PWC’s 2013 Top Ten Technology Trends for Business

January 28, 2013

In today’s highly competitive global environment, companies are looking for opportunities to minimize costs, increase efficiencies and gain competitive advantage. Business leaders across all industries are focused on IT as a way to accomplish these goals. The use of emerging, disruptive technologies such as context-aware mobile apps and enterprise social networking along with the proliferation of public and private cloud is commanding organizations to assess and manage the impact these technologies may have on their business. Leaders are required to understand, prioritize and apply these new technologies within the context of their overall business goals.

PwC recently completed the 5th Annual Digital IQ Survey. The survey is designed to assess how well companies understand the value of technology and weave IT into the fabric of their organization. For the first time, the Digital IQ survey was conducted globally and included participation from more than 1,100 respondents. Detailed below are the Top 10 Technology Trends for Business that emerged from the survey. Click on any trend to get a brief point of view from PwC’s leaders in these areas.

Read about the 2013 Top 10 Technology Trends for Business please click the link.

Simulation & Scenario Modeling
Gamification
Digital Delivery of Products & Services
Private Cloud
Big Data Mining & Analysis

HOW ONE DEALERSHIP GENERATES $30,000.00 A MONTH IN PURE PROFIT USING A SIMPLE REPORT WITH ALERTS.

January 15, 2013

By Joe Tareen (Business Intelligence & Customer Engagement Professional)

Systemic problems within organizations never go away by just being identified and talked about. Management and all the stakeholder have to move beyond words, discussions and mere introductions of new process initiatives to address the core issue.

One has to identify the core problem and set up self monitoring systems to actively perform contextual tasks in the background. These contextual tasks should provide management with actionable intelligence to effectively and purposely engage team members with specific instructions to meet standards.This active and purpose driven engagement  should continue until a counter culture has developed or a new habit is ingrained within your organization to meet your change objectives.

The case in point:

A dealership that I had worked for presented me with a challenge for solving a chronic issue they faced on a monthly basis: Their Shop Supplies fee collection was well below the industry benchmark and their repeated efforts to address this revenue shortfall with Service Advisors was not bearing any fruitful results. The assumption was that Service Advisors were readily waiving the fees to either increase discounts or in rare cases were mitigating for an adverse customer related situation. Whatever the reasons, the dealership really needed this additional stream of income in face of increasing expense liabilities and decreasing consumer demand for automotive repair and maintenance services. Click Shop Supplies to find the definition.

The existing reporting systems were not intuitive enough to help mitigate this issue. They simply lacked the features that could identify the exact service transactions in which Shop Supplies fees were unjustly waived without providing a valid reason.

If you have ever visited or ran a service department for a franchised dealership in the middle of a huge metropolitan city, you know that the dizzying speed with which these business units operate and the multitudes of customer interactions that take place within a very short time span can cause a serious caffeine addiction for those who manage them. The management team just does not have the resources available to manually manage negative revenue exceptions, whatever they may be. Consequently dealerships end up incurring a substantial amount of potential profit loss each month.

The Solution:

After a careful analysis, we as a team established that any viable solution should at least consist of three important components:

  1. The solution should be ‘alert’ based and self-driven. In other words no activity should be required by management and the system should be smart enough to initiate all exception alerts via an email with details included.
  2. Transaction counts, in this case number of repair orders which were automatically identified with missing Shop Supplies charges needed to be viewed inside a grid report with drill down capabilities right down to the repair order details. This would immediately help management identify reasons for not charging Shop Supplies before an individual Service Advisor is forwarded a request to provide explanation.
  3. Report viewing as well as repair order details should be device neutral. In other words management should be able to access this intelligence using a browser, a tablet or a smartphone.

Luckily for us this was not a daunting task. The dealership under the leadership of a very capable and forward thinking General Manager had already tasked me to develop such a reporting solution albeit not for this specific purpose. We, as a matter of fact, had the solution up and running on the cloud for six months prior to facing this challenge request. We had successfully and very inexpensively utilized a third party cloud database application platform on which we built our very own Service Revenue Analysis application accessible via a simple browser. This cloud application platform was highly customize-able with the ability to tightly integrate with the Reynolds & Reynolds DMS system.

