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How Does DevOps Change the Services Industry?
On April 19, 2016 In Thought Leadership
DevOps is changing the services industry, especially in the people model. Here’s an important question for service providers in the Digital Age: Can you achieve the same impact in a distributed DevOps environment as you can in a collocated DevOps environment? Clearly, because of where the industry makes money, the industry would like the
The Best is Yet to Come in Services … or is It?
On April 18, 2016 In Thought Leadership
My wife and I are like the service industry, particularly the arbitrage-based talent service industry – maturing rapidly. These days, while we think about how we’re moving into our golden years with the prospect of being surrounded by loved ones and hopefully grandchildren, I think the prospect for the service industry is quite different.
Do IT Groups Really Need to Move to a Software-Defined Environment?
On April 6, 2016 In Thought Leadership
CIOs and their IT teams are bombarded with major changes on nearly every front these days. Shifting to a software-defined environment is one of the top agenda items in many enterprises. But what does this shift in operations really mean? Are the benefits really worth the headaches of major operational change? We are in
CIOs Need to Reconceive the Process Design for IT Support Services
On March 31, 2016 In Thought Leadership
I’ve been observing the end-user computing environment and believe it’s time for a complete rethink on how IT groups support their end users. What I usually find is that the support interactions are a lot like support interactions with cable companies – and most cable company customers feel that’s an infuriating experience. Cable companies
Are Your IT Performance Metrics Measuring the Right Things?
On March 29, 2016 In Thought Leadership
CIOs need to make sure IT metrics align with business users’ expectations. Once your IT organization aligns with business users’ needs and commits to the journey of achieving those business objectives, you can then determine how to do that. After determining your strategy, you’ll then establish metrics to measure IT’s performance. As Winston Churchill
Amelia is Stunning
On March 28, 2016 In Thought Leadership
For those of you who don’t know who or what Amelia is, she is IPsoft’s cognitive agent or, in other words, an Artificial Intelligence agent that can converse with people and act as an electronic call center agent. She can do what I would say is at least 30 percent or more of the
CIOs Need to Avoid a Mistaken Path to DevOps
On March 24, 2016 In Thought Leadership
DevOps is the completion of the Agile methodology and creates an engineering environment in which developers can achieve speed. How fast is the difference? Agile is like a person running fast – about 20 miles per hour tops. DevOps is like a person driving a Ferrari who can exceed 200 miles per hour. Often
How CIOs Can Deliver a Breakthrough Business Transformation
On March 22, 2016 In Thought Leadership
Imagine yourself in this situation: Your company is in a hyper-competitive market and has identified a compelling new opportunity through leveraging big data and the Internet of Things. But capturing the opportunity requires that you as CIO lead the company in a business transformation initiative – a journey where many organizations typically falter along
4 Things CIOs Need to Know about Implementing Automation
On March 18, 2016 In Thought Leadership
As a CIO, you’ve undoubtedly heard and read enthusiastic discussions around the benefits of automation. Beyond its cost savings due to people replacement, automation offers high value in the form of dramatic improvement to: Process efficiency Cycle time (remember, speed is the new currency) Productivity Quality (reduced errors) Scalability Governance and regulatory compliance (requirements
Death of the Services Megadeal
On March 17, 2016 In Thought Leadership
A lot of people in the marketplace are talking about how the large outsourcing transactions are fewer and fewer and soon to be extinct. There are many reasons for the breaking up of megadeals into smaller ones. One is that large, multi-tower deals over time become hard to manage. Another reason: It doesn’t matter