With tech startups rapidly eating into traditional sectors, large organizations face an increased pressure to innovate. The challenge is that traditional innovation approaches are broken. A recent study revealed that only 5% of R&D staff feel highly motivated to innovate. In certain sectors, more than 85% of new products fail and an overwhelming 90% of companies consider they are too slow in launching new products and services.
The weaknesses of traditional innovation approaches have led some organizations to explore different avenues and seek new inspiration. These organizations have launched innovation centers in major technology hubs with the explicit mandate to accelerate digital innovations. These innovation centers, comprising teams of people and often physical sites, are established in a global tech hub. The goal is to leverage the ecosystem of startups, venture capitalists, accelerators, vendors, and academic institutions that these hubs provide.
We interviewed leaders of innovation centers and conducted an extensive research study of the 200 largest companies in the world to identify best practices and critical success factors.
Global technology hubs are the preferred destinations for setting up innovation centers. 60% of companies that have set up these centers have a presence in the Silicon Valley but many more hubs are emerging – the top 10 cities in our analysis represent only 33% of total innovation centers. The US had the largest share with 31% of total innovation centers closely followed by Europe at 30% & Asia at 22%. Penetration varies significantly between sectors; manufacturing is a clear leader at 58%, but despite facing increasing pressures from digital disruptions, Financial Services lags at only 28%.
Innovation centers offer a range of benefits. They:
• Accelerate the speed of innovation
• Provide a fresh source of ideas
• Enhance risk-taking ability
• Attract talent
• Drive employee engagement
• Build a culture of innovation.
It is extremely challenging to make a success of innovation centers. The long list of critical success factors is a testimony to the size of the challenge. These factors range from clarity on the role of the innovation center to governance for innovation implementation. For example, innovation centers should not peer so far out into the future that it becomes disconnected from current realities. But, it should not confine itself too closely to the parent’s current operations to make breakthrough innovation impossible.
The advent of thriving technology hubs has created an innovation ecosystem that traditional organizations can tap into. By combining the culture and approach of innovation centers with their budget firepower and access to markets and customers, traditional organizations have an excellent opportunity to re-energize their innovation capability.
The current business model of almost every organisation won’t survive the next 10-20 years.
How can you future-proof your organisation, and how do you transition?
Most of us know why business model innovation is essential. Not many know how to do it. These slides are from the webinar: Transform your Business Model to Stay Ahead of The Curve by Dr. Jeffrey Tobias, Managing Director of The Strategy Group. https://www.thestrategygroup.com.au/transform-your-business-model-to-stay-ahead-of-the-curve/7/
CEO's need to change the way their companies do business. Why? How? and... Do it Different! Check out these 3 key messages in detail. This presentation was held at the CEO Forum in Taipei, Taiwan.
The current business model of almost every organisation won’t survive the next 10-20 years.
How can you future-proof your organisation, and how do you transition?
Most of us know why business model innovation is essential. Not many know how to do it. These slides are from the webinar: Transform your Business Model to Stay Ahead of The Curve by Dr. Jeffrey Tobias, Managing Director of The Strategy Group. https://www.thestrategygroup.com.au/transform-your-business-model-to-stay-ahead-of-the-curve/7/
CEO's need to change the way their companies do business. Why? How? and... Do it Different! Check out these 3 key messages in detail. This presentation was held at the CEO Forum in Taipei, Taiwan.
A Case Study my partner and I did for Advertising Problems 4040 and LSU. We did a IMC plan along with a new campaign for Red Bull with a $100,000,000 budget.
Successful online selling - Strategies for Offline Brands and RetailersRajiv Prakash
This is a guide to setting up successful eCommerce businesses and to successful online retailing in India by offline brands and retailers. It covers the business case elements, omnichannel design, online retail model options, capabilities and elements of financial model.
