Our cover star, EY’s Global Chief Data Officer Marco Vernocchi, tells Interface why data is a “team sport” and reveals…
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Our cover star, EY’s Global Chief Data Officer Marco Vernocchi, tells Interface why data is a “team sport” and reveals the transformation journey towards realising its potential for one of the world’s largest professional services organisations.
Welcome to the latest issue of Interface magazine!
Global Chief Data Officer, Marco Vernocchi, reflects on the data transformation journey at one of the world’s largest professional services networks.
“Data is pervasive, it’s everywhere and nowhere at the same time. It’s not a physical asset, but it’s a part of every business activity every day. I joined EY in 2019 as the first Global Chief Data Officer. Our vision was to recognise data as a strategic competitive asset for the organisation. Through the efforts of leadership and the Data Office team, we’ve elevated data from a commodity utility to an asset. Our formal data strategy defined with clarity the purpose, scope, goals and timeline of how we manage data across EY. Bringing data to the centre of what we do has created a competitive asset that is transforming the way we work.”
PivotalEdge Capital
Sid Ghatak, Founder & CEO of asset management firm PivotalEdge Capital, spoked to us about the pioneering use of “data-centric AI” for trading models capable of solving the problems of trust and cost.
“I’ve always advocated data-driven decision-making throughout my career,” says Ghatak. “I knew when I started an asset management firm that it needed to be data-centric AI from the very beginning. A few early missteps in my career taught me the importance of having a stable and reliable flow of data in production systems and that became a criterion.”
LSC Communications
Piotr Topor, Director of Information Security & Governance at LSC Communications, discusses tackling the cyber skills shortage, AI, and bringing together the business and IT to create a cyber-conscious culture at a global leader in print and digital media solutions.
Topor tells Interface: “The main challenge we’re dealing with is overcoming the disconnect between cybersecurity and business goals.”
América Televisión
Interface meets again with Jose Hernandez, Chief Digital Officer at América Televisión, who reveals how the company is embracing new business models, and maintaining market leadership in Peru.
“Launching our FAST channel represents a pivotal step in diversifying our content delivery and monetisation strategies. Furthermore, aligning us with global trends while catering to the changing viewing habits of our audience,” says Hernandez.
Also in this issue of Interface, we hear from eflow about new approaches to Regtech; get the lowdown on bridging the AI skills gap from CI&T; and GCX on the best ways to navigate changing cybersecurity regulations.
Our final cover story for 2023 explores how Deputy CIO May Cheng is accelerating a digital customer and product-centric approach…
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Our final cover story for 2023 explores how Deputy CIO May Cheng is accelerating a digital customer and product-centric approach to IT management for the International Trade Administration (ITA).
Welcome to the latest issueof Interface magazine!
Interface showcases leaders at the forefront of innovation with digital technologies transforming myriad industries.
We connect once more with the tech trailblazers at the International Trade Administration. Deputy CIO May Cheng and her team areaccelerating adoption of ITA’s customer and product-centric approach to IT management. In addition, their focus is on Agile, DevSecOps, Value Proposition, and Human Centred Design. “In 2023, we launched 13 products, three MVPs and saw enhancements operationalised. Moreover, the digital model has enabled a partnership between business and IT. The result is clearer lines of shared responsibility, transparency in resources, and a continuous learning culture across the agency.”
Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Trust: Digitally transforming patient care
The Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trustis centred on bringing tomorrow’s treatments to today’s patients with a clear mission to provide excellent, specialist care to patients suffering from heart and lung disease. We hear from Andrew Raynes who took up his role as CIO in 2017. He is overseeing a digital transformation program bringing value to staff and patients. “Using the global language of interoperability… we’ll see greater efficiency in terms of use of technology and sweating our assets. Furthermore, exploiting the benefits to support seamless care by allowing standards to do the heavy lifting.”
Toronto Community Housing: Supporting tenants with tech
Toronto Community Housing houses tenants in 106 of Toronto’s 158 neighbourhoods. It ensures over 43,000 low and moderate-income families are supported in their continuously managed homes. Luisa Andrews, VP Information Technology Services tells us it’s the best role she’s had in her career. “It’s the most challenging, and where I’ve seen the most progress in a short amount of time. I’m proud of my team and what we’ve accomplished in five years. We, and our partners, have enabled the corporation, through technology, to do what it needs to do for our tenants.”