Our script imported all the invoiced repair orders from the DMS system on a nightly basis. Once the data was placed into our cloud application we had the capability to massage the data relationally, set alerts based on exception formulas and create on the fly unlimited number of Service report views and dashboards. These reports and dashboards consisted of interactive ad-hoc reports, gauges, charts, summary etc.

The users of the system also had the ability to easily create reports and dashboards per their own requirements. This introduced a very powerful element with which key stakeholder for the first time could devise proactive management strategies for the entire department based on fast developing and slow moving trends simultaneously.

This unprecedented insight generated a renewed interest and increased engagement in all of us. The entire team involved started to talk about how we could utilize this tool to its full potential by scaling it out to other departments. For the first time the dealership was able to bring their own Fixed Operations data to life and analyze it in a very multidimensional manner. We started to see relations and dependencies that we could not have imagined before. Also we were no longer captive to prepackaged and somewhat limited in scope reports that were provided to us by other vendors. It is not that we didn’t find some of their reports useful, we just believed that the best reports and analytics are the ones which are created by the end users themselves. Something to be said about the process of data discovery itself which brings to the table a spirit and pleasure of its own. In the back of our mind we knew that New & Used Car Sales, Parts Sales, and Finance would be next. Possibilities were endless, benefits many.

Specifically for the challenge of Shop Supplies fees collection at hand, our cloud application allowed us to create a condition based view for all repair orders. This condition was fairly simple. Include in this view all repair orders where there should be a Shop Supplies charge but the Shop Supplies field is equal to zero dollars.

Our system allowed us to then create a simple email alert out to the Service Manager and the General Manager based on this condition and included details of each repair order transaction that could be viewed inside the body of each email reducing number of clicks needed to get to the actionable intelligence.

The grid report view was also available as a dashboard that could be shared with anyone within or outside the dealership via a web link only by admin. Obviously this report was updated daily and automatically using our DMS integration piece, so the service manager was notified and provided details even before he arrived for work.

Upon reviewing this specific actionable intelligence, the Service Manager was simply able to forward these alerts on to each responsible Service Advisor who had waived the Shop Supplies charge in the first place with a stern message attached of course. This action made each Service Advisor self aware and realize that they could not get away with these dereliction and had no choice but to refrain from waiving Shop Supplies unless there was a good enough documented reason.

The Conclusion:

Results were amazing to say the least. We implemented the solution in September of 2012 and prior to that we were averaging right around $20,000.00 in Shop Supplies fees collection. With the new system in place we started to see our monthly collection amount exceed $30,000.00. It turns out all we needed was a system that simply alerted us of these exceptions and the active management initiative portion was just as simple as forwarding these alerts to the guilty party. I guess you could call it ‘preventive maintenance’, of course pun intended here.

This important task could simply be performed by any member of the management using any device as long as they had access to an email client, which definitely satisfied the last required component to make the effort ever so successful. This simple report continues to provide exceptional value to the dealership and has now organically expanded to include excessive Parts and Labor discount alerts per repair order, which have come to save the dealership additionally anywhere between $2500.00 to $5000.00 in gross profit each month.

How much additional profit can your dealership generate each month using simple reports with built in alerts?

P.S. If your dealership faces a similar challenge as outlined above, feel free to contact me. I would love to engage in a discussion to help in identifying the right solution for you and your organization.


Embrace cloud diversity and simplify application control

December 21, 2012

One of the more popular arguments made against cloud computing is a perceived lack of useful standards. For example, Dave Linthicum, the CTO and founder of Blue Lab Mountains, mentioned in a recent article:

…the notion that you can easily move from one provider to another without significant work and cost is largely science fiction at this point.”

While his argument may have a certain degree of technical merit, it still rings hollow. The growth of cloud computing shows no signs of slowing down: major providers display consistently strong growth. Analyst firm Gartner predicts worldwide cloud services spending to surpass $109 billion in 2012 alone. In fact, large enterprises willingly choose multiple clouds, and it’s illuminating to consider the reasons why this happens.