A complete presentation on the company Pepsi and analysis of it from marketing point of view including a brief about the company's history and its competitors, SWOT Analysis, Segmentation, Targeting and Positioning and 4P's followed by recommendations at the end.
Social Media Strategy for Maximizing Your LinkedIn Experienceerikakirstenbeck
Emerging online collaboration platforms are fundamentally changing the way we work and engage with each other, clients and partners. LinkedIn is no exception. Maximize your online brand with a specific social media strategy to achieve your professional goals.
A Case Study my partner and I did for Advertising Problems 4040 and LSU. We did a IMC plan along with a new campaign for Red Bull with a $100,000,000 budget.
Successful online selling - Strategies for Offline Brands and RetailersRajiv Prakash
This is a guide to setting up successful eCommerce businesses and to successful online retailing in India by offline brands and retailers. It covers the business case elements, omnichannel design, online retail model options, capabilities and elements of financial model.
A complete presentation on the company Pepsi and analysis of it from marketing point of view including a brief about the company's history and its competitors, SWOT Analysis, Segmentation, Targeting and Positioning and 4P's followed by recommendations at the end.
Social Media Strategy for Maximizing Your LinkedIn Experienceerikakirstenbeck
Emerging online collaboration platforms are fundamentally changing the way we work and engage with each other, clients and partners. LinkedIn is no exception. Maximize your online brand with a specific social media strategy to achieve your professional goals.
At idealabs we believe that there's a new innovation era coming, where big corporations and startups blend. We dive into the corporate innovation boom, showing you some examples of big corporations working together with startups.
Flatnut Ventures is a technology company providing Startups and Corporates with an Execution Task Force (ETF) helping them reach their Software Engineering and Performance Marketing objectives.
Achieving Innovation through Outcome EngineeringCognizant
In today's rapidly changing technical and competitive environment, the onus is on organizations to continuously develop innovative digital products. But, first they must ensure that both their design and digital product engineering teams are aligned from the beginning -- using an approach called outcome engineering.
Many of the major disruptions in media and communications have been driven by nimble, entrepreneurial companies, coming out of nowhere to completely decimate established business models. Companies that spin into existence to solve one problem or commercialize a single idea can scale almost instantly if they find a solution that sticks. That’s what’s happening all over the marketing industry today: hundreds of tech-savvy startups are reinventing business from the bottom up.
#DTR8: The New Innovation Paradigm for the Digital Age: Faster, Cheaper and O...Capgemini
In this edition of the Digital Transformation Review, we examine how organizations can create sustainable and successful innovation strategy, drawing on our global panel of industry executives and academics.
We focus on four key themes:
Which digital innovations should be on organizations' radar screens?
How should companies promote innovation and embed it into their culture?
What lessons can we draw from organizations that are stand-out innovators?
What is the role and impact of innovation centers, including the Capgemini Consulting-Altimeter Group report, "The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses are Investing in Innovation Centers".
The New Innovation Paradigm for the Digital Age: Faster, Cheaper and OpenJon Nordmark
How Iterate Studio helps multinationals embrace Open Innovation is featured in Capgemini Consulting's 8th Digital Transformation Review (Oct 2015), pages 44-50. Other topics include Machine Learning and AI (University of Oxford), Innovating through Open Data, Robotics, Intrapreneurship (by Telefonica), Innovation Centers (by Capital One), Frugal Innovation (University of Cambridge), and more. -- Digital Transformation Review 8th Edition, Capgemini Consulting ( https://www.capgemini-consulting.com/digital-transformation-review-8 )
How to cook up meaningful innovation with an innovation lab.
The way businesses need to organize and behave has fundamentally shifted. Across industries, companies, and organizational functions, we have heard many of the world’s most innovative companies echo the same challenge: businesses must urgently embrace a more nimble and entrepreneurial approach in order to stay competitive. We call this challenge of how big companies can leverage scale while staying innovative “big entrepreneurship.” Incubating Innovation is one of five pieces in our report, Big Entrepreneurship, aimed at deconstructing some of the complex challenges around big entrepreneurship and provide actionable insights for business leaders.