Marshfield Clinic Health System:
Marshfield Clinic Health System provides care at over 50 locations across the US state of Wisconsin. Chief Data & Analytics Officer Mitchell Kwiatkowski explains its tech mantra to us: “We’re trying to toe that line while examining new technologies as they come out. We’re aiming to understand what they are, how they can help, and implementing things that are mature enough and show promise. I don’t think healthcare is necessarily risk-averse; it’s a highly regulated area that doesn’t always have deep pockets for investment. However, it’s people’s health at stake, so we have to be careful…”
Also in this issue, we get the lowdown on the tech trends for 2024 from Hitachi Vantara innovation guru Bjorn Andersson. We also hear from the WatchGuard Threat Lab research team with their cybersecurity predictions for the year ahead.
Todd Salmon, Executive Advisor for Strategic Services at GuidePoint Security, on the cybersecurity challenge of keeping up with the pace of the ever-changing digital world
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This month’s cover story explores how GuidePoint Security, an elite team of highly trained and certified experts, cut through cybersecurity chaos and confusion to put control back in customers’ hands.
Welcome to the latest issueof Interface magazine!
Interface welcomes in 2023 with a need-to-know list of what we can expect from technology this year and how it can allow enterprises to gain a competitive edge in a disruptive and increasingly digital world. Faced with everything from process mining and AI to quantum-readiness and the metaverse we cut through the hype to bring you the facts.
GuidePoint Security: digital transformation in cybersecurity
“Cybersecurity is in such a reactive mode because of the sheer volume of risks and vulnerabilities an organisation faces,” says Todd Salmon, Executive Advisor for Strategic Services at GuidePoint Security. “We see a lot of copycats and repeat attacks happen, but at the end of the day it’s all about creating solutions to help combat those problems.”
GuidePoint’s elite team of highly trained and certified experts, cut through cybersecurity chaos and confusion to put control back in customers’ hands. Helping them make the smartest, most informed cyber risk decisions, and choose and integrate the best-fit solutions to build the most effective cybersecurity program, Salmon discusses the challenge of keeping up with the pace of the ever-changing digital world.
bp: a strategic reinvention
“We are investing in digital to drive process efficiency and improve insights; but also to develop our people with the skills we need for now, and the future at bp. This means we are playing to win while caring for our people through investing in their personal development,” says Head of Strategic Transformation Nick Hales.
“After setting the right foundations through various remediation and compliance initiatives, we embarked on our digital transformation journey,” adds Strategy & Transformation Manager Emmanouela Vlachantoni. “There was a clear opportunity to standardise and streamline our controls environment to reduce complexity and increase insight.”
Fairfax County: winning the IT war with cybersecurity
Meanwhile, across the pond, we learn how Fairfax County in the State of Virginia is reaping the rewards of a cybersecurity program enabling government services and keeping citizens safe. “My role is to educate our leadership to ensure they understand the business value of cybersecurity as it relates to government services. Being accountable for the security of their systems and data is a key factor in developing a successful cyber program,” explains CISO Michael Dent.
Also in this issue, we round up the key tech events and conferences across the globe and, with the help of the experts at Fasthosts, take a deep dive into the metaverse… Can virtual reality become our reality? Read on to find out.
Welcome to the Winter edition of INTERFACE Magazine, our biggest yet! Our cover story this month centres around Lutz Beck,…
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Welcome to the Winter edition
of INTERFACE Magazine, our biggest yet!
Our cover story this month centres around Lutz Beck, CIO of Daimler Trucks North America, who reveals its massive digital transformation into a totally connected company… Read the latest issue here!
Beck transformed Daimler Trucks Asia
– with its brands Mitsubishi Fuso and BharatBenz – into a truly connected
company, moving the IT function front and center of its operations. This work
paved the way for Beck’s move to head up transformational change in the US.
“I was given an open field to do a lot of
these innovations here within the Daimler Trucks North America Group because
they had started certain elements but there were still a few things lacking.
That’s the reason why there is a clear task: to push innovation and transform
IT into a business value adding and future oriented organization.”
Elsewhere in the mag we also speak
exclusively to c-level executives at BT, AXA Partners, SSE, ACC and KPN
in a bumper issue of B2B insight! We also feature interviews with Lisa Moyle
from VC Innovations and Digital Banking Report’s Jim Marous and Sonia
Wedrychowitz. Plus, we list all the top events and conferences from around
the globe.
