scientific community exists at the company
environment. “We have a window of opportunity in the next two years to change the way we are doing things, and the skills our staff can offer to the market. We have about 110,000 employees worldwide, so it’s no small task. We need to change to stay relevant in the market of the future, and we need to be more mature with our clients rather than just sitting there and waiting for them to tell us what they want us to do. We have a responsibility for the future of our clients’ businesses and we need to be partners on their journey into the digital future.”
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246
AI
for Good
WRITTEN BY
MATT HIGH PRODUCED BY
NATHAN HOLMES
NOVEMBER 2019
247
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MICROSOFT
Microsoft is using pioneering technology including AI and machine learning to address the world’s most critical challenges
A
ccording to the UN’s Environment Emissions Gap Report 2018, “now more than ever, unprecedented and urgent
action is required” to address the climate and sustainability crisis faced globally. Achieving 248
a sustainable and prosperous planet requires a concerted effort and, in this era, the pace of movement must be accelerated. Chiefly, this acceleration can be achieved through the driving of collaboration between public-private partnerships, the greater enforcement of policy on a global scale, and, according to technology giant Microsoft, the harnessing of the power of digital technology to combat climate change. Elaborating on this, Mike Chan, General Manager Azure, Microsoft APAC, says: “At Microsoft we are committed to delivering on our environmental goals for sustainability and empowering our customers and partner ecosystem with the technology and tools to deliver on theirs. This starts with data capture, harnessing the power of the intelligent Cloud – a platform of limitless NOVEMBER 2019
249
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MICROSOFT
“ We are committed to delivering on our environmental goals for sustainability and empowering our customers and partner ecosystem” — Mike Chan General Manager Azure, Microsoft APAC 250
compute scale – and driving innovation to meet demanding business challenges and create meaningful impact with speed and agility.” Microsoft is leading the acceleration of movement in this field. The business, world-renowned for its innovative and pioneering technology, is working more closely than ever with partners and customers to use AI and other digital technologies to address global sustainability challenges. The former, for example, has the power to amplify human ingenuity and extend our capabilities so that we can achieve more, says Microsoft. “Democratising technology is of utmost importance to Microsoft; the power of accessibility and inclusivity in the digital age will transform industries, collectively enabling us to become more productive and jointly solve society’s biggest challenges,” says Sherie Ng, General Manager Public Sector APAC at the company. “With technology, we are empowered to create a future for the greater good – imagine a future with limitless possibilities.” On a wider level, the company believes in the power of technology
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘AI FOR GOOD’ 251 for the common good to drive soci-
years, investing $50mn in five years to
etal impact, and enable a range of
advance the use of cloud and AI tech-
economic and social opportunities.
nologies in an environmental capacity,
Through partnerships and investments
100% carbon neutrality across the
with the public, private and civic sec-
company’s global operations every
tors – the United Nations and other
year since 2012, and a 20% reduc-
global non-profit organisations – it
tion in product packaging for all new
aims to contribute towards achiev-
devices in 2018.
ing the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. Since 2009, Microsoft has made
In April this year, Microsoft announced it would close to double its internal carbon fee to $15 per met-
and met several commitments towards
ric tonne on all carbon emissions. It
environmental sustainability. These
also detailed ongoing plans to further
include a drive to cut operational car-
implement renewable energy and
bon emissions by 75% over the next 11
innovation into its data centres (60% w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
MICROSOFT
252
renewable energy use by 2020). Here, the business is dedicated to building a
and zero-waste. These achievements are impressive
“responsible cloud of the future�. It aims
enough in isolation. However, core to
to achieve this through measures such
Microsoft’s sustainability vision, is the
as ensuring that 50% of the current
belief that its ambition and the tech-
volume of electricity used by its data
nologies it develops should empower
centres is from green energy sources
others. In 2017, the company launched
such as wind, solar and hydropower.
its AI for Earth Grant initiative, which
In addition, Microsoft is committed
sees it partner with leading environ-
to its sustainable campuses building
mental and research groups to develop
initiative. These, in combination with its
AI, machine learning and cloud-related
smart building technology, will see the
solutions to problems such as climate
company become the first large corpo-
change. Since then, Microsoft has
rate campus to achieve zero-carbon
awarded more than 230 grants to
NOVEMBER 2019
recipients in around 60 countries. AI
that the company conducted with PwC
for Earth represents a US$50 million,
on how the technology can enable a
five-year commitment to put artificial
sustainable future. This suggested
intelligence technology in the hands of
several benefits to greater AI adoption,
individuals and organisations around
including reducing global greenhouse
the world who are working to protect
gas emissions by up to 4% by 2030,
the planet across four key areas – agri-
gains of as much as $5.2tn to busi-
culture, biodiversity, climate change,
nesses through improved productivity
and water. The initiative reinforces the
and automation, and a 4.4% rise on
crucial role that Microsoft believes AI
global GDP by 2030.
will play in the future. Further evidence of this can be found in a research paper
The business is currently working on several related projects with partners 253
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Sherie Ng Sherie leads Microsoft’s public sector business across Asia Pacific and, together with the larger partner ecosystem, spearheads and accelerates the pace of digital transformation for governments, healthcare and education institutions as well as large state-owned enterprises in the region. An industry veteran with more than 22 years of experience in managing businesses in the high tech sector, Sherie is passionate about technology’s role in enabling societal shifts and empowering people for inclusive and sustainable development of societies. Prior to Microsoft, Sherie was the managing director for NICE in Asia-Pacific, where she helped large enterprises embrace digital innovation for business breakthroughs with robotics, analytics, artificial intelligence, machine learning and smart data. Her previous experiences include leadership roles at Invensys, Singtel, CSG and Lucent Technologies.
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MICROSOFT
254
and customers in the energy sector
entered into partnership with Microsoft
under the banner of ‘tech intensity’,
to migrate Hermes to Microsoft Azure,
which describes using the latest tech-
thus improving inspection times sig-
nology to drive efficiencies and create
nificantly, allowing for the capture and
a more sustainable planet.
