Digital disruption and the future of the automotive industryPeter Tutty
Digital services centered on increasingly empowered consumers will bring disruption to the automotive industry.
Economic value within this industry and across adjacent markets will be forever altered. In a world where the future is far from certain, automotive companies will need to develop new core capabilities to survive.
What is going to happen next and how to respond? Download the report or explore the infographic, below.
Platforms, where the digital economy stands up. A bit of platform thinking for students of the European Institute of Technology, Master of Data Science
The Role of Gamification and Enabling Technologies in the Future of Commerce ...David Wortley
IORMA’s recent strategic agreement with IBM reminded me of the important role that IBM played in shaping the future direction of my career and my involvement in the technologies and strategies I anticipate will shortly have a very disruptive impact on business and commerce in an OMNI world.
Digital disruption and the future of the automotive industryPeter Tutty
Digital services centered on increasingly empowered consumers will bring disruption to the automotive industry.
Economic value within this industry and across adjacent markets will be forever altered. In a world where the future is far from certain, automotive companies will need to develop new core capabilities to survive.
What is going to happen next and how to respond? Download the report or explore the infographic, below.
Platforms, where the digital economy stands up. A bit of platform thinking for students of the European Institute of Technology, Master of Data Science
The Role of Gamification and Enabling Technologies in the Future of Commerce ...David Wortley
IORMA’s recent strategic agreement with IBM reminded me of the important role that IBM played in shaping the future direction of my career and my involvement in the technologies and strategies I anticipate will shortly have a very disruptive impact on business and commerce in an OMNI world.
Ravinder Pal Singh, Global Chief Information and Technology Officer at Air Works, identifies the IT dilemmas and opportunities that faces airlines today and suggests how a business might use them
Monetizing the Internet of Things: Extracting Value from the Connectivity Opp...Capgemini
Cisco has estimated that the Internet of Things (IoT) has the potential to generate about $19 trillion of value over the coming years. The staggering potential size-of-the-prize has certainly caught the attention of the world’s business community. In a recent survey of senior business leaders around the globe, 96% said their companies would be using IoT in some way within the next 3 years. However, there is a catch – most organizations are yet to derive significant commercial value from IoT. Our research shows that 70% of organizations do not generate service revenues from their IoT solutions. We have looked at why organizations are falling short in monetizing the IoT, and have tried to capture some initial observations on monetization models in what is still a very fast-developing marketplace.
Disrupting the Car Industry and Driver Experience with APIs - API Days San Fr...Fabernovel
Announcing API Days San Francisco 2014, focused on APIs for Connected Cars and Driver Experience.
This edition will focus on how APIs are disrupting the Car Industry and the Driver Experience, paving the way towards the connected car of the future.
According to Mark O'Neill, VP Innovation at Axway, "Soon we will see apis as being just as fundamental to cars as fuel or tires".
Come join us at API Days San Francisco 2014, from June 13th to June 15th at PARISOMA (169 11th Street).
More info: http://sf.apidays.io
The biggest online and social media in the CEE region, between 14th-15th October, with famous international speakers like:
Barabási-Albert László (USA – University Harvard)
Horváth László (USA)
Aigerim Shorman (USA)
Dan Gabriel (USA)
Jonathan Hubbard(USA)
Hannes Wirnsberger(DDB)
Johannes Wesemann(UBER)
Thomas Jul (Denmark – Ericsson, evangelist of "The Networked Society")
Chris Sherwood (Allegro)
Tomasz Musial(SmartAdserver)
Torben Heimann(IMorproveDigital)
Rob Webster(MediaCom)
Maciej Wyszy((SocioMantic)
Juraj Sasko (Szlovákia)
Chris Sherwood (Allegro),
Okányi Attila (Romania),
Jo Coombs (TURN)
John Purkiss(UK)
Lori Beattie(UK)
Kristin Billowitch(Rubicon)
With great enthusiasm Insights Success has shortlisted, “The 10 Most Innovative Automotive Tech Solution Providers 2019”, which are changing the world of automotive technology.