This report was created by Fahrenheit 212, a global innovation strategy and design firm. We define innovation strategies and develop new products, services, and experiences that create sustainable, profitable growth for our clients. We challenge the belief that innovation is inherently unreliable and have spent the last decade designing the method, building the model, and assembling the minds to make innovation a predictable driver of growth for our clients' businesses.
Technological Innovation Examples - MIT ID InnovationPankaj Deshpande
Here are some of the technological innovation examples that have significantly made an impact on the business.
To know more details, visit us at : https://mitidinnovation.com/recreation/examples-of-technological-innovation-with-potential-impact-on-business/
Vivaldi UK Capabilities | Financial ServicesRichard Rolka
Consumers’ rising expectations, disruptive new entrants and new possibilities with consumer data are only some of the trends currently transforming the financial services industry.
Are you a Digital Transformation leader? Can you create a high-performance strategy in the digital age? Have you got what it takes to avoid the tumbling barrels of distracting digital tactics, over hyped technology or the belief that your market is immune to disruption? Have you allocated the right resources to deliver a focused plan of transformation?
COVID-19 heightened chronic challenges within the global healthcare industry. It became a catalyst amid fierce competition and tight regulations for health providers and payers to focus on digital health, cybersecurity, patient data transparency, and a variety of customer-centric and operational enhancements. As a result, we found the 2022 trendline pointing to improvements in access and quality of care.
Healthcare challenges such as optimizing the cost of care while simultaneously enabling personalized interventions and consumer-friendly shoppable services are long-standing − but, historically, the industry has been slow to react.
Read our Top Trends 2022 report to examine the lingering ramifications of the pandemic, responses from medical and insurance organizations, and the worldwide impact of ever-changing regulatory standards and mandates.
A combination of factors − the pandemic, catastrophic weather events, evolving policyholder expectations, and insurers’ drive for operational efficiency and future relevance − are sparking P&C industry changes.
In a post-COVID, new-normal environment, the most strategic insurers are building resilient, crisis-proof enterprises poised to take advantage of emerging and future business opportunities. They are leveraging advanced data analytics and novel technologies to assure agility and achieve positive revenue and customer satisfaction outcomes. Competitive advantage will hinge on accelerated digitalization and faster go-to-market. Therefore, win-win partnerships and embedded services with InsurTechs and other ecosystem players are critical.
Read Capgemini’s Top P&C Insurance Trends 2022 for a glimpse at the tactical and strategic initiatives carriers are undertaking to boost customer-centricity, product agility, intelligent processes, and an open ecosystem to ensure profitable growth and future-readiness.
This analysis provides an overview of the top trends in the commercial banking sector as they shift to technology high gear to boost client efficiency and battle a volatile, uncertain, competitive, and evolving landscape.
First, it was retail banking. Now, advanced technology is shifting to – and disrupting − the commercial banking space. Many commercial banks, known for paperwork, red tape, and branch dependency, were unprepared to support clients during their post-COVID-19 ramp-up. But now, the digital pivot to new mindsets, partnerships, and processes is in overdrive.
As commercial banks grapple with competition from FinTechs, BigTechs, and alternative lenders, their inability
to fulfill SME demands and pandemic after-shocks necessitates transformative process changes and a move
to experiential, sustainable, and inclusive banking models. We expect banks to strive to meet the demands
of corporate clients and SMEs by digitally transforming critical workflows and improving client experience.
Additionally, incremental process improvements in the middle and back-office that leverage intelligent
automation will keep the competition at bay because engaged clients are loyal.
Adopting newer methods to mine data and moving to as-a-Service models will prepare commercial banks
to flexibly respond to newcomers and find ways to co-exist through effective collaboration. The time has come for commercial banks to put transformation on the fast track as lending losses in wallet and market share could spill over to other functions!