use of better data and enabling greater
Close collaboration with Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, for example, has helped to make renewable
predictive maintenance and fewer costly repairs. According to the World Health
energy more affordable and sustain-
Organization, a staggering 66 people
able. Siemens was previously using its
on average die in road accidents every
Hermes system – autonomous drones
day in Thailand. PTT Global Chemical
coupled with a digital platform – to
Public Company Limited (GC) plans
monitor its wind turbines. The company
to reduce the accident rate on the
NOVEMBER 2019
Bangkok to Rayong route and enable the safety of more than 4,000 employees that clock up around 8,000 trips between the two locations. GC worked with its shuttle drivers, Microsoft and Frontis to design the ‘AI for Road Safety’ solution, which uses facial recognition AI to detect and alert when drivers show signs of risk such as drowsiness and distraction. GC sees the programme as a major component of its intention to contribute to society, especially in Rayong, where the company has a number of factories Elsewhere, water and energy technologies provider Ecolab and energy
“ The power of accessibility and inclusivity in the digital age will transform industries” — Sherie Ng General Manager, Public Sector APAC Microsoft
company Orsted, have implemented Microsoft Azure, as well as its IoT and AI solutions, to make significant leaps forward in improving water conservation and the efficiency of renewable energy respectively. By 2050, the demand for food is expected to outpace production by over 70%. Farmers need access to better data on their land in order to maximise both efficiency and yield, while at the same time, reducing environmental impact. However, gathering data from farms is difficult due a si a .busi ne ssc h ief. com
255
MICROSOFT
256 to typically low technology adoption rates by farmers, particularly in the developing world, where access to technology is often limited. To address these issues, Microsoft is working to enabling greater precision in farming with the use of AI through Farmbeats. This uses the company’s machine learning algorithms, together with lowcost sensors, drones, and other data to deliver actionable insights to farmers. Microsoft believes that this data, coupled with the farmer’s knowledge of his or her farm, can help to increase farm productivity while reducing NOVEMBER 2019
environmental impact and out-ofpocket costs. With transport and buildings making a significant contribution to global greenhouse gas emissions, Microsoft is also focused on ‘architecture for the new world’, or smart cities. In this field, the business has several key innovations around smart buildings and smart energy. Microsoft ICONICS, for example, is a smart building software that collects and analyses IoT sensor data from building management systems to give information on general property status, as well as where improvements can be made to achieve greater energy efficiency and lower maintenance costs. An example of the company’s work in this sector can be seen in the Taiwanese capital, Taipei. The city has experienced rapid growth in recent years, and thus city planners were looking for methods of streamlining its municipal operations while improving energy efficiency and safety for citizens. Microsoft partnered with local company AAEON to develop an IoT-based solution that would form the basis of a cloud-based monitoring system for the city’s more than 150,000 w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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MICROSOFT
street lights. Previously, city officials had followed a reactive maintenance programme, based on citizens reporting light failures before maintenance teams were eventually sent to the location. Instead, the AAEON Lighting Control System enables predictive and preventive maintenance, optimises the duration that the lights are on in order to maximise safety and forms part of a greater holistic ecosystem for a wider smart city concept. Naturally, such dedication to as important a cause as the world’s 258
climate requires a resolute and single-minded culture within the business. Microsoft believes that every
“ Microsoft believes that every employee must play a central role in transformation and making a difference […] this mindset is fostered under the theme of ‘AI for Good’” — Sherie Ng General Manager, Public Sector APAC Microsoft NOVEMBER 2019
employee must play a central role in transformation and making a difference. The company encourages members of staff to always focus on learning, to take risks and to fail fast – by doing so, it states, they will make a difference and find a deeper meaning in their work. This mindset is fostered under the theme of ‘AI for Good’: combining the company’s technology and expertise in artificial intelligence and data science with the talent and expertise of groups around the world in fields such as environmental science,
1975
Year founded
$125bn+ Approximate revenue (2019)
259
disability needs and humanitarian
global network capable of connecting
assistance to create a more sustain-
billions, even trillions, of datapoints
able and accessible world.
about the global environment. This
In the longer term, Microsoft remains
system, says Joppa, would have
focused on leveraging the power of
“the computing power and machine
technology and innovation. In particu-
learning tools to process them into
lar, according to the company’s Chief
actionable insights that will empower
Sustainability Officer Lucas Joppa,
decision makers in every corner of the
the ultimate solution could come in
globe to put sustainability first. And,
the form of an ambitious and innova-
although parts of this plan may seem
tive “planetary computer”. The scale of
like science fiction, it could be a reality
innovation here would be significant, as
in the near future.”
Joppa explains, revolving around the development and implementation of a w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
260
EDUCATION THROUGH TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION
NOVEMBER 2019
WRITTEN BY
MATT HIGH PRODUCED BY
STUART IRVING 261
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TOI OHOMAI INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
FOR TOI OHOMAI INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, DIGITAL INNOVATION IS IMPROVING REGIONAL EDUCATION, AS RABINDRA DAS EXPLAINS
A
lot can happen in a year. That’s certainly the case for the Toi Ohomai Institute of Technology, one of New Zealand’s larg-
est technology institutes that, in October 2018, embarked on a digital journey with a human-centric approach. In just under 12 months, and following the implementation of several innovative technolo262
gies, Toi Ohomai has improved the agility of its operations, created new resources for its students and staff and increased conversion rates. Head of Information Technology at Toi Ohomai, Rabindra Das, has been instrumental in the rollout of the institute’s digital plan. He explains that the impetus for the change lies in a complex merger that the organisation went through three years prior, in 2016, when two regional institutions in New Zealand’s Bay of Plenty – one in Tauranga and one in Rotorua – came together. “It was really driven by a desire to better serve the region as a whole,” says Das, recalling the high unemployment and lower socio-economic demographic in the wider Bay of Plenty area. “It’s so important to us to engage with our local communities so that they have the best opportunity to take part in tertiary education – it’s NOVEMBER 2019
263
“ IT’S ALL ABOUT PROVIDING THE VERY BEST REGIONAL DELIVERY WE CAN” Rabindra Das, Head of Information Technology, Toi Ohomai Institute
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Customer driven networking Creating a secure, self-healing network requires the latest technological advancements. Extreme Networks has the expertise in network automation, security, machine learning and analytics to help you drive your digital transformation journey forward.
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CLICK TO WATCH : ‘LEARN BY DOING – TOI OHOMAI INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY’ 265 all about providing the very best deliv-
delivering new and improved services,
ery in line with the needs of the region.”
to run our organisation more efficiently
Between 2016 and the start of this
and effectively, and have the founda-
year, Das was occupied with the merg-
tions in place to start looking at the new
ing of various disparate systems that
capabilities we needed.”
were used by the two institutes into one
Those new capabilities formed the
central solution. It was, he admits, a
basis of the digital plan that was imple-
challenging task: “We had two organi-
mented towards the end of 2018. In
sations coming together, two IT teams
late spring of that year, as Das explains,
with their own methods of operating and
the institute began considering ways
at different levels of maturity from an IT
in which it could improve student
perspective. We had a limited budget
recruitment and engagement, offer
with which to carry out the merger, so
a better customer experience and
it was a challenge, but we knew that in
connect the staff across campuses
the end we’d be in a position to begin
more effectively. “Our conversion w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
TOI OHOMAI INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
266
ratios were quite low,” he says. “We
centred around five key strategic goals
used various human-centric design
to support the business. Work under
thinking methods to approach the
these goals included improving and
issue from a different angle. Rather
streamlining the online applications
than set out the problem and come
process, implementing new wifi and
up with a solution, we got out there,
campus network switches across
carried out empathy studies, spoke
all campuses, developing innovative
to students to fully uncover the inhibi-
digital workspaces for staff, and the
tors and problems they faced, and it
creation of a student portal app. “It’s
proved invaluable – it was the catalyst
not just about creating new systems,”
we needed for real change.”
he notes, “it’s about looking more
In response to the feedback, Das
broadly to revolutionise the way that
and his team developed and rolled
we work and empower staff to become
out the institute’s strategic IT plan,
more productive.”
NOVEMBER 2019
267
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Rabindra Das Rabindra is an experienced IT professional with over 25 years’ commercial experience in corporate organisations like Johnson & Johnson Medical, Lucent Technologies and Gen-i (now Spark); the last ten years have been within Tertiary Education at Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and Toi Ohomai Institute of Technology. Rabindra is an elected officer for the Rhubarb Committee which is a Bay of Plenty organisation looking to take the Bay to the forefront of innovation, technology and talent development. Rabindra also sits on the IT Professionals NZ Tauranga Committee. Rabindra recently completed a Post Grad in Leadership at the Waikato Management School, and is continuing his learning journey with an online Masters in Management at Massey.