Considering this vital factors, with great enthusiasm Insights Success has shortlisted, “The 10 Most Innovative Automotive Tech Solution Providers 2019”, which are changing the world of automotive technology.
2020 CTRM Vendor Perception Survey and AnalysisCTRM Center
The 2020 Commodity Technology Advisory’s Vendor Perception Study is a biennial survey and analysis conducted to establish end-user and market influencer perceptions of the CTRM vendors, and to determine market leadership perceptions as well as buying criteria and brand awareness of the different vendors. As in previous years, the research survey was comprised of a comprehensive set of questions that CTRM end-users and industry consultants were invited to answer.
Updated - The Future of Automotive Data 25 07 16Future Agenda
In June 2015, as part of the core Future Agenda programme, we ran a dedicated workshop in Munich on the future of the connected vehicle, the stimulus for which can be found on our slideshare site (http://www.slideshare.net/futureagenda2/the-future-of-the-connected-vehicle-29-july-2015) while the outputs are on Flickr (https://www.flickr.com/photos/131046472@N07/albums/72157650615072522). With the connected car vision fast growing in impact and reach, many are highlighting what new data sources may be available in the future and how these may provide benefit to drivers, manufacturers and support services. As such we are now taking a deeper look at this, what is possible, what is probable and where value may be created, delivered and shared.
Building on last year’s views and additional recent discussions, we created a new initial view that brought together a number of different perspectives on the potential future of automotive data, the varied sources potential shifts within the sector as well as adjacent trends on data and connectivity. Over the past couple of months we gained feedback and opinion from around the world on which of these shifts are most likely to occur, where greatest value lies and what may be missing from this view.
As many organisations are rushing to grab as much data as possible, many hoping to extract value from the associated insights, we hope that this discussion will help clarify the reality from the hype, prioritise the propositions that will truly have benefit and so enable more focused activities. This is an area where collaboration, data sharing and competitor cooperation is clearly critical and as a lead arena for digital transformation we hope that the associated insights that emerge will be of interest to many.
This is an update of the initial view that includes comments from multiple experts around the world with whom we have talked. Some are from within the automotive sector and others from adjacent fields - potential partners and disrupters. We have grouped the updated insights into clusters around potential pots of value as seen by these experts - and separated them into level of value (high / medium / low etc) and level of sharing of data - from proprietary to shared to open.
As the final stage of this project we are now opening this up for wider comment to build a more broadly informed point of view. We welcome your views
Autonomous Vehicles ("AVs" - sometimes referred to as “self-driving” or “driverless” cars) are developing
rapidly and we are getting an increasing number of questions from investors about what they will mean for
the auto industry. The excitement around AVs is understandable – 'newcomers' like Google are making bold
claims for their AVs, existing OEMs are demonstrating fast-improving prototypes and suppliers are arguing
that they can exploit this new opportunity. People are beginning to ask if AVs are going to fundamentally
disrupt the conventional auto industry.
2021 Trends in Agricultural and Soft Commodities TradingCTRM Center
Arguably, all commodity and commodity-exposed businesses are facing unprecedented change and disruption. These numerous challenges range from climate and carbon to COVID lockdowns and work from home, to managing geopolitical and operational risks through supply chains while seeking to digitalise, automate and increase efficiencies across the business.
While talk of a new commodities supercycle may be premature, global population growth and the resulting increased demand suggest rising prices and volatilities, especially in agricultural commodities. Companies need enhanced agility in such markets. It starts with a modern software platform that provides adequate visibility and control over the business, from managing physical movements to limiting risks and exposure.
Digital disruption and the future of the automotive industryPeter Tutty
Digital services centered on increasingly empowered consumers will bring disruption to the automotive industry.
Economic value within this industry and across adjacent markets will be forever altered. In a world where the future is far from certain, automotive companies will need to develop new core capabilities to survive.
What is going to happen next and how to respond? Download the report or explore the infographic, below.