How incumbents react and respond to 2022 trends could determine their relevancy and resiliency in the years ahead.
The Covid-19 pandemic necessitated the payments industry undergo a facelift, sparked by novel approaches from new-age players, fostered by industry consolidation, and customers’ demand for end-to-end experience. Crossing the threshold, the industry is entering a new era – Payments 4.X, where payments are embedded and invisible, and an enabling function to provide frictionless customer experience. As customers make a permanent shift to next-gen payment methods, Digital IDs are critical for a seamless payment experience. The B2B payments segment is witnessing rapid digitization. BigTechs, PayTechs, and industry newcomers are ready to jump in with newfangled solutions to help underserved small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs).
As incumbents struggle with profits, new-age firms are forging ahead to take the lead in the Payments 4.X era by riding the success of non-card products and services. The new era demands collaboration, platformification, and firms can unleash full market potential only by embracing API-based business models and open ecosystems. Data prowess and enhanced payment processing capabilities are inevitable to thrive ahead. The clock is ticking for banks and traditional payments firms because the competitive advantage is not guaranteed forever. As industry players seek economies of scale, consolidations loom, and non-banks explore new territories to threaten incumbents’ market share. While all these 2022 trends are at play, central bank digital currency (CBDC) is emerging globally and might open a new chapter in the current payments landscape.
As we slowly move out of the pandemic, financial services firms have learned the criticality of virtual engagement to business resilience. Wealth management firms will need capabilities to cater to new-age clients and deliver new-age services. This report aims to understand and analyze the top trends in the Wealth Management industry this year and beyond.
A year ago, our Top Trends in Wealth Management report emphasized how the pandemic sparked disruption and digital transformation and changing investor attitudes around Environmental, Social, and Corporate Governance (ESG) products. As we begin 2022, many of those trends continue to hold as COVID-19’s wide-reaching effects continue to influence the wealth management industry.
As wealth management (WM) firms supercharge their digital transformation journeys, investments in cybersecurity and human-centered design are becoming critical to building superior digital client experience (CX). Another holdover trend − sustainable investing – is gaining mainstream attention and generating increasingly sophisticated client demands. Data and analytics capabilities will become ever more essential for ESG scoring and personalized customer engagement. As large financial services firms refocus on their wealth management business while new digital players make industry strides, competition is becoming historically intense. Not surprisingly, client experience is the new battleground.
This analysis provides an overview of the top trends in the retail banking sector driven by the competition, digital transformation, and innovation led by retail banks exploring novel ways to create and retain value in evolving landscape.
COVID-19 caught banks off guard and shook legacy mindsets to the core. With 20/20 (2020) hindsight, firms are more aware, digitally resilient, and financially stable as they head into 2022. The trials of the past 18 months forced firms to shore up existing business and consider new models and revenue streams.
Customer-centricity remains at the top of most FS agendas and is a 2022 focal point. Banks will focus on achieving operational excellence as diligently as delivering superior CX. In 2022 and beyond, it will be paramount for FIs to explore and invest in new technologies to remain relevant and resilient.
Banking 4.X will arrive in full force in 2022 with platform-supported firms monetizing diverse ecosystem capabilities and aggressively harvesting data to create experiential customer journeys through intelligent and personalized engagements. The new era will compel future-focused banks to finally abandon legacy infrastructure and collaborate with third-party specialists to solidify their best-fit, long-term roles. Increasingly, open platforms will make banks invisible as banking becomes embedded into customer lifestyles. At the same time, banks will shed asset-heavy models and shift to the cloud for greater agility, speed to market, and faster innovation. The shift will act as a precursor to adopting new technologies on the horizon – 5G and Decentralized Finance.
The recent past was filled will extraordinary lessons for financial institutions. Now is the time to act on those learnings and move forward profitably.