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TOI OHOMAI INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
268
2016
Year founded
£90mn+ Approximate revenue
750
Approximate number of employees
NOVEMBER 2019
269
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Transforming Your Campus Services into a Personalised Mobile Experience campusM delivers a mobile app and portal that helps institutions deliver on their strategic goals and gives their students a one-stop shop for everything they need. Personalise your services
campus
+61 402 901 113 www.campusm.com
Understandably, technology played
campusM platform. It was one of
a big part in this revolution. “Regardless
many developments we knew we had
of the hardware we had on site, we
to realise. The students needed a cen-
knew we had to have a really solid and
tral place or hub that they can use to
robust network,” Das explains. “For
find out information in order to network
that reason, one of the first things
and to engage with the institution. It’s
we did was to ensure our campuses
been very well received; I think we’re
were well connected. We provided a
somewhere in the region of 5,000
solid base and ensured a consistent
downloads which is a fantastic result.”
user experience at every location. We
“It’s really important that we don’t
partnered with Extreme Networks
rest on our laurels,” he adds. “The app
to deliver this capability which was a
has been successful, but it’s now a
huge undertaking, but it was delivered
case of ‘what’s next?’. We’re approach-
successfully and without issue. The
ing this by asking those students that
student portal app uses Exlibris’
haven’t downloaded the app why they
NOVEMBER 2019
“WE USED VARIOUS HUMAN-CENTRIC DESIGN THINKING METHODS TO APPROACH THE ISSUE FROM A DIFFERENT ANGLE” Rabindra Das, Head of Information Technology, Toi Ohomai Institute 271 haven’t, and to gain as much feedback as we can from those that have. As part of this, and to encourage further uptake, we’re considering using campusM to create an app for our staff too. A student attendance app is likely to be the first module on the app, which would modernise and streamline how we currently record attendance.” With regards to improving how the institute’s staff approach their work, Das is keen to highlight the new modern intranet solution that has been rolled out. “We had two legacy w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
TOI OHOMAI INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
272
“ REGARDLESS OF THE HARDWARE WE HAD ON SITE, WE KNEW WE HAD TO HAVE A REALLY SOLID AND ROBUST NETWORK” Rabindra Das, Head of Information Technology, Toi Ohomai Institute
NOVEMBER 2019
intranets and an interim one, however, fairly early into the merger process, we all agreed that it was essential to have a single version for everyone to use. Rather than a change, it’s been a leap to an innovative digital workplace that has collaboration tools, communication capabilities and other really great features that have really helped. Any significant change should be started from the top, so measures like this have been
over 100 people using it, and that number is growing as we start moving into a proper deployment phase.” The last 12 months has seen the institute build a firm foundation on which it can continue its digital journey. Most of the goals originally set, confirms Das, have been met or are currently on track. Looking further ahead, there are plans in place to update the student app further to increase its capabilities in line with a new cohort of students joining. “Elsewhere, we’re looking at additional automation across various systems, as well as integrating things like machine learning and AI, particularly when it comes to interpreting the data that we collect and providing really important in moving forwards.”
analysis or trends. Through combining
“In this vein, our exec team embraced
all these technologies and systems, it’s
being early adopters and were the
all coming together and we’re seeing
‘pilot team’ in terms of introducing
great results, including increasing our
new developments like Microsoft
student conversion ratios this year. We
Teams, and they’ve really loved it,” he
now have the capabilities to expand our
continues. “It’s given us all new ways
offering, and we fully intend to do so.”
of working, and improved things like organisational communication and collaboration. However, most importantly, it’s brought everyone closer together. What turned out to be a pilot now has w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
273
Tested and true WRITTEN BY
274
DAN BRIGHTMORE PRODUCED BY
STUART IRVING
NOVEMBER 2019
275
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REVOLUTION IT
How Revolution IT offers independence from systems integrators and developers to make sure each client gets a quality assured outcome
R
evolution IT was born in 2003 when the company’s trio of directors were working
in London as IT consultants on major projects, including the merger of Glaxo Wellcome and
276
SmithKline Beecham. They noticed that the UK were ahead on project delivery, quality assurance and governance around IT projects. Inspired, they hatched a plan to start an IT business founded on the sole purpose of helping its clients deliver successful projects while ensuring that the software was high quality, secure, and reliable. “There was a real need for independent governance and testing services in Australia at that time,” recalls Jamie Duffield, Director and CEO of Revolution IT. “We felt that it was the right time to revolutionise project delivery.” Revolution’s current offering spans three business units: Assure – testing, performance, automation, and crowdsourced testing; Secure – application security and cyber security; and Transform – experience design, DevOps, PPM, NOVEMBER 2019
277
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Does balancing speed, quality and scale feel like rocket science? LEARN MORE
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Blast off with the Micro Focus Application Delivery Management portfolio. Continuous quality and application security at the speed of DevOps. Accelerate your organisation’s ability to deliver high quality applications at enterprise scale and unlock the value of investments you’ve already made. Manage continuous quality, secure your applications, automate your releases with an integrated DevSecOps toolchain at the speed to meet business demands. Micro Focus helps you run and transform your business. Driven by customer-centric innovation, our software provides the critical tools you need to build, operate, secure, and analyse the enterprise in a constantly changing world.
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Enterprise DevOps – Build and deliver better software faster Hybrid IT Management – Operate with agility Security, Risk & Governance – Secure what matters most Predictive Analytics – Analyse in time to act Application Security– Secure applications by embedding strong security and best practices into DevOps processes
Revolution IT is a Platinum Micro Focus partner in Australia. Please contact Revolution IT for more information on Micro Focus software solutions coupled with Revolution IT services.
microfocus.com/devops 61 1300 275 738 info@revolutionit.com.au revolutionit.com.au
REVOLUTION IT
“ We mix and match services, tools, training and IP to give our clients innovative solutions to deliver their projects and leave them with long lasting improvements” 280
— Jamie Duffield, Director and CEO, Revolution IT
delivered both onsite and offsite at our labs.” Quality is paramount for Revolution. “You get what you pay for in this industry,” he says of the company’s cheap offshore competitors. He believes they can’t match Revolution’s creativity. “We mix and match services, tools, training and IP to give our clients innovative solutions to deliver their projects and leave them with long lasting improvements.” Duffield adds that Revolution’s independence from the systems integrator and developer means it is entirely focused on making sure the client gets a quality outcome. “This independence allows us to call
Data Engineering and Data Analytics.
out the quality concerns and repre-
Successfully delivering projects to
sent the client with their best interests
over 700 clients, Duffield believes
at heart.”
Revolution has earned a reputation
Revolution IT has a Test
as a trusted partner because of its
Management Office (TMO) solu-
exceptional offering and unshakeable
tion that establishes a commercially
ability to navigate the complexities in
unbiased central independent model
project delivery. “We are extremely
to ensure consistent quality, testing
adaptable and responsive, with 650
and governance across all develop-
staff and the ability to move quickly
ment activities for an organisation. It
on immediate project demands,”
provides a consistent and repeatable
confirms Duffield. “The engagement
risk-based approach to quality and
models are flexible, including T&M,
testing. Any changes either internally
fixed price, and managed services
or from external vendors go through
NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘GARRY WHATLEY, CIO, CORPORATE EXPRESS ON CROWDSOURCED TESTING’ 281
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REVOLUTION IT
282
the TMO which can itself define the
provides a central point of contact
amount of testing required to adhere
and a conduit between the vendor,
to the organisation’s quality policy.
business and PMO for reporting
“The purpose of the TMO is to
purposes. TMO quality policy can be
provide quality assurance across all
referenced in vendor negotiations,
development activities to allow the
SLAs, milestone payments and ongo-
organisation to accept and deploy
ing vendor management.”
quality solutions into production,”
Innovation around testing has been
explains Duffield. “The TMO manages,
a key component in Revolution’s
approves and assists vendors with
journey over the past 15 years. “We
documentation, testing and quality
developed Crowdsprint as a crowd-
artefacts required during the plan-
sourced testing platform that allows
ning, design and execution phases of
us to test web and mobile applica-
major and minor projects. The TMO
tions using the power of the crowd,”
NOVEMBER 2019
“ We developed Crowdsprint as a crowdsourced testing platform that allows us to test web and mobile applications using the power of the crowd” — Jamie Duffield, Director and CEO, Revolution IT
consistently been the best performing reseller, winning the top award from Micro Focus for the past eight years. “We’re very happy with their technology,” confirms Duffield. “It allows us to be competitive, because we bundle up a best of breed software and use it to help deliver solutions that are flexible, on demand and deliver real value Our strong relationship with Micro Focus allows us to cut through all the red tape you normally encounter with large vendor organisations that have so many different business units
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Jamie Duffield Mr Duffield has over 20 years’ experience in the IT industry and is the CEO of Revolution IT, a leading quality assurance consulting firm which he co-founded with Mike Quill and Hamish Leighton in 2004. He has strong risk, governance and commercial experience with expertise in driving growth through sales, marketing, mergers and acquisitions. Jamie is also a non-executive Director of IntelliHR (ASX:IHR) and a graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors.