Ravinder Pal Singh, Global Chief Information and Technology Officer at Air Works, identifies the IT dilemmas and opportunities that faces airlines today and suggests how a business might use them
Monetizing the Internet of Things: Extracting Value from the Connectivity Opp...Capgemini
Cisco has estimated that the Internet of Things (IoT) has the potential to generate about $19 trillion of value over the coming years. The staggering potential size-of-the-prize has certainly caught the attention of the world’s business community. In a recent survey of senior business leaders around the globe, 96% said their companies would be using IoT in some way within the next 3 years. However, there is a catch – most organizations are yet to derive significant commercial value from IoT. Our research shows that 70% of organizations do not generate service revenues from their IoT solutions. We have looked at why organizations are falling short in monetizing the IoT, and have tried to capture some initial observations on monetization models in what is still a very fast-developing marketplace.
Disrupting the Car Industry and Driver Experience with APIs - API Days San Fr...Fabernovel
Announcing API Days San Francisco 2014, focused on APIs for Connected Cars and Driver Experience.
This edition will focus on how APIs are disrupting the Car Industry and the Driver Experience, paving the way towards the connected car of the future.
According to Mark O'Neill, VP Innovation at Axway, "Soon we will see apis as being just as fundamental to cars as fuel or tires".
Come join us at API Days San Francisco 2014, from June 13th to June 15th at PARISOMA (169 11th Street).
More info: http://sf.apidays.io
The biggest online and social media in the CEE region, between 14th-15th October, with famous international speakers like:
Barabási-Albert László (USA – University Harvard)
Horváth László (USA)
Aigerim Shorman (USA)
Dan Gabriel (USA)
Jonathan Hubbard(USA)
Hannes Wirnsberger(DDB)
Johannes Wesemann(UBER)
Thomas Jul (Denmark – Ericsson, evangelist of "The Networked Society")
Chris Sherwood (Allegro)
Tomasz Musial(SmartAdserver)
Torben Heimann(IMorproveDigital)
Rob Webster(MediaCom)
Maciej Wyszy((SocioMantic)
Juraj Sasko (Szlovákia)
Chris Sherwood (Allegro),
Okányi Attila (Romania),
Jo Coombs (TURN)
John Purkiss(UK)
Lori Beattie(UK)
Kristin Billowitch(Rubicon)
With great enthusiasm Insights Success has shortlisted, “The 10 Most Innovative Automotive Tech Solution Providers 2019”, which are changing the world of automotive technology.
Considering this vital factors, with great enthusiasm Insights Success has shortlisted, “The 10 Most Innovative Automotive Tech Solution Providers 2019”, which are changing the world of automotive technology.
2020 CTRM Vendor Perception Survey and AnalysisCTRM Center
The 2020 Commodity Technology Advisory’s Vendor Perception Study is a biennial survey and analysis conducted to establish end-user and market influencer perceptions of the CTRM vendors, and to determine market leadership perceptions as well as buying criteria and brand awareness of the different vendors. As in previous years, the research survey was comprised of a comprehensive set of questions that CTRM end-users and industry consultants were invited to answer.
Updated - The Future of Automotive Data 25 07 16Future Agenda
In June 2015, as part of the core Future Agenda programme, we ran a dedicated workshop in Munich on the future of the connected vehicle, the stimulus for which can be found on our slideshare site (http://www.slideshare.net/futureagenda2/the-future-of-the-connected-vehicle-29-july-2015) while the outputs are on Flickr (https://www.flickr.com/photos/131046472@N07/albums/72157650615072522). With the connected car vision fast growing in impact and reach, many are highlighting what new data sources may be available in the future and how these may provide benefit to drivers, manufacturers and support services. As such we are now taking a deeper look at this, what is possible, what is probable and where value may be created, delivered and shared.
Building on last year’s views and additional recent discussions, we created a new initial view that brought together a number of different perspectives on the potential future of automotive data, the varied sources potential shifts within the sector as well as adjacent trends on data and connectivity. Over the past couple of months we gained feedback and opinion from around the world on which of these shifts are most likely to occur, where greatest value lies and what may be missing from this view.