C24 Application hosting specialists

The entire premise of virtualizing your application infrastructure is to give you the ability to divorce your apps from your physical infrastructure on which they are hosted. This, in turn, allows your application workloads to be dynamically placed and migrated across a pool of application server resources, which allows the infrastructure to dynamically adapt and respond to your evolving business needs. If you look at traditional applications and how they are developed, it’s clear they were not designed for the cloud, and they definitely don’t take advantage of some of the best benefits a virtualized infrastructure can offer.

Traditional applications are based on vertical integration. So if you want to move an app to a different environment, it requires a significant amount of effort and will most likely impact your other apps, simply because these apps are so tightly integrated. Traditional applications were not built using modern development frameworks, which would help to decouple these components from each other.Changes to one application, often has an impact on the other making them complex, static and brittle. These types or changes are often a major cause of service disruptions. Each change needs to be tested comprehensively, which is time consuming. In addition, traditional applications do not take advantage of capabilities provided by the cloud, such as the elasticity to scale up to serve millions of users. This severely inhibits the ability of the business to expand and integrate, new types of applications and environments.The assertions skeptics make are based on the observation that you can’t move a virtual machine (VM) from one cloud to another considering most clouds have incompatible VM formats. But what they miss is that your apps are not made up of VMs.  They are made of software!  So how do you move software around? Easily: in the same way you have been doing for years with agile development processes, configuration management and automation tools, deployment blueprints, templates, installers, etc. If you can provision your app on one cloud, you can provision it on any cloud as they all provide the same basic building blocks – instances of an operating system or an application server that you provision on top of.

Each of the major cloud environments offers a unique set of benefits and differentiators. Users of AWS don’t choose that platform because they feel compelled to; instead, they choose AWS because it gives them flexibility and services for their particular application requirements. The very same user might select a private VMware-based cloud for a different application because, again, that application has a different set of requirements. Cloud diversity is a good thing because it presents developers a range of choices.

Blog 3a

So, yes, when discussing cloud diversity, you can have your cake and eat it, so long as you pick the cloud that is best suited to your:

  • Application and services, and it has the right technical capabilities that your application requires
  • Business and commercial criteria encompassing the cost imperatives and SLAs you need
  • Customer needs, including their geographical proximity, regulatory and data protection laws, etc.

At Riverbed, we see more and more of our customers considering cloud-based architectures as a means to transform their application business models, particularly those with fluctuations in traffic and seasonal demand. Essentially, our customers find that moving to the cloud gives them a competitive advantage, the ability to provide differentiated service offerings, and new revenue models.

Cloud computing isn’t limited to just a collection of virtual machines and storage you rent by the hour in a location far away from your data center. Mature cloud providers offer the ability to extend existing on-premise infrastructures into cloud facilities, creating a unified architecture with the benefits of instant infrastructure. Applications can span both, and users need not notice the difference.

Can I have cloud diversity if part of my app infrastructure is not software?

Here’s the catch. You’ve virtualized your application delivery infrastructure and have started to push some of your apps out into the cloud. But part of your app delivery solution is not software.  You have a hardware ADC that is critical to the correct operation of your apps and the vendor provides a virtual appliance. Neither of these are ‘software’ in the sense that they can be deployed anywhere.  How is this going to impede and limit your ability to truly virtualize and reap the benefits cloud diversity brings?

When everything is software, including the network and the ADC with robust and open APIs, you get into the realm of a truly programmable infrastructure model. A great way to look at this would be  the conventional jet engine of the cloud takes you supersonic, and the scramjet of programmable infrastructure then goes hypersonic.

Yesterday’s load balancers and legacy application delivery controllers are not designed for the cloud and to give you the type of diversity, portability, programmability and granular application-level control. The mismatch is clear.

Blog 4aA truly cloud-ready, software application delivery solution is what you will need to help you meet our applications requirements on any cloud. Such requirements include:

  • Enhancing efficiency and response times of applications and services
  • Improving availability between instances that span multiple geographic zones and regions
  • Solving latency problems with content optimization and acceleration tools
  • Ensuring proper protection using intelligent layer-7 inspection against known and unknown threats
  • Scaling resources to provide encryption and compression services without affecting performance.