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Ignite Enterprise Productivity with Micro Focus Robotic Process Automation LEARN MORE
Micro Focus enterprise software helps you innovate faster, with less risk, in the race to digital transformation. Please contact Revolution IT to find out how RPA can drive productivity efficiencies in your organisation. Revolution IT is a Platinum Micro Focus partner in Australia.
microfocus.com/rpa 61 1300 275 738 info@revolutionit.com.au revolutionit.com.au
y Business users spend far too much time on mundane, repetitive, error-prone tasks. Why not save robotic tasks for robots and liberate human brainpower? Robotic process automation (RPA) uses software robots that mimic UI-based human actions to automate everyday tasks.
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Save robotic work for the robots. Robots can mimic human actions to perform everyday tasks. They save time. They cut costs. And they free human employees to focus on more important things.
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Work with code or take the visual route. An intuitive interface makes designing sophisticated end-toend RPA workflows as painless as recording simple actions.
Scale your robots up or down as workloads change. A worker queue based architecture makes it possible to run hundreds or thousands of robots at once, there are no limits.
Save robotic work for the robots. Robots can mimic human actions to perform everyday tasks. They save time. They cut costs. And they free human employees to focus on more important things.
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REVOLUTION IT
286
A B O U T MI CRO FO CU S
Micro Focus helps organisations run and transform their business through four core areas of digital transformation: Enterprise DevOps, Hybrid IT Management, Predictive Analytic and Security, Risk & Governance. Driven by customer-centric innovation, its software provides the critical tools needed to build, operate, secure, and analyse the enterprise. By design, these tools bridge the gap between existing and emerging technologies — enabling faster innovation, with less risk, in the race to digital transformation. Micro Focus maintains a leading position in the Magic Quadrant for Applica ion Security Testing for its Fortify portfolio based on their completeness of vision and ability to execute.
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“ Micro Focus RPA (Robotic Process Automation) delivers on key capabilities such as scalability, resiliency and security that our customers and partners demanded” — Jamie Duffield, Director and CEO, Revolution IT
explains Duffield. “It’s an amazing solution which allows us to ramp up 1,500 professional testers (from a network of 20,000) who use their own devices to perform the testing in a matter of hours. This achieves quick results and allows clients to test across multiple devices and operating systems for better test coverage.” The solution has been used by major companies such as the airline Qantas. “We are big in automation, and in Australia this is really kicking off with most of our clients looking at w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
REVOLUTION IT
DevOps and striving for continuous delivery,” continues Duffield, who adds that Revolution is also gaining more traction with RPA (Robotic Process Automation). “It’s an exciting proposition and one we’re starting to get more traction in through our work partnering with Micro Focus.” Micro Focus RPA automates repetitive, error-prone UI-based human actions on legacy apps and integrates them with modern IT process automation in a single product. “The solution 288
delivers on key capabilities such as scalability, resiliency and security that our customers and partners demand,” says Tom Goguen, Micro Focus Chief Product Officer. “It adapts to UI changes, automates UI and API-based applications, and includes real-time auditing and traceability, giving our customers the confidence to deploy RPA across the enterprise while providing for centralised governance and compliance for their digital workforce.” In May 2019, Micro Focus achieved market leader status for Application Security Testing in Gartner’s Magic Quadrant for the sixth time. As a Platinum Partner, Revolution IT has NOVEMBER 2019
behind the scenes. It enables us to work quickly for our customers.” Many of Revolution’s clients are looking to move away from perpetual on premise licensing to a SaaS model where they can get flexibility around ramping up and down licences based on project demand. “Micro Focus has worked with us on many occasions to help with transitions and has been extremely flexible in supporting clients evolving to new delivery models,” reveals Duffield, who believes cloud offers the best ultimate outcome. “That’s where the market is revolutionising and where we’re helping our clients find the right operating model for them.” Duffield notes that Revolution partners with many technology vendors such as Tricentis and Broadcom to provide an agnostic approach to tools and help delivers the most appropriate technology to their situation. “We like to trial new technology, because we’ve got to stay relevant for our clients and go to market with an open mind,” he adds. “We’re lucky that testing is required across all industries and technologies in that we get to w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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REVOLUTION IT
play with the latest tech. This helps, but the challenge is making sure we know what’s coming and what will be useful for our clients who are all on different maturity curves. The Australian market is typically a year or 18 months behind. We’re fortunate because we can keep an eye on what’s happening in the UK and US and are constantly looking internally, and externally, at
290
“ To get involved in a project that means something and has a tangible effect on people’s lives was really exciting for us” — Jamie Duffield Director and CEO, Revolution IT, NOVEMBER 2019
how we deliver solutions to our clients to stay competitive.” Staying on top of the latest trends and being able to react to them to meet the changing demands of customers is all in a day’s work at Revolution. “In our client base we’re seeing a big uptake in automation, security (cyber and app) and data (engineering and insights),” says Duffield. “With automation, we’re looking at how we can accelerate our project delivery in both the
291
development lifecycle and business
Crafting this winning formula has
process. Security has always been
helped add the likes of TAL, NAB
a bit of a sleeper but we’re seeing
and Sunsuper to a burgeoning roster
tighter controls with new legislation
of satisfied customers which also
making this a really hot topic now with
includes Australia’s Triple Zero emer-
how it relates to data, privacy and the
gency services. “To get involved in a
encryption required. With that data,
project that means something and
gaining insight is a big part of the work
has a tangible effect on people’s lives
we’re doing with specialty practices
was really exciting for us,” comments
directly aligned to these trends. We
Duffield. Looking to 2020 and beyond,
use the latest tools and approaches
his team aim to strengthen the com-
to craft solutions that directly address
pany’s market position and further
our clients’ needs.”
cement Revolution’s reputation as w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
REVOLUTION IT
2004
Year founded
700+ Clients
650
292
Approximate number of employees
NOVEMBER 2019
“the trusted partner you come to if you need to deliver a successful project without sacrificing quality.” Planned M&A activity will focus on expanding security and automation capabilities, while attracting the right talent to drive growth remains key. What is Duffield’s advice for businesses nervous about their ongoing transformations? “If you’re a business owner, vendor manager, CIO or programme manager then consider independent testing in your next big software implementation. Keep testing separate from the software vendor and systems integrator in order to build quality KPIs and metrics into the commercial contracts. Protect your investment, keep the vendor honest and mitigate the risk of unwanted brand damage.” It’s a smart mantra that could help your business in its own revolution.