While COVID-19 has sparked the demand for life insurance, it has also exposed the operating model vulnerabilities in distribution, servicing, and customer retention. In a post-COVID, new-normal environment, insurers need to enhance their capabilities around advanced data management and focus on seamless and secure data sharing to provide superior CX and hyper-personalized offerings. Accelerated digitalization and faster go-to-market are vital to remaining competitive, and win-win partnerships with ecosystems are critical in the journey.
Read our Top Life Insurance Trends 2022 to explore the tactical and strategic initiatives carriers undertake to acquire competencies around customer centricity, product agility, intelligent processes, and an open ecosystem to ensure profitable growth and future readiness.
Property & Casualty Insurance Top Trends 2021Capgemini
The Property & Casualty insurance landscape is evolving quickly with the changing risk landscape, entry of new players, and changing customer expectations. The ripple effects of COVID-19 on the P&C insurance industry and natural disasters such as forest fires have adversely impacted insurance firm books.
In this scenario, to ensure growth and future-readiness, the most strategic insurers strive to be ‘Inventive Insurers’ – assuming a customer-centric approach, deploying intelligent processes, practicing business resilience and go-to-market agility, and embracing an open ecosystem.
Read our Property & Casualty Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adapting to remain competitive amidst the evolving business landscape and how they can explore new ways to enhance their profitability.
A combination of factors such as demographic changes, evolving consumer preferences, and desire to become operationally efficient were already spurring changes in the life insurance industry. Enter 2020 – the COVID-19 pandemic is having a significant impact on the industry.
At the peak of disruption, the focus was on ensuring business continuity, but new initiatives are cropping up to tackle the challenges as the industry is adapting to the new normal.
Furthermore, COVID-19 has acted as a catalyst, pushing life insurers to prioritize their efforts on improving customer centricity, developing go-to-market agility, making processes intelligent, building business resilience, and embracing the open ecosystem.
Read our Life Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adopting to manage the changing market dynamics.
The uncertainty of 2020 is setting the global tone for the immediate future in the financial services industry. So it is no surprise banks are laser-focused on business resilience, emphasizing both financial and operational risks. The need to adapt quickly to new normal conditions through virtual customer engagement is clear.
Customer centricity continues to drive commercial banks’ solution designs. And, the pandemic compelled products that deliver immediate client value ‒ quick digital onboarding, seamless lending, and support for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). The onus is now on banks to go to market more quickly, which requires the implementation of intelligent processes and integrating corporates’ enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems with banking workflows.
To achieve go-to-market agility, banks across the globe are investing in and collaborating with FinTechs. Many of these partnerships are focused on boosting digital lending and providing seamless support to anxious small-business clients in need of assurance.
With newfound impetus for FinTech collaboration, commercial banks have picked up their step on the path toward OpenX. COVID-19 made it evident that survival during turbulence is manageable through collaboration with ecosystem players.
Read our Top Trends in Commercial Banking 2021 report to explore the strategies banks are adapting to transform their businesses from a product-led, siloed model to an experiential and agile plan.
When we published the Top Trends in Wealth Management 2020, little did we foresee the pandemic that would sweep through the world and disrupt life as we knew it. Yet, when we reviewed last year’s trends, we found that many still hold and some have taken on even greater relevance. One such trend is sustainable investing, which had begun to gain prominence as investors became more aware of ESG considerations, and firms rolled out more sustainable investing offerings. Another trend that has accelerated in the post-COVID world is the importance of investing in omnichannel capabilities and technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance personalization and advisor effectiveness. The pandemic has driven wealth management firms to accelerate their digital transformation journey, with some immediate focus areas being interactive client communications and digital advisor tools.
There is no denying that time is of the essence. Yes, budgets are tight, but the Open X ecosystem offers wealth management firms opportunities to reimagine their operating models and deliver excellent customer experience cost-effectively.