Blog 5aOne example of a software ADC is the Riverbed Stingrayfamily. This new breed of ADC is natively designed for virtualization and cloud portability. As a pure software solution intended for the widest variety of deployments, the Stingray family enables a more flexible application delivery strategy and provides a common delivery and control platform that can grow with your business.

for more information on Riverbed please visit http://www.c24.co.uk


Oops, we lost a few terabytes! NBD!

December 11, 2012

Earlier this week, Swiss intelligence agency (NBD) warned US and UK counterparts that they might have lost terabytes of top secret data due to insider theft by a disgruntled IT admin.  Reminds me of this xckd:

Chain of Command

We emphasize insider threats and the importance of zero trust all the time at Varonis.  Yes, it’s extremely important to secure the perimeter walls and use data loss prevention to protect endpoints.  But perimeter defense is far more straightforward, if nothing else, than defending against those who appear to be on your team – Kingslayers.

Inside jobs happen over and over again because they’re so hard to stop. According to a Forrester survey in 2010 [1], 43% of data breaches were caused by “trusted” insiders.  Just a few months ago, I wrote about the Zynga employee who, upon leaving the company, felt compelled to take 763 documents—including business plans and other IP—along with him.

So what do we do about it?  The answer is actually in Varonis’ mission statement: we ensure that that only the right users have access to the right data at all times from any device, all use is monitored, abuse is flagged.

Where do you stand in the battle against insider threats?

Are you alerted when statistical deviations in file system and email activity occur?

We jokingly call this our early resignation detection system since, sometimes, when someone is about to resign, they copy everything they’ve ever worked on.  But the alerting system in DatAdvantage was primarily designed to detect suspicious and potentially harmful behavior.

Are you alerted any time someone is granted admin-level access?

One of the top use cases for DatAdvantage for Directory Services is to always know exactly when someone is given super user rights, who granted it, when, and why.  And perhaps even more importantly, we can see what they’re doing with that access.

Do you know when IT administrators can, and do, access business data?

There’s likely no good reason for an IT admin to be rifling through customer records, changing the contents of business data, or deleting files without justification.  If you can say for certain that this isn’t even possible, you’ll be able to prevent a situation like NBD’s.  Incidentally, one of the core reasons businesses cite for not wanting to move corporate data to the cloud is that they lack visibility into what the cloud provider’s IT admin are doing with their sensitive business data at any point in time.

If you’d like a free data protection assessment to find out if your environment is at risk, sign up here.

[1] Source:Forrester, Forrsights Security Survey, Q3 2010


The most popular SaaS solutions

November 15, 2012


Ernst & Young’s IT Security Survey Highlights

October 31, 2012

Many CIOs and chief information security officers are struggling to adapt security practices to a changing environment that includes cloud computing, social media and tablets , according to a survey of 1,850 such IT pros.

The Ernst & Young 2012 Global Information Security Survey published today found cloud computing to be one of the main drivers of business model innovation and IT service delivery, with 59% of respondents saying they use or plan to use cloud services. But 38% admitted they have not taken any measures to mitigate risks.

Use of social media in business is prevalent, but 38% of the CIOs and CISOs surveyed say they don’t have a coordinated approach to address risks, such as defending the organization’s brand or determining how employees use work time to engage in social media.

The Ernst & Young survey indicated that 31% of respondents said they saw an increase in the number of security incidents compared to the previous year.

SECURITY: DDoS attacks against banks raise question: is this cyberwar?

Another technology game-changer, use of mobile devices, such as tablets and smartphones, is compelling “policy adjustments,” according to over half of these IT professionals who hail from the financial industry, insurance, high-tech, government, and various industrial, retail and utility sectors from all around the world.

More than one-third say that company-owned mobile devices have been adopted but use of personal devices is not allowed for business. The survey found that 36% have acquired mobile-device management software and 31% now have a “governance process to manage the use of mobile applications.” Encryption plays a central role for 40% of CIOs and CISOs surveyed.