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294
tackling cybersecurity in a connected economy WRITTEN BY
OLLIE MULKERRINS PRODUCED BY
ANDREW STUBBINGS
NOVEMBER 2019
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MIMECAST
MIMECAST, A CYBER RESILIENCE INDUSTRY LEADER, EXPLAINS THE IMPORTANCE OF MAN AND MACHINE WORKING TOGETHER TO CREATE A ROBUST SECURITY NETWORK
M
imecast, founded in 2003, is an international cyber resilience company, with offices in the UK, US, South Africa, Australia, Europe
and the Middle East. Mimecast uses dispersed data centers, intelligent mail routing and robust cloud 296
security to provide a security network capable of managing over 35,000 customers and 296 billion email accounts, with a 100% uptime service. Mark O’Hare, Chief Information Security Officer at Mimecast was one of the first 25 employees to join the company when he came on board in 2008. This has given Mark a comprehensive understanding of the Mimecast’s inner workings and its position within a rapidly evolving industry. Speaking of the changes in the cyber security industry Mark says: “Organisations can no longer afford to be reactive when it comes to their cybersecurity posture. They need to become more proactive to survive the evolving threats they face. To do that you need that credible and actionable threat intelligence along with a detailed understanding of your vulnerabilities.” NOVEMBER 2019
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The company has won a plethora of awards for its workplace environment, through an ethos of collaborative development and job satisfaction. This methodology extends out to Mimecast’s clients, where transparency, tailored experiences and a focus on the customer reinforces a trusting relationship. As Mark explains: “We have customer success managers and customer experience managers making sure our customers understand that we’re passionate about w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
MIMECAST
“ Organizations can’t be reactive anymore. You need to be more proactive” — Mark O’Hare, Chief Information Security Officer, Mimecast
their security and their well-being, and ensuring they get the most out of our product. After all, we’re building a product for them and not for us.” Mimecast has shifted from an email security-focused platform in its infancy, into a more robust cyber resilience platform. Today Mimecast’s platform takes on a much broader remit, supporting a wider range of customer security needs, such as Awareness Training, Web Security and Threat Intelligence through a single, trusted platform. Organizations that deploy
298
multiple point solutions can often end up with over complicated and over engineered security environments. This leads to poorly implemented and managed services as they attempt to protect multiple facets of a company’s network through several disparate solutions. Complexity is the enemy of security. For Mimecast to achieve its goal of an accessible and reliable cyber resiliency focused product for its clients, it has had to keep simplicity in mind without compromising the platform’s ability to manage the diversifying needs of web-reliant businesses. According to Mark, cybersecurity NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘PRODUCT OVERVIEW: MIMECAST TARGETED THREAT PROTECTION – INTERNAL EMAIL PROTECT’ 299 can appear to be a “piecemeal, frag-
certain environments such as bank-
mented, complex and confusing
ing, manufacturing, health care, land
industry for many.” For that reason, he
insurance, to mention a few, simply
said, Mimecast understood the need
won’t work. Each industry and even
for “a longer-term focus on customer
each organization in each industry
efficiency, making our products easy to
have different requirements and we
deploy and manage, while still allowing
need to cater for all of them.”
for those organizations who require
This approach could not be deliv-
more complex controls to customize
ered by sheer manpower alone and
our product to suit their own unique
so new technologies have had to be
requirements.” Mark admits that no
implemented to cope with the growing
business is exactly the same, meaning
scale of demand. Machine learning
each has a unique risk acceptance
and AI analytics have had a hand
profile. For that reason, he says, “com-
in this, where a platform can moni-
ing in with a cookie cutter approach for
tor user behavior, learning trends in w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
MIMECAST
300
a way any one user approaches their
employees investigating incidents.
work. When there is a major deviation
“Technology has to evolve to keep
from these operational behaviors, the
up with far more complex and often
machine learning system can flag this
automated threats that we face these
up as a warning event, which can then
days. Traditional methods aren’t
be investigated more thoroughly. As the
enough anymore, we have to embrace
machine learning system gathers more
things like machine learning and AI to
information on the habits of its users it
keep up – essentially fighting threat
is able to make more accurate insights
automation with security automation,”
into what may, or may not, be a threat or
Mark explains.
a security incident, increasing efficiency
Mimecast also offers end user
exponentially and allowing organiza-
cybersecurity training and aware-
tions to scale their security defenses
ness helping organizations to reduce
without having to scale the number of
or eliminate human error. As human
NOVEMBER 2019
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Mark O’Hare Mark is a well-seasoned and highly qualified Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) with over 20 years of experience in IT. His skill range is broad but includes Windows, Linux, Networking, Databases, Web Applications, Firewalls, SaaS, IaaS and many other information technologies. He specializes in the Cybersecurity field and has experience in Corporate IT, as well as Cloud-based SaaS environments, including in the challenging and exciting environment of leading the Cybersecurity team for a Cloud-based cybersecurity service. Mark has been involved in successful ISO 27001, ISO 27018, SOC2, HIPAA audits and has managed both the technical and policybased aspects of Mimecast’s security program since 2011. He has performed many risk assessments in line with ISO 27001 requirements and has the ability to identify and develop appropriate remediation plans for critical security risks to a business. He is able to communicate on a technical level with Developers and Technical Operations staff, as well as at a management and board level. This gives him the advantage of understanding the high-level security vision and requirements of a business along with the ability to translate and communicate those requirements effectively to the relevant technical and non-technical teams. Mark feels passionately that security needs to be an enabler in the business, rather than a blocker. Some of Mark’s current and previous certifications and training courses are — CISSP, GSEC, GCFA, MCSE, CCNA, CCSA, CCSE, ACSE, ACSA.
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C O M PA N Y N A M E
error is the leading cause of security breaches, having highly cybersecurity conscious staff can drastically reduce risk to a business. Mimecast has a Cybersecurity Awareness Training solution that educates employees on the everyday cybersecurity risks employees will face and then importance of being cyber-diligent through highlighting the impact these risks expose organizations to. Mimecast’s Awareness Training modules are tailored toward making cybersecurity
REAL-TIME THREAT INTELLIGENCE POWERED BY MACHINE LEARNING. • Extend threat visibility with the largest breadth of external sources • Respond to alerts relevant to your business 10x faster • Seamlessly integrate with existing security solutions
LEARN MORE AT RECORDEDFUTURE.COM
“There’s a real challenge around educating new staff as they join the business, especially those that have not worked in an environment where cybersecurity training and awareness has been a focus”. An important part of the onboarding program is to let employees know what is expected of them,” says Mark. “The new user onboarding program should cover off the organization’s Acceptable Use Policy and include security awareness training and testing. Employees are often the last line of defense in your security chain, so it’s essential to focus awareness digestible and humorous so
on educating them and making sure
the target audience is engaged. The
they understand what’s at stake when
Mimecast platform also allows organi-
things go wrong.”
zations to test their user’s resilience to phishing attacks through simulated phishing testing campaigns. The platform takes several user behavior metrics into consideration and computes an overall organization risk score. Mark says, “it is great to see your organization’s risk score decreasing over time as your users become better at detecting and reporting phishing scams. This kind of information is also just what Executives and Boards want to see.”
“ Not every business is the same.Coming in with your cookie cutter approach won’t work” — Mark O’Hare, Chief Information Security Officer, Mimecast
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MIMECAST
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The company’s focus on people
amount of time at work so in order to
does not stop there. As rising demand
retain top talent you need to keep them
for cybersecurity continues, so does
happy, enjoying their work and making
the challenge of recruiting good cyber-
them feel that they are part of a mean-
security talent. Mimecast is dedicated
ingful team executing meaning projects.”
to finding the best talent the industry
Also, by enabling its workforce to do
has to offer and fostering a long-term
their job through a thorough a portfolio
relationship through competitive pay
of approved business tools, a business
and job satisfaction. For Mark, it’s all
can ensure its employees are using
about “making sure your team feels
regulated and approved methods,
challenged and that they really enjoy
rather than bringing in external and
coming to work. We spend a significant
unapproved services to process and
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305
store sensitive data. Mark explains,
of your data and how it’s protected”
“One of the most important things, as
says Mark.
your company and workforce grows,
Mimecast’s holistic approach to
is giving your users the appropriate
cybersecurity, using technology, threat
tools to get their job done. With so
intelligence and user education has
many SaaS based tools available, it is
led to the creation of a robust platform
now easy for users to leverage unsanc-
able to deal with each customer’s indi-
tioned applications and infrastructure.
vidual requirements.
Shadow IT becomes a major problem because these application have generally not been security approved and the organization ends up losing control w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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BEING ADAPTABLE AROUND TECHNOLOGY WRITTEN BY
SHANNON LEWIS
PRODUCED BY
STUART IRVING w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
PENRHOS COLLEGE
Neil Mullally, Director of Information Communication Technology at Penrhos College, discusses how important it is to be adaptable in the digital age in order to stay at the forefront of innovation
A 308
n Australian all-girls school, Penrhos College has been around since 1952. A part of the Independent Girl’s School
Association (IGSA), it offers education from kindergarten through to Year 12. A pastoral care organisation, its focus on STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) has led it to win several awards, including placing as a finalist for the Governor’s School STEM Awards. “A Penrhos girl is independent and resilient. She is the girl of today, well-prepared and equipped for the challenges of tomorrow. We are committed to providing an education that honours our traditions and Christian values in a climate of technological and global change. Our girls are free to pursue excellence in an environment free from gender stereotypes in the subjects they study, the activities they participate in and the careers they ultimately choose.” says Mullally.