As many organisations are rushing to grab as much data as possible, many hoping to extract value from the associated insights, we hope that this discussion will help clarify the reality from the hype, prioritise the propositions that will truly have benefit and so enable more focused activities. This is an area where collaboration, data sharing and competitor cooperation is clearly critical and as a lead arena for digital transformation we hope that the associated insights that emerge will be of interest to many.
This is an update of the initial view that includes comments from multiple experts around the world with whom we have talked. Some are from within the automotive sector and others from adjacent fields - potential partners and disrupters. We have grouped the updated insights into clusters around potential pots of value as seen by these experts - and separated them into level of value (high / medium / low etc) and level of sharing of data - from proprietary to shared to open.
As the final stage of this project we are now opening this up for wider comment to build a more broadly informed point of view. We welcome your views
Autonomous Vehicles ("AVs" - sometimes referred to as “self-driving” or “driverless” cars) are developing
rapidly and we are getting an increasing number of questions from investors about what they will mean for
the auto industry. The excitement around AVs is understandable – 'newcomers' like Google are making bold
claims for their AVs, existing OEMs are demonstrating fast-improving prototypes and suppliers are arguing
that they can exploit this new opportunity. People are beginning to ask if AVs are going to fundamentally
disrupt the conventional auto industry.
2021 Trends in Agricultural and Soft Commodities TradingCTRM Center
Arguably, all commodity and commodity-exposed businesses are facing unprecedented change and disruption. These numerous challenges range from climate and carbon to COVID lockdowns and work from home, to managing geopolitical and operational risks through supply chains while seeking to digitalise, automate and increase efficiencies across the business.
While talk of a new commodities supercycle may be premature, global population growth and the resulting increased demand suggest rising prices and volatilities, especially in agricultural commodities. Companies need enhanced agility in such markets. It starts with a modern software platform that provides adequate visibility and control over the business, from managing physical movements to limiting risks and exposure.
Digital disruption and the future of the automotive industryPeter Tutty
Digital services centered on increasingly empowered consumers will bring disruption to the automotive industry.
Economic value within this industry and across adjacent markets will be forever altered. In a world where the future is far from certain, automotive companies will need to develop new core capabilities to survive.
What is going to happen next and how to respond? Download the report or explore the infographic, below.
The Digital Disruption Wave_ How Can IT Firms Ride It_ - Techwave.pdfKalpins
With disruption to business models facing almost every industry, organizations are focusing on making digital strategy their centerpiece. Going “digital” requires a coherent approach to ensure all parts of the organization follow the digital approach and the organization is perceived as being digitally savvy. How can organizations be sure their strategy is coherent? Porter’s model offers a good starting point. In the colloquial approach, the organization marshals its unique set of activities to help deliver a value proposition to the customer.
CTRM - The Next Generation - ComTechAdvisory Vendor Technical UpdateCTRM Center
There is no doubt that technology has undergone a sea-change over the last decade or so potentially making it possible to build and deploy software faster and more cost-effectively while offering a host of features that help users to work smarter, faster and with less opportunity for error. Additionally, the way that applications are designed and built has also changed to take better advantage of these technologies. While arguably there is no single technology that facilitates a paradigm shift in Commodity Trading and Risk Management (CTRM) software, when you combine advances in all areas of solution development and deployment technology, then such a leap forward is both likely and desirable.
Nowhere is the gap between the possibilities offered by these leaps in technology and what is available as commercial solutions more apparent than in the commodity trading and risk management software category. There are many aging, legacy, solutions still being utilized, marketed, and deployed and yet, this is an industry that is experiencing unprecedented demands and change, which in turn, are placing increasing demands on the software it utilizes. What most commodity firms are seeking is more agile software platforms that can allow them to adapt and evolve through these changes. This growing demand is also accentuated by the younger, more tech-savvy people entering the business whose expectations are not being met by many existing solutions.
Interview: What is the main security and privacy risks associated with the ad...Ersin KARA
worldautomotiveconference.co.uk
"The methods of artificial intelligence and augmented reality have always been the substance of rumination and speculation since very recently, where they’ve started to take very a central role in our lives.