In terms of budgets for the next 12 months, 30% said they expect information security funding increasing from 5% to 15%, while 9% of respondents anticipate a budget increase of 25% or more. Security budgets are expected to remain the same for 44%. About a third said they spend at least $1 million per year on information security.

Just over half said the area of highest priority for them is business continuity, including management and disaster recovery. But one surprise, the report states, is that the second-highest priority is “a fundamental redesign of their information security program.”

This appears to reflect on the security gaps that these CIOs and CISOs acknowledge exist in their organizations adopting cloud computing and tablet adoption. 55% said they plan to spend more to secure new technologies, while 63% acknowledged that they felt they had “no formal architecture framework in place, nor are they necessarily planning on using one.” The Ernst & Young study indicated these IT professionals may feel they have “a patchwork of non-integrated, complex and fragile defenses” that creates gaps in their security.

Those that did have a defined security architecture pointed to the Open Group Architecture Framework, the ANSI/IEEE 1471:ISO/IEC 42010 standards, and other references such as defense department frameworks defined in the U.S. and the United Kingdom.

A major complaint from 43% of respondents is that they can’t find the right people with the right skills and training to handle information security jobs. And when asked what threats or vulnerabilities have most increased risk over the last 12 months, the answer at the top of the list was “careless or unaware employees,” followed by “cyber attacks to steal financial information.”

Ellen Messmer is senior editor at Network World, an IDG publication and website, where she covers news and technology trends related to information security. Twitter: MessmerE. E-mail: emessmer@nww.com.
Read more: http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/news/network-wifi/3407599/ernst-youngs-it-security-survey-shows-struggle-control-cloud-computing-social-media-mobile-risks/#ixzz2Arf70Dov


L’Oreal: The Next Level XBOX 360 App

October 10, 2012

L’Oreal have moved into the console gaming territory with ‘The Next Level’ XBOX 360 App, a personalised world of beauty, style and entertainment delivered right into the Xbox gaming console, complete with a participation based rewards program. The app includes things like a personal stylist, tips, forums, inspiration and even an educational style academy program… The more you interact with the app, including the more friends you bring into the experience, the more ‘Style Cred’ points you earn, which are in turn redeemed for the latest offers from L’Oreal.


Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Cloud? [INFOGRAPHIC]

October 10, 2012

The following infographic from CA Technologies’ CloudViews is based on a recent survey of IT leaders; it shows just how and why some companies have been slow to adapt.

Among its more interesting findings: While 80% of respondents say cloud computing drives innovation, more than 50% say they had no immediate plans to implement it. Why the disconnect? Job anxiety could be one reason. A shade under half of respondents say they believe companies will have to create entirely new IT jobs to accommodate a transition to the cloud, while 56% say cloud computing will require current employees to learn new skills.

Thanks to Mashable


FLASH REPORT: How Does Big Data Affect You?

September 28, 2012

On this week’s episode of the Flash Report, Jessica tells us how big data is influencing our everyday lives in ways we don’t even realize.

According to an article published by ITWorld, scientists and experts in the fishing industry are beginning to model big data sets about specific species’ breeding habits and migration patterns in order to keep them off the endangered species lists (so we can continue to consume our favorite fish, without over-consuming them).

Retailers are also beginning to utilize big data in unexpected new ways. Harvard Business Review explains how retailers are using big data to research shoppers’ buying patterns to help improve shopping experiences. For example, when a customer goes to buy an item, they’ll know about a sale on a related item.

Businessweek and IBM published some estimates on how “big” big data really is. Studies show that the world creates approximately 2.5 quintillion bytes of new data every day. That’s 1 followed by 18 zeros.

Next, KSL.com reports that NASA now believes ‘warp drive’ may be possible, and links back to a Wired story on examples of science fiction becoming science fact. We’d like to point out that if warp drive does show up any time soon, you can bet it will come with some pretty big data.


Fans and stadiums, really interesting video on how technology could potentially be adopted in stadium

September 13, 2012

Really interesting video….


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 752 other followers