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“There is a lot of human error in everything that happens. No matter what industry you’re in, people make mistakes. But it’s making sure you’ve got the right processes and governances in place to capture the mistake, learn from the mistake, and make sure the mistake doesn’t happen again” — Neil Mullally, Director, Information Communication Technology, Penrhos College Neil Mullally has been working at Penrhos College as Director of Information Communication Technology
310
(ICT) since July of this year. With 25 years’ experience in IT, he has a broad background that he brings to the education sector, having worked in such varied fields as finance, retail, manufacturing and critical infrastructure being Perth Airport. “I’ve worked in industries where we have our own data centres on premise through to finance where everything was outsourced into our own private cloud including Managed Services.” Says Mullally, “We have a lot of physical infrastructure on site at Penrhos.” As Director of ICT, Mullally oversees five teams, from service delivery, systems & infrastructure, NOVEMBER 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘VIRTUAL REALITY LEARNING AT PENRHOS COLLEGE’ 311 network security, corporate applica-
regulations, and in the airport, you
tion support and PMO.
have very heavy regulation with CASA
Penrhos College has always been
(Civil Aviation Safety Authority). In
at the top of tech innovation in the
education, there is no governing body
education sector. It was one of the first
that tells you how to operate with
schools to offer laptops to every single
regards to information security.” His
student, an initiative now followed
solution to this has been to bring his
across Australia. According to Mullally,
knowledge of other industries into
though, the education sector overall is
Penrhos, settling on the NIST (National
behind when it comes to regulations
Institute of Standards and Technology)
regarding information security and
standards and frameworks, making
data protection. “From my experience,
Penrhos a leader in the education
other industries are very heavily regu-
sector by taking this kind of action.
lated,” he says. “For finance industries
During his time at the airport, there
you have to meet APRA (Australian
was a significant data breach.
Prudential Regulation Authority)
According to Mullally, “there was an w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
PENRHOS COLLEGE
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awful lot of quick learning around that
again.” He uses this mindset not only
breach that I’ve introduced to Penrhos
internally, but when outsourcing as well.
to prevent us from having those sorts
When searching for cloud-based solu-
of issues in the future.” Education
tions to store sensitive data, Mullally
about data security and its importance,
insists all potential vendors go through
he states, is key in determining these
an information security checklist. “It’s
safe practices. “There is a lot of human
very onerous, but if the third party can
error in everything that happens. No
respond positively to the questions,
matter what industry you’re in, people
as it aligns with the NIST framework,
make mistakes. But it’s making sure
it will help me filter out which third
you’ve got the right processes and
parties take information security seri-
governances in place to capture the
ously and which don’t.” This sort of
mistake, learn from the mistake, and
documentation is mutually beneficial.
make sure the mistake doesn’t happen
The school ensures its information
NOVEMBER 2019
is protected and “the vendors are
improvements. “We’re like any other
reassured that their product and
organisation,” says Mullally. “We have
business model is sustainable in
an abundance of tools. The strategy
multiple industries.”
is to take stock of what we have
The focus, for Penrhos, lies on its
available, and what we actually need
back of house. “Front of house is
to go forwards.” For Mullally, it is about
spectacular,” affirms Mullally. “Back
embracing the technology already
of house is the area that usually gets
available to them, rather than just
left behind.” Streamlining processes
seeking outwards for new solutions.
is the way forward, using existing
“One of the biggest challenges in
tools to assist with automating work-
education sector is time,” says Mullally.
flows is a start but overall, we want
“In the corporate world, you would
to improve accuracy, effectiveness
organise a meeting during business
and/or efficiency and then rede-
hours, and that would be that. In the
sign those processes to realize the
teaching world, teachers are very
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Neil Mullally Neil Mullally is a multi-skilled IT Manager with over 25 years’ experience in the IT industry and over 16 years as a Manager of IT teams. Very high level of experience in Cyber Security whether Cloud or On-premise solutions, evaluating, integrating and supporting innovative technologies to help internal and external customers achieve their goals, while effectively maximizing return on resources and providing cost effective solutions for everyone concerned. Very capable with a proven track record ensuring the smooth running of ICT systems with both on premise and outsourced support teams providing IT services that improve the efficiency, performance and overall return on investment of a company.
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READY FOR A DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION? We work with a number of institutions in the Education and Public Sector as their trusted advisors in: • Cloud Solutions • Cyber Security • Business Transformation • Automation
• Data Management • Kids Cyber • Product Licensing • Cyber Incident Response 24/7
CONTACT US
E. info@es2.com.au W. es2.com.au
1952
Year founded
driven by their time-table, so things don’t go as fast as you’d like.” This is why Mullally points to the importance of using Agile and Lean methodolo-
AU$100mn Approximate revenue
400
Approximate number of employees
gies when designing new solutions and implementing projects. “Every organisation I’ve worked in, I’m very big on Lean and Agile. I think both Lean and Agile has its place, so I utilise both methodologies.” From daily stand-ups to scrums, Penrhos uses Agile as a methodology for project delivery. “Right now, we’re re-visiting what student laptops and devices we use. We engage a student working
NOVEMBER 2019
“We want to provide the best experience possible and the people that can provide the best information for us are the people that are using the technology” — Neil Mullally, Director, Information Communication Technology, Penrhos College
customer through a perfect value creation process that has zero waste. From an organisational perspec-
group to help assist in evaluating the
tive, “we’re highlighting our top twenty
new devices. Gone are the days when
processes that we want to review
just the department head makes the
that will provide the best value for us
decision, we now ensure a more
through time, money or
collaborative approach with all
efficiency gains, whether
stakeholders.” Lean methodology,
that be the customer
Mullally says, has been very helpful
experience we offer parents
in mapping current and future
accessing our student
processes for efficiency gains.
portal or finance and
From
teaching,” says
a tech-
Mullally.
nology
“We want to provide
perspective,
the best experience
Lean provides
possible and the peo-
a framework for the
ple that can provide the
college to help understand our
best information for us
customers value and focuses its
are the people that are
key processes to continuously
using the technology.”
increase it. The ultimate goal is to provide perfect value to the
Having formed a strategic partnership with w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z i n e. com
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PENRHOS COLLEGE
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“We’re very big on the core values of education that allow the girls to become leaders in the industry” — Neil Mullally, Director of Information Communication Technology at Penrhos College
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“ Gone are the days when just the team manager makes the decision” — Neil Mullally, Director, Information Communication Technology, Penrhos College
ES2, a consulting organisation that specialises in enterprise security and solutions services, Mullally believes the collaboration offers a lot of value. “This partnership is supported by consultancy, project management, training and managed services with offices where our mission is to be a trusted advisor of business-centric services and solutions,” explains Mullally. “Our focus on business outcomes and our proactive attitude has enabled us to be a leader in our industry locally,
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319
nationally and internationally.”
information about power and water
By this time next year, Penrhos will
usage that can both be used to allow
be the home of a brand-new Science
us to become more sustainable as an
and Innovation Centre. An AUD $15mn
organisation and as a teaching tool.
project, it will further bring technology
The innovation centre will allow Penrhos
into the learning sphere. Partnering
to stay at the top of the industry. “Once
with Rutledge AV, the centre will include
its built, we’re looking to be the premier
a premier room with video walls that
girls’ school in Perth and a leading edu-
can be used to share information with
cation provider from k-12.”