Top trends in Payments: 2020 highlighted the payments industry’s flux driven by new trends in technology adoption, innovative solutions, and changing consumer behavior. The pandemic has tested the digital mastery of players, who are already grappling with transition. Non-cash transactions are on a robust growth path, accelerated by increased adoption during COVID-19. Regulators are working to instill trust and address non-cash payments risk amid unparalleled growth as players collaborate to quell uncertainty. Regional initiatives, such as the P27 (Nordics real-time payments system) and the EPI (European Payments Initiative), are gaining traction in response to country-level fragmentation and competition.
Investment in emerging technologies is looked upon as an elixir to mitigate fraud, data-driven offerings are being considered for providing value-added propositions, and distributed ledger technology is in focus for digital currency solutions, efficiency enhancement, and cost gains. New players, such as retailers/merchants, are integrating payments into their value chains while technology giants are upscaling their financial services game by weaving offerings around payments as a center stage. Constrained by budgets, firms consider business models such as Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) to provide cost-effective and superior customer experience.
A combination of factors, including demographic changes, evolving consumer preferences, and regulatory and compliance mandates, were already spurring change in the health insurance industry. Enter 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic, which is having sweeping implications for the industry.
At the peak of disruption, the focus was on ensuring business continuity, but new initiatives are cropping up to tackle the challenges as the industry adapts to the new normal.
Furthermore, some changes are here to stay, and it will be prudent for the industry players to be resilient to the market shifts by being agile, improving member centricity, making processes intelligent, and embracing the open ecosystem.
Read our Health Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adopting to manage the external pressures.
The banking industry’s resilience is being tested as banks navigate through a remarkable 2020 filled with uncertainties. The impact of COVID-19 has been about setting the tone for future operational models. Retail banks have shifted focus towards integrated risk management with a more holistic view of operational risks. Adapting to the new normal, banks have prioritized cost transformation while engaging customers virtually. Incumbents sought to be more responsible within fast-changing environmental conditions and ESG remained a critical focus.
To provide more experiential services, banks are leveraging techniques such as segment-of-one to hyper-personalize offerings while aiming to humanize digital channels for increased engagement. Banks are also revamping middle and back offices, going beyond the front end leveraging intelligent processes. Open X is enabling banks to play on their strengths and use the expertise of ecosystem players. Going forward, banks are poised to become an enhanced one-stop shop by providing consumers value-adding FS and non-FS experiences.
To acquire customers in cost-effective manner, retail banks are tapping value-based propositions ‒ such as POS financing and mortgage refinancing. Further, Banking-as-Service provides incumbents a way to provide their high-value offerings to other players. In preparation for the future, banks will be looking to improve their go-to-market agility by leveraging the benefits of cloud. This analysis outlines the top 10 trends in retail banking for 2021.
Explore how Capgemini’s Connected autonomous planning fine-tunes Consumer Products Company’s operations for manufacturing, transport, procurement, and virtually every other aspect of the supply-value network in a touchless, autonomous way.
Financial services is undergoing a paradigm shift that is forcing incumbent retail banks to rethink growth strategies as they struggle to remain relevant. Growing competition from BigTechs, FinTech firms, and challenger banks has added to the complexity created by increasingly stringent regulatory and compliance requirements. Customers now expect a seamless customer journey and personalized offerings because they have become accustomed to top-notch individualized service from GAFA giants Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon. The changing ecosystem offers established banks new, unexplored opportunities and encourages a transition beyond traditional products to meet the exacting requirements of today’s customers. Bank collaboration with FinTech and RegTech partners is becoming commonplace. Incumbents are exploring point-of-sale financing and unsecured consumer lending, while they also boost their digital channel competencies to reach a broader customer base. Banks are beginning to accept open APIs and are working with third-party specialists to create an open shared marketplace. Technological advancements such as AI are fueling efforts to evolve customer onboarding and touchpoint processes. Increasingly, banks are turning to design thinking methodology to understand the customer journey, extract deep insights, and develop a more refined user experience across the customer lifecycle.