Intelligent technologies today are computer-aided systems that completely control all industrial pipelines. They can operate autonomously and on this account all processes can be managed independently.
Today’s logistics do not resemble one-way storage of goods seen up to a few years ago. This is due to new web technologies that allow an entirely new level of interaction within the moving parts of a given logistics eco-system. As these technologies continue developing at a rapid pace, several partially and fully automated logistic frameworks are already readying for deployment."
"When we compare Industry 4.0 advantages and classic ERP programs advantages We see below points ;
- Space-efficient storage. This will save in warehouse areas and volumes. Ex. Kardex Remstar applications, vertical storage solutions
- ERP’s are integrated warehouse management software.
So the error will be absolutely minimal. Prevention of losses due to lack of communication in monolithic systems that have one point of failure.
- Automatic and controlled product circulation. This will allow for increased work safety and fewer work accidents. This will naturally result in risk reduction resulting from controllability, especially in hazardous material logistics.
- Line feed, standby modules. So perfect stock management, “0” inventory loss.
- Automatic finished product warehouses. This will allow for unmanned warehouses, fast vehicle loading and unloading systems that can work 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Cellular transfer storage systems.
For distribution centers and warehouse management systems that implement Industry 4.0 technologies, data needs to be collected, analyzed, acted on, and secured in order to partake in the data driven decision-making Industry 4.0 advertises."
The world is being transformed by new technologies, which are redefining customer expectations, enabling businesses to meet these new expectations, and changing
the way people live and work. Digital transformation, as this is commonly called, has immense potential to change consumer lives, create value for business and unlock
broader societal benefits.
The World Economic Forum launched the Digital Transformation Initiative in 2015, in collaboration with Accenture, to serve as the focal point for new opportunities and
themes arising from the latest developments in the digitalization of business and society. It supports the Forum’s broader activity around the theme of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution. Since its inception, the Initiative has analysed the impact of digital transformation across 13 industries and five cross-industry topics, to identify the
key themes that enable the value generated by digitalization to be captured for business and wider society. Drawing on these themes, we have developed a series of
imperatives for business and policy leaders that look to maximize the benefits of digitalization. We have engaged with more than 300 executives (both from leading
global firms and newer technology disruptors), government and policy leaders, and academics.
Every industry has its nuances and contextual differences, but they all share certain inhibitors to change. These include the innovator’s dilemma (the fear of
cannibalizing existing revenue models), low technology adoption rates across organizations, conservative organizational cultures, and regulatory issues. Business and
government leaders should continue to work towards addressing these challenges.
A notable outcome of this work is the development of our distinctive economic framework, which quantifies the impact of digitalization on industry and society. It can be
applied consistently at all levels of business and government to help unlock the estimated $100 trillion of value that digitalization could create over the next decade. We
have already started to leverage this framework for region-specific discussions with some governments.
We are confident that the findings from the Initiative will contribute to improving the state of the world through digital transformation, both for business and wider society.
For this paper, we interviewed some of the leading voices in the connected car industry to uncover some of the trends influencing the market, and what it might mean for the future of any business seeking to capitalize on this radical change in how we live and move. We examine how these changes are fundamentally altering the talent landscape in the industry, heralding the arrival of a new breed of executives to fill an evolving talent gap in the mobility sector; created by the convergence of the traditional automotive sector and a myriad of outside influences.
A cloud-based TMS that Provides Real-Time Visibility.
Designed to provide visibility and manage
your global shipments from creation to delivery.
iMpact TMS is a configurable solution that meets
your exact needs and specifications.
5 Manufacturing Technology Trends That Lead to Cost SavingsInsight
Rising demand for high-quality, affordable products has put pressure on manufacturers to optimize their processes. Let’s explore some of the leading solutions that have transformed the industry.
Learn more: http://ms.spr.ly/6000Tweiq
DMS Ecosystem – An Edge To Automotive IndustryShingita k.
There are four key business drivers that impact the automotive industry: economic conditions, consumer preferences, government, and technological advances.
There are four key business drivers that impact the automotive industry: economic conditions, consumer preferences, government, and technological advances.