the wider community. Also aided by Crestron and Cisco, the centre will serve as a method of practicing data analytics for the students, collecting w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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Integrating resources to drive customer value WRITTEN BY
MARCUS LAWRENCE PRODUCED BY
JAKE MEGEARY
NOVEMBER 2019
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T E L U S D I G I TA L
TELUS Digital, the digital transformation arm of telco giant TELUS, is unifying teams across the organization through a powerful Digital Platform
I
n the digital age, an increasing number of companies are establishing dedicated digital transformation arms to acceler-
ate the journey for themselves, their partners and their customers. A pioneer of this approach was Canadian telecommunications giant TELUS, 322
establishing TELUS Digital as a means to cement its position as a digital leader. “The journey started around seven years ago, and the foundation of the team was built around building up our web presence with TELUS.com,” says Ryan Kardish, Manager of the Digital Platform Evolution with TELUS Digital and experienced in the AI and analytics spaces. “In the modern world of telecom, you’re seeing customer demands and preferences, shift towards self-serve digital experiences, especially in the research and learn phase of their journey. The question was: how can we improve the customer engagement with the breadth of products and services that TELUS can offer through the digital channel? I see that as ground zero to the digital transformation story.” Steve Choi, Manager of Data Products at TELUS Digital, adds that catering to NOVEMBER 2019
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1990
Year founded
CA$14bn+ Approximate revenue
59,000+
Approximate number of employees (TELUS International) w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
T E L U S D I G I TA L
“ We now have the ability this shifting landscape necessitated the birth of the dedicated digital arm. to build intelligent “In the past, we didn’t have the right systems and organizational structure to support the applications that really transformation,” he says. “That’s why there was this idea to spin off the digital take advantage of data group as a way to incubate new ways that we’ve had all along of working with an agile approach to but never had the means delivering value, iterating quickly, and being able to experiment.” to use effectively” Over time and along with shifts in 324
— Steve Choi Manager, Data Products TELUS Digital
NOVEMBER 2019
consumer expectations, particularly around mobile, TELUS needed to consolidate silos, technology stacks and
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘THE ROLE OF CULTURE IN DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION’ 325 simplify the path to production to cre-
because their needs are similar across
ate consistent digital experiences. The
the capabilities we’re building,”
solution, a recipient of the ‘Open Digital
explains Choi. “Every team is looking to
Ecosystem Platform of the Year’ award
expand and build their digital presence,
at the 2019 TM Forum Awards, is the
and use these technologies to better
Digital Platform - an ecosystem of tools
serve our customers.” Through the
and solutions that enable teams to
Digital Platform, TELUS has an
develop and deliver cutting edge cus-
exceedingly powerful tool that simpli-
tomer experiences in a seamless,
fies the developmental processes for
collaborative manner. “As all these
teams across the organization and rep-
teams spun up to develop new func-
resents an exciting new level of
tions, we recognized the opportunity to
collaboration. Through the compilation
start investing in shared capabilities,
of resources that can be used again
shared technologies and shared
and again, TELUS has a resilient outlet
resources across those teams
for scalability and reliability in its w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
T E L U S D I G I TA L
development processes. “I always struggled with how best to explain this,” admits Kardish. “However, I now think about it in the context of: what are the steps for building a modern digital application? It’s everything from sourcing the right data from your systems of record all the way to ensuring that you’re investing in the personalization and consistency of the content and design components a customer can see, and so on.” The Digital Platform’s integrated capabilities enable each of 328
these steps, as well as affording the opportunity for teams to contribute to the platform’s ongoing development. “Any individual who wants to build on top of the tools and technologies we have built can do so,” Kardish adds. Choi notes that the Digital Platform also solves a challenge experienced by
available on the Digital Platform, the
many large organizations: the segrega-
reuse of those resources drives con-
tion of data across different
siderable efficiency in the development
departments and teams. “A lot of
process of a new feature or application.
teams would go searching across the
Not only that, but the advancements
organization to figure out how to build
made to those resources through their
a particular experience, but there
reuse can then be used again in the
might be another group that’s already
future. It’s an incredibly organic pro-
tackled that challenge,” he says. With
cess, driving iterative, internal
the resources of that project being
collaboration that breaks down the
NOVEMBER 2019
“ We’re starting to truly recognize what it means to digitally transform, to collaborate and coordinate across the many teams and businesses TELUS operates” — Ryan Kardish Manager, Digital Platform Evolution TELUS Digital
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Steve Choi Steve leads the Data Products team at TELUS Digital, which is focused on building machine learning applications and reporting automation solutions within the digital ecosystem at TELUS. He is passionate about connecting data systems to generate new insights and drive incremental value.
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Building our customer’s business remains our primary focus.
Be it promoting their brands on stage, assisting their search for talent, providing them with essential digital marketing tools and service or celebrating their successes. Congratulations to our friends on the digital marketing team at TELUS for their continued success.
#buildingourcustomersbusiness
“A lot of teams would go searching across the organization to figure out how to build a particular experience, but there might be another group that’s already tackled that challenge” — Steve Choi Manager, Data Products TELUS Digital
barriers that have traditionally limited team-based development cycles. With the mantra ‘automate all the things’ being easy to spot on its website, it is no surprise that the expedition of the developmental groundwork for new applications at TELUS Digital is further accelerated by a robust automation strategy. Aside from the well-communicated benefits to businesses ranging from increased efficiency and accuracy to adding value to the daily tasks of staff, automation has also been deployed at TELUS Digital to gain a grip on ever-shifting customer trends. “As we look across the traditional channels at TELUS, specifically within our field tech and call
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Ryan Kardish Ryan is a passionate leader and intrapreneur, leading the evolution of TELUS’ award winning Digital Platform. With a dedicated focus on delivering our customerfirst promise, he is driving forward our digital transformation mandate, and working hard so that anyone (customers and team members alike) can build a ‘Digital TELUS.’
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T E L U S D I G I TA L
PART N ERS Adobe “Adobe has been a key partner in our journey towards turning the data we collect into insights and action. They have evolved their solutions in ways that integrate well with the technologies we use. As a result, we’re able to deliver experiences that enable our customers and drive business value for our organization”
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teve Choi, Manager, S Data Products
center experiences, what we’re starting to see is that both our customer and team member demands and preferences are changing quicker than ever before,” says Kardish. He adds that the challenge is mitigated by the shift towards chatbots, conversational interfaces such as smart speakers, unified agent desktops, and interactive voice response (IVR) tech which offer opportunities for accruing insight-rich data whilst necessitating a scalable NOVEMBER 2019
Red Hat “Our digital platform is hosted using OpenShift a Kubernetes orchestration platform by RedHat. OpenShift allows us to focus on delivering value to our customers while the infrastructure that supports and enables hundreds of applications is managed by RedHat. This relationship means that we don’t need to focus on managing, patching or scaling our infrastructure and we can focus on building great products.” Aron Reid, Director, Technical Operations & Infrastructure
and reactive approach to their implementation in new offerings. That being said, TELUS’ approach to data is not solely focused on current data accrued through its various customer-facing solutions. Through the cloud-based unification of different systems within the organization, TELUS Digital is unlocking the value of data that Choi says can even be decades old. “Historically, there’s always been a separation of what I consider operational data systems and analytical data systems; traditionally, the latter were second-class citizens,” explains Choi. “That was a practicality issue because, in the past, your compute and storage would be relatively expensive. With cloud, that’s changed. We now have the ability to build intelligent systems and applications that really take advantage of data that we’ve had all along but never had the means to use effectively. The scale of data, the velocity of data, it’s always been there, but now we have the means to keep up with it.” The key takeaway from TELUS’s transformation efforts, and indeed of the development of its staggeringly w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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“As we look across the traditional channels at TELUS, specifically within our field tech and call center experiences, what we’re starting to see is that both our customer and team member demands and preferences are changing quicker than ever before” — Ryan Kardish Manager, Digital Platform Evolution TELUS Digital
NOVEMBER 2019
effective Digital Platform, is that unifying technology reaps dividends. Across an organization as large and internally diversified as TELUS, the value of a platform that brings together the expertise and resources of each of them for the benefit of the company, its partners and customers cannot be overstated. “We’re starting to truly recognize what it means to digitally transform, to collaborate and coordinate across the many teams and businesses TELUS operates,” enthuses Kardish. “Recognizing that a lot of great work has been happening across the entire organization, taking the best of each world to create a set of solutions, best practices and standards that help define the guiding principles of how we can work and operate better as an organization, that’s when you get the big wins.”