Borislav Tadic, Vice President BMS & Transformation DRC, explores how a major digital transformation of Deutsche Telekom has enabled greater…
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Borislav Tadic, Vice President BMS & Transformation DRC, explores how a major digital transformation of Deutsche Telekom has enabled greater customer experience and significant technological advancements.
Tell us what
your role is and how it fits into the wider Deutsche Telekom strategy?
I’m Vice President at Deutsche Telekom, responsible for board member support and transformation of the board area, data privacy, compliance and legal, working here in the Bonn headquarters of Deutsche Telekom Group. We as Deutsche Telekom Group are present in 50 countries and I would say are definitely a leading European telecommunications brand. We hope, after our mergers and acquisitions in the United States that we’ll become an even bigger player on a global level.
How
important is it in your position to continue to learn?
That’s a fantastic point. One thing
I try to do is constantly improve on an individual level. That includes formal
education. I have at least 10 internationally recognised certifications and I’m
currently working on my PhD in parallel to my work and I use numerous
non-formal opportunities to expand my knowledge, both in the formats offered in
the company and outside as well as through reading and keeping up to date with
the latest developments every day, every morning.
That attitude is something I try to include in our transformation programs. For example, during the past two years, we’ve up-skilled more than 1000 employees off this board area, both in Germany and internationally, in several ways. First, offering them online learning content on our intranet platform, creating awareness about the different digital courses we have in the context of Deutsche Telekom, which are focused on their profession. We also continue to learn about global technological developments, so they can understand the new trends and developments in the industry so that they can better advise and/or support their customers.
From there we went a step forward and decided not only to offer them in a digital format, which is easy to implement and easy to offer and cost-efficient but also to enable a knowledge transfer. This is through our Digital Future Campuses in Athens and here in Germany. Several hundred people and experts from different functions of our board area were brought together and we educated them in areas such as broadband development, 5G, agile working, international collaboration, diversity and many other topics which directly or indirectly contribute to their performance and to their daily jobs. Satisfaction rate on the company level was one of the best in the recent history of Deutsche Telekom, with 96 to 99% participant satisfaction with the program.
A
transformation of any kind breeds challenge, what are some of the challenges
you have faced?
It is a challenge indeed. The first aspect of the challenge is that you have to give or convey as much knowledge as possible in a relatively short time and of course to make the knowledge current because if you prepare a course around blockchain and you prepared it two years ago, today you would need a completely different base. The pace of change with regards to the content, which you create to educate someone, is very high. It’s important that you stay up to date in the preparation and delivery of these courses.
Even that aside, you have a limited budget and this limited budget has to be approved and/or aligned with our human resources area. We are working with them closely because of course they have way more transparency about the needs of every individual employee and we have of course our professional view and vision where we want to be as a group. We basically worked with our colleagues from HR and with our expert groups in identifying which areas we need to focus on because you have hundreds of areas, especially in our fast-changing, fast-paced business around digitisation and technology.
After we finalised that, we created a program and then the next challenge was how to get the best possible lecturers and best possible experts to share the knowledge, because of course, their time is limited. There are of course budget limitations and numerous other restrictions including language barriers. We tackle that by trying to find the best in-house experts in some areas and external partners for others. They have more experience in some domains that are relevant to us. Then there is the delivery.
Even if you organise a format that consists of online courses as well as the physical presence of a course for several hundred people, that’s not an easy task. It sounds like an easy task; it’s just an event with a couple of hundred people but no, this is multi-partner, multi-party interactive session with numerous choice options because not everyone gets the same program. The people choose the modules and you have to fit all of that together. These are some of the challenges we’ve hopefully successfully tackled.
How
do you ensure that your transformation is done so with the customer experience
in mind?
That was the essence of our program and it’s a great question. First, we understood that we cannot only assume what the customer wants, we need to know what the customer wants and the only way to do that is to talk to the customer. As a governance function, we went and talked to the customers. We went out and spoke with actual private customers and business customers of Deutsche Telekom and asked them: what can we, from security, from privacy, from legal, from compliance, do differently in order to make your life better and easier?
We got our feedback. It was extremely good feedback, in the sense of many concrete, actionable points we can implement. For example, one of them was to simplify terms and conditions. When you sign a contract anywhere, for any mobile service, TV service or anything else we offer, you need to read through the pages of the contract documentation. This document is written mostly with the small letters, small font, explaining what will happen in case of some emergency escalation or conflict etc. It’s written in a language that no one understands but it was always the intention of Deutsche Telekom to make it fully understandable to our customers. We were doing our own efforts but when you speak directly to the customers, he can explain to you, which paragraphs are not easily understood or interpreted.