Our analysis of the top retail banking trends for 2020 offers a glimpse into the fast-changing banking ecosystem and explores the tools and solutions being used to face new-age challenges.
Aspects of the life insurance industry have remained constant for years – and so have premiums. Traditional savings products have taken a huge hit in terms of attractiveness because low interest-rates prevail. Meanwhile, the risk landscape is shifting, and insurers need to align better with the emerging business environment, manage changing customer preferences, and improve operational efficiencies. Within today’s scenario, industry players are undertaking tactical and strategic shifts in attempts to manage unpredictable market dynamics. Insurers must develop alternative products to breathe new life into policies and leverage emerging technologies (artificial intelligence (AI), analytics, and blockchain) to improve efficiency, agility, flexibility, and customer-centricity.
Read Top Trends in Life Insurance: 2020 for a look at the innovative steps future-focused insurers are considering to meet industry challenges and opportunities.
The health insurance industry is evolving and undergoing significant changes. As the risk landscape shifts, insurers are working to improve operational efficiencies, meet evolving customer preferences, and align better with the changing business environment. Accordingly, payers must adapt and align business models and offerings. An incisive tactical approach is required to accommodate members’ needs and related emerging risks — medical, health, and environmental. Advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence, analytics, automation, and connected devices are enabling insurers to manage these changes proactively, partner with members, and help to prevent risks, all the while continuing to fulfill payer responsibilities.
Read Top Trends in Health Insurance: 2020 to learn which strategies insurers are adopting to navigate and align with today’s challenges.
Similar to other financial services domains, payments is evolving into an open ecosystem. The EU’s Payment Services Directive (PSD2) pioneered open banking by encouraging banks and established payments players to securely open the systems to foster competition, innovation, and more customer choices. In tandem with non-cash transaction growth, regulations are driving banks and payments firms to expand their array of payment methods and channels. Governments are encouraging financial inclusion by also promoting the adoption of non-cash payments. Increasingly, merchants and corporates seek to offer alternative payment systems because of widespread popularity among consumers. Alternative payments also enable merchants to provide real-time and cross-border payments to boost business efficiency.
Banks, payment firms, card firms, BigTechs, FinTechs, and other players are continuously developing new technology to cash in on market changes. However, data breaches and fraud continue to hinder innovation as firms devote countless resources each year to address security issues. Many governments are also designing new regulations to reduce ecosystem threats. All these measures are expected to make the current ecosystem much more secure and simple for players as well as customers.
Top Trends in Payments: 2020 explores and analyzes payments ecosystem initiatives and solutions for this year and beyond
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
Essentials of Automations: Optimizing FME Workflows with ParametersSafe Software
Are you looking to streamline your workflows and boost your projects’ efficiency? Do you find yourself searching for ways to add flexibility and control over your FME workflows? If so, you’re in the right place.
Join us for an insightful dive into the world of FME parameters, a critical element in optimizing workflow efficiency. This webinar marks the beginning of our three-part “Essentials of Automation” series. This first webinar is designed to equip you with the knowledge and skills to utilize parameters effectively: enhancing the flexibility, maintainability, and user control of your FME projects.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- Essentials of FME Parameters: Understand the pivotal role of parameters, including Reader/Writer, Transformer, User, and FME Flow categories. Discover how they are the key to unlocking automation and optimization within your workflows.
- Practical Applications in FME Form: Delve into key user parameter types including choice, connections, and file URLs. Allow users to control how a workflow runs, making your workflows more reusable. Learn to import values and deliver the best user experience for your workflows while enhancing accuracy.
- Optimization Strategies in FME Flow: Explore the creation and strategic deployment of parameters in FME Flow, including the use of deployment and geometry parameters, to maximize workflow efficiency.
- Pro Tips for Success: Gain insights on parameterizing connections and leveraging new features like Conditional Visibility for clarity and simplicity.
We’ll wrap up with a glimpse into future webinars, followed by a