Welcome to the Digital World - where technological advancement will change business, society and humanity at a pace and scale like no other in history. This presentation summarises the technological disruptions, their consequences and implications for all of us living in this new world.
3. “ Imagination creates reality, and as desire is a part of
imagination, the world we desire is more real than the
world we passively accept ”
Northrop Frye
4.
5. If we can connect a
cow to the internet
Then why not an
elephant?
7. 4/10 Companies will fail in
next 5 years
Source: Cisco & IMD Global Center for Business Transformation
8. Source: The Hamilton Project
$100,000,000,000,000
$1,000,000,000,000
$10,000,000,000
$100,000,000
$1,000,000
$10,000
$100
$1
1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
2010Dollars(LogScale)
iPad2
ENIAC
An 2010 Ipad2 in the 1950s would
have cost you $100 trillion.
UNIVAC 1
IBM 7090
Altair 8800
Commodore 64
Mac II
Gateway G6-200
Industry 4.0 is a collective term for technologies and concepts in the value chain or the vision of the smart factory.
Characteristics of industry 4.0
Cyber physical systems and marketplace
Smart robots and machines
Big Data
New quality of connectivity
Factory 4.0
There are two digital implications that go in the favour of Italian dynamics:
1. PROCESS: Network manufacturing and cluster dynamics: Business will operate in dispersed locations, drawing on skills spread across their empires. This is the idea of industrial democracy – meaning that the blurring frontiers between the information and physical worlds may lower barriers to smaller or more specialised companies. In some areas, the distribution between MNES and SMEs may shift.
2. NEW BUSINESS MODELS the fragmentation of the value chain. We have seen this in monolithic industries like music or the media. After fragmentation, countless small entrants have lower barriers to entries and this plays to the strengths of italian manufactuers and the concept of being fast and not big!
http://fr.slideshare.net/polenumerique33/roland-berger-tabindustry40201404031
Why it’s important?
Manufacturing plays a decisive role for Italian SMBs
At the same time, there is still a strong SME dominance in the manufacturing sector.
Although only 10 % of all Italian SMEs are active in this sector, one out of four employees in the SME sector work in manufacturing, compared to one in five for the EU average.
Almost one-third of value added is generated by SMEs, compared to one fifth in the EU.
Manufacturing therefore plays a decisive role for Italian SMEs.
The crisis has yet to release its grip, but industry is holding its own (and the ISTAT confidence index rose from 86.9 in May to 88.4 for June and improved across all industries, with manufacturing rising to 100, the highest it has been since July 2011), and even respected economists have confirmed what we have always said here on this blog, that there can be no future without manufacturing. This knowledge is also shared by the Italian Minister for Economic Development, Federica Guidi, who is putting together a plan for Italian manufacturing that features 100 million in investment and initiatives to strengthen exports (adding 50 billion to the current 470 billion) and to attract at least 20 billion in international investment for a decisive turnaround in both competitiveness and development.
23
Just 25% of our customers say they have a strategy to take advantage of the digital revolution that’s in the process of occurring…
That’s great – out job is to help execute against that vision– they understand what the tech makes possible and the strategy comes from that.
But 75% say they know they need to but they don’t know what to do.
We don’t need to evangelise – they know tech will change – it’s to help them.
And that’s because on the other side…