We used that feedback to simplify the terms and conditions for our major products. We did that within a couple of months and now we have one of the best, if not the best terms and conditions document, which is now standard. This raised the trust with our customers because they know that Telekom is fully transparent and wants them to understand what they are signing and what they are changing with their contract situation. This is only one example of numerous changes we did to the direct discussions with external customers.
How
important is transparency to a company like DT?
When you look at how you can make it more transparent and when you simplify the processes and the policies, the documents, when you’re directly communicating your goals and why you are doing certain things, this raises the trust of the customers. But of course, many digital tools can also help you to raise that transparency. For example, you can do it for ethical reasons. We have been very successful in advancing customer demands through a chatbot. It became so good that some of the customers didn’t even know that they were being served by the chatbot. Because it answered all their questions in the manner that they would expect from a live person, but we still, from an ethical perspective, decided to include the sign notification saying: “You’re speaking with our digital assistant, not with a real person.”
We’ve also introduced specialised
tools both internally and externally. As an example, we have a data privacy
cockpit that enables you to log in as a customer of Deutsche Telekom and
basically see which data you have approved or are sharing with both Deutsche
Telekom and you can also click and approve or disapprove with us sharing that
data with other parties. We are very strict with that. This is one of the parts
of our unique selling proposition; we’re extremely careful with the data of our
customers. What we want to achieve is for customers to no longer need to call or
send an email to understand which data of theirs is in the system and which can
be shared, but they also can log in with their mobile or fixed device and look
and choose and change the categories at any time, through a very useful and
user friendly interface.
Around 10 years ago, through internal experiences, we realised that this could become something we are known and recognised for, and so we decided to really invest internally into data privacy, security, compliance to strengthen our legal functions, to strengthen our audit functions. We did this in order to create a system that not only gives assurance to our shareholders but also to all of our customers. We don’t do it because we must; we believe that there is clear value in data being handled in an ethical and responsible manner for our customers.
How
difficult is this with regards to DT’s presence across 50 countries?
First is that we look at all of our footprints holistically where, if we have a high standard which is not producing a significant change in the product pricing or service pricing, we look to apply it throughout the whole footprint. In the area of compliance, security, privacy and risk management, we are applying the highest standards worldwide.
The challenge here is that you have certain local changes which happen and which of course demand us to stay on the ball in that we are always in contact with our local counterparts which are responsible for these areas where the board area is active and not only upscale them, not only to make them aware of the customer demands both locally and internationally, but also to always make sure that they’re applying the latest, leanest standard and the process to keep the high levels of these services.
How
will you continue to grow and transform? Can a transformational journey ever
really end?
There is no endpoint. You’re absolutely right; the transformation will never stop and should never stop. It’s a process of continuous improvement of the organisations and individuals and customers’ demands, markets. Everything is changing, so we need to keep changing constantly. I think it’s very important to say in the sense of the role you mentioned is that you also lead by example, not only me but also my colleagues and other senior executives. They need to be aware that if we are promoting a tool to be used or a process to be simplified, we have to start with ourselves.
They’re extremely important, these change processes, because it’s not sufficient only to upscale, to implement the customer demands and to digitise and introduce digital tools. If you want the whole organisation to have a sane and a good mix of agile projects and waterfall projects, I need to show that some of my projects in the digitization context are being run agile.
What do the next 12 months look like for DT?
We’re going to focus on new skills. Let’s say that we are going to further explore what the blockchain is bringing. We are going to further explore what the changes are, not only technologically, but also the social changes related to 5G. In addition to that, we want to further explore AI and also further explore digital ethics. We are going to be active in the corporate digital responsibility domain where we, as Deutsche Telekom, are very much pioneering some of the elements here in Europe, so this is definitely going to happen.
What
makes a successful CTO?
I would say surround yourself with extremely diverse people because diversity is not only diversity in the context of having different people with different backgrounds around yourself or different religions, different genders, different ages, etc., but also diversity in the opinion context, and the context of thoughts. And when you’re surrounded by such people, try to be like a sponge.