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Inside WSP’s mission to bring digital integrity and smarter buildings to Canada’s property space WRITTEN BY
HARRY MENEAR PRODUCED BY
JAMES BERRY
NOVEMBER 2019
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WSP CANADA
Sharyn Gravelle, National Vice President, Telecom and Technology, and Terri Govang, Director of Technology for Western Canada for WSP talk IoT, 5G, cybersecurity and the future of smart property development
T
oday, more than half of humanity lives in cities. The United Nations predicts this proportion will rise to 68% by 2050,
adding 2.5 billion people to the world’s urban areas. To promote successful coexistence within these 338
increasingly congested jungles of glass and steel, city planners and developers in the public and private sectors are increasingly turning towards cutting-edge technology for solutions. “We’re standing at the dawn of another technological revolution, and keeping up with the speed of the coming change is key,” says Terri Govang, Director of Technology for Western Canada at WSP and an expert in smart building security systems. Govang, who started her career as an electrician and progressed from roles in integration and manufacturing to design and consulting services, joined WSP in November 2018. With 60 years at the forefront of progress in the professional services space, WSP in Canada is now a leading supporter of the companies engineering our hyper-urbanized, interconnected, Internet of Things (IoT) and 5G-powered future. NOVEMBER 2019
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$1,053.6mn Approximate revenue
1959
Year founded
8,300
Approximate number of employees w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
WSP CANADA
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘WSP FUTURE READY’ 340
“At WSP, we have a Future Ready®
is reshaping the smart building space
program that offers our clients a clearer
and how WSP is positioning itself to
understanding of what the future will
lead and benefit from the coming
look like,” adds Sharyn Gravelle,
technological revolution.
National Vice President of Telecom and Technology at WSP in Canada.
CLOSE CLIENT PARTNERSHIPS
“We look at four different pillars: climate,
Commitment to continually improving
society, resources and technology.
the quality and effectiveness of
We strive to make our designs ready,
processes, by educating both her
both for current design codes and for
team and her clients, is at the heart
the future we envision. This is where
of Govang’s role.
we add value for our clients.” Gravelle and Govang sat down with us to explore the ways in which technology NOVEMBER 2019
“The overall industry and the technology it employs has seen several changes over the last decade,
341
and I’ve personally worked with hundreds of clients to educate and support them through these transitions,” she explains. “WSP has a long history of providing technology and telecom specialty services to an established client base. We strive to understand our clients’ business. Before commencing any design, it’s crucial to sit with the client in conversation about how they envision their building operationally.” Working closely to develop a clear
“ Ensuring end-to-end encryption between all devices is increasingly important. In fact, I’d say it’s crucial” — Terri Govang, Director of Technology for Western Canada, WSP
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for everything from aesthetics to
As technology evolves, the demands
core system functionality is a key
of the market do as well. “Clients are
differentiator for WSP.
more educated now than they’ve ever
“Our clients are competing to provide
been,” Govang explains. “They have a
elegant buildings, packed with ameni-
greater understanding of technology,
ties and world-class technology,” says
and these pioneers are ultimately
Govang. “Our focus is on offering the
seeking overall improvement in
kind of strategic advisory services that
building performance, operational
support design and project manage-
efficiencies, and improved user,
ment of enterprise security technolo-
employee and guest experiences.”
gies and programs, with an emphasis
Working with a team of seasoned
on intelligent infrastructure in high-
technology professionals, Govang is
performance buildings, digital adoption
at the heart of WSP’s efforts to both
and technological improvements.”
increase the interconnectedness and
NOVEMBER 2019
technological capabilities of its clients’
all over a building, campus or city, the
buildings, and ensure that those clients
vulnerability points for potential attack
remain safe in a rapidly-evolving threat
increase drastically, so ensuring
landscape. “With more devices being
end-to-end encryption between all
connected to your network, security
devices is increasingly important.
and integrity are often overlooked.
In fact, I’d say it’s crucial.”
With the digital era and the increasing adoption of IoT, yes, we can converge
A STRATEGIC IMPERATIVE
intelligence systems, capture analytics
Alongside the evolution of intelligent
and connect buildings across the city.
business systems, the need for
But as exciting as this may be, the
integrated security has grown, to
technological revolution has brought
the point where Govang argues it
with it a changing threat landscape,”
is no longer a technological issue,
she says. “If we disperse IoT devices
but a managerial and strategic one.
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Sharyn Gravelle Sharyn Gravelle is the National Vice President of Telecom and Technology at WSP in Canada. She is a strategic leader with strong acumen and progressive career experience spanning over 30 years with start-ups and large corporations. Having begun her career as a Radio Frequency Design Engineer in 1988, Gravelle has held diverse roles shaping the wireless industry from early analog to the current 5G landscape and continues to help shape Canada’s telecom and technology infrastructure. Over the last 6+ years, she has led a unified national team of 200 employees at WSP.
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NOVEMBER 2019
“ We use technology to create open and secure spaces, improve the flow of traffic or people and deliver a more sustainable, reliable solution” — Terri Govang, Director of Technology for Western Canada, WSP
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Great minds think together. Your business has unique design, security and operational needs. Axis Professional Services provides personalized advice and customized expertise to help you optimize existing surveillance systems and be able to meet the demands of tomorrow. There, when you need us. Visit us at www.axis.com/professional-services-us or call us at 1 800 444 AXIS, option 1
In the past, Govang often encoun-
experience, reduce waste, reduce risk,
tered organizational tendencies to
increase compliance and drive efficiency
sacrifice technology and security
through new and emerging technologies.”
investment for the sake of perceived
The driving capability behind all
convenience and cost. Today, that
these improvements that WSP is
simply isn’t an option.
delivering is the ability to gather more
“Above all else, a smart building is
high-quality data than ever before.
a secure building,” she says. “We use
“It wasn’t long ago that cameras were
technology to create open and secure
used to capture general overviews,
spaces, improve the flow of traffic or
which helped deter and reactively
people and deliver a more sustainable,
review safety or security in spaces.
reliable solution. Clients want to
That’s all changed,” says Govang.
leverage their investments to create new use cases, improve the customer NOVEMBER 2019
Working alongside one of its partners, Axis Communications,
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E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Terri Govang As the Director of Technology for Western Canada at WSP, Terri Govang oversees the design, development and deployment of comprehensive security and technology systems and applications. Having begun as an industrial electrician, Govang has 13+ years of industry experience that she leverages to deliver modern and optimized approaches to security. She is an ASIS Certified Protection Professional (CPP ÂŽ), specializing in new construction and enterprise systems migration and upgrades. Her expertise is evidenced by her track record of mitigating risk, project planning and innovation.
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WSP CANADA
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“ Above all else, a smart building is a secure building” — Terri Govang, Director of Technology for Western Canada, WSP NOVEMBER 2019
WSP is using IoT-enabled devices in order to provide its clients with better insights pulled from larger, more sensitive networks. Then, Big Data analytics allow WSP to draw actionable insights from that data. “What’s great about this is that all Axis devices support the application platform, which enables developers to leverage a lot of device processing power, which helps edge-based analytics that enable the camera to do more than it ever could before,” enthuses Govang.
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Looking to the future, both Govang
says Govang. “Gone are the days
and Gravelle see the capacity for smart
when technology and security were a
buildings to increase efficiency, security
nice-to-have extra option. Technology
and comfort as a key driver of the
has become the modern critical
digital evolution of urban environments.
infrastructure.”
“The market is evolving towards 5G and IoT — IoT being both massive IoT for large scale applications, and critical IoT for latency and other sensitive, niche applications,” says Gravelle. And as with any major paradigm shift, this evolution has rendered old practices obsolete. “Change is certainly the one thing that is constant,” w w w.gi ga bi t ma ga z in e. com
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