Try to take as much input as you can to process this and put it into the context and to continue changing because if I would apply what I learned at let’s say in the university or what I’m learning now for my PhD, that might be okay for a certain period of time, but the world, technology and the market is changing with extreme pace. So, you have to be fully aware that this will continue changing so your adaptability is the key. Your curiosity is the key and if you keep that, I’m sure that you’re basically ensuring that you’ll be successful today and tomorrow.
This month’s cover centres around Staffordshire University, one of the UK’s emerging tech powerhouses. We talk to Andrew Proctor, Director of Digital Services, at the university who talks about the massive digital transformation he has overseen there.
For a sector steeped in tradition, it’s perhaps not
surprising that higher education has taken longer than most industries to wake
up to the digitisation of operations and offerings that have disrupted
virtually every other market. However, with rising customer expectation linked
to increased fees, and a battle to establish points of differentiation in a
highly competitive marketplace, higher education has had to respond to the
changing needs of the client, and nowhere is that more evident than at
Staffordshire University.
Andrew Proctor, is the man who has spearheaded a
massive digital revolution in an attempt to truly harness digital. “If you
compare higher education to a lot of the modern digital era organisations or
companies, universities can be obsessed with physical assets such as buildings;
a new building being a sign of a healthy university,” he explains. “Now, I’m
not saying that buildings aren’t a part of that future, they absolutely are,
but we are developing what we call a ‘clicks and mortar’ strategy that delivers
the best of the physical and the digital. It’s that harmony between your
physical infrastructure and your online presence.”
Elsewhere,
there is a highly revealing interview with EnterSolar’s Edgar
Lim, Vice President of Technology and Procurement, who explores how a sound
procurement philosophy achieves growth in a “solar-coaster” market.
We
also hear from Craig Stewart, Vice President of Product Management at
SnapLogic, who addresses how tech can provide some of the solutions to the
global skills gap. We also look at the advent of automated data centres and
reveal the most influential blogs and resources for CIOs.
Plus,
lots, lots more, including our guide to the world’s best events and conferences.
Companies that use voice plus touch interactions with their products and services are actually seen as less trustworthy and less…
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Companies that use voice plus touch interactions
with their products and services are actually seen as less trustworthy and less
engaging by their users, according to new research from emlyon business school.
The research, conducted by Margherita Pagani,
Director of the AIM Research Center on AI in Value Creation and Professor of
Digital Marketing at emlyon business school, and colleagues from ESSCA School
of Management and Florida State University, College of Business, analysed the
impact and differences between ‘touch’ interaction and ‘touch and voice’
interaction on personal consumer engagement and brand trust.
The researchers created two separate experiments,
focused on a utilitarian product and then a hedonic product, both of which had
over 90 participants belonging to generation Y, which is commonly equipped with
the latest smartphones and frequently use them for business interactions. For
both experiments, participants had to interact with the brand using their
smartphone including a phone call to the company to ask a specific set of
questions.
One group was required to interact with the brand
through the smartphone using a touch-only interaction, and the other used both
touch and voice interaction – either Apple’s Siri or OK Google. After
interacting with the company, participants were asked to rate their customer
experience. The participant’s answers were then measured to evaluate personal
engagement with the tasks, their level of trust with the brand and their
privacy concerns.
The researchers found that participants who used
the touch-only interaction experienced a much higher level of personal
engagement with the brand compared to those who used the touch plus voice
interaction.
Prof. Pagani says,
“Many companies have introduced new AI products
that use voice-activation such as Amazon’s Alexa, Google’s Home Assistant or
Apple’s Siri. These have been introduced in order to increase customer
experiential engagement, stimulate the interaction and collect more data that
allow to better personalise the experience through machine learning.
However, our study shows that in the initial phase of adoption, adding
voice recognition actually has the opposite desired effect. Even if voice may
be considered as a way to develop a much more natural interaction, the level of
cognitive efforts required to the brain using two sensory modes (voice and touch)
are higher. Therefore, consumers find it harder to completely engage with the
product and can easily be distracted”.
The researchers also found that participants who
used the touch-only interaction felt as though they had more control over the
information they shared and therefore had greater confidence in the brand.
Users stated that they found it much simpler to input information using only
one sensory method; touch.
“The lack of familiarity with how these digital
voice interactions actually work is likely to be the reason as to why consumers
are less trusting of brands that use both touch and voice. Whilst the use of
touch also garners much more control for a consumer, as opposed to voice”.
The
study, published in the ‘Journal of Interactive Marketing’ is the first of its
kind to explore the effects of new voice-based interface modes on marketing
relationships. Whilst technology multiplies the way that consumers can interact
with brands, this study shows that too much interaction can actually harm a company,
and offers managers guidance on how to increase personal engagement and brand
trust.
Industrial companies are embracing 5G connectivity as a primary enabler of digital transformation, and plan to implement the technology within…
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Industrial companies are embracing 5G connectivity as a
primary enabler of digital transformation, and plan to implement the technology
within two years. This is spurring interest in private licenses, which nearly
half of large industrial companies (47%) intend to apply for, according to the
latest findings from the Capgemini
Research Institute.
Key findings of the study, which surveyed over 800
industrial companies’ executives and 150 telecoms executives across 12
countries, include:
5G is critical to digital transformation: When industrial
companies’ executives were asked which technologies will be the most integral
to their digital transformation over the next five years, 75% mentioned 5G as a
key enabler, ranking second to cloud computing (84%), and ahead of technology
innovations such as advanced automation and AI/machine learning. Industrial
companies believe that 5G’s versatility, flexibility and reliability will help
address connectivity challenges (a limiting factor to digital transformation
for 44% of those polled) and fuel future use cases.
Industrial companies want to move quickly to implement 5G: There
is widespread confidence in 5G’s potential, with almost two-thirds of
industrial companies (65%) planning to implement it within the first two years
of availability. In Italy (35%), France (30%) and Canada (27%), over a quarter
intend to use 5G within the first year, while 75% of industrial companies in
the UK and Italy, 69% in Spain, and 68% in the US and Norway plan to start
within the first two years. The largest manufacturers are most likely to
implement 5G first compared to the broader industry: 74% with annual revenue
above $10bn expect to do so within the first two years, compared to 57% with
revenue between $500m and $1bn.
One-third (33%) of industrial companies are planning to
apply for their own 5G license and large organizations will take the lead with
47% expressing interest. This is fuelled by a desire for greater autonomy and
security combined with concerns about telecom operators being too slow in
rolling-out 5G public networks. However, there will be regulatory barriers
which differ across countries.
Gunther May, Head of Technology and Innovation, Business
Unit Automation and Electrification at Bosch Rexroth AG says, “As a solution
provider and a manufacturer, we are monitoring the 5G landscape closely and we
believe there are multiple benefits to holding our own license. It would allow
us to be in full control of our 5G strategy by giving us the freedom to either
deploy the network alone or with a telecom operator.”
Security and operational advantages will drive 5G adoption: When
asked about the business reason for investing in 5G, more than half cited more
secure operations (54%) and efficiency of operations/cost savings (52%), with
the expectation that 5G will help in enabling or enhancing use cases such as
real-time edge analytics, video surveillance, remote control of distributed
production, AI-enabled or remote controlled motions, remote operations through
AR/VR, etc.
Industrial companies will pay more for premium services: Despite
uncertainties around the speed of deployment, manufacturers are already willing
to pay a premium charge for enhanced 5G connectivity. 72% of industrial
companies will pay more for enhanced mobile broadband speed and increased
capacity, yet only 54% of telecom operators think there is appetite for this.
This presents an opportunity for telecom operators to consider how they build a
highly profitable 5G business model.
Pierre Fortier, Principal Consultant in Telecom, Media and
Technology at Capgemini Invent comments: “This research makes it clear that
industrial companies are confident about the benefits of 5G before it has even
come to market. That said, 5G is an emerging technology and there will be many
challenges to overcome before it is ready to be deployed at scale.
Co-innovation between industrial companies and the telco ecosystem, in the form
of pilots and open experimentation platforms, will be essential to create
win-win business, service and operating models that will foster 5G adoption.”
Research Methodology
The Capgemini Research Institute conducted, with Capgemini
Invent experts, a primary survey of over 800 executives from industrial
companies. Respondents were based in 12 countries: Belgium, Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom
and United States, and across a dozen sub-sectors: Aerospace & Defense,
Airport and Railway Operators, Automotive, Chemical, Consumer Product, Energy
& Utilities, Industrial Machinery, Logistics, Medical Devices, Pharma &
Life Sciences and Semiconductor and Hi-tech Manufacturing. The Institute also
conducted a survey of 150 telecom executives from these 12 countries and also
finished more than 20 one-on-one interviews with industry and telecom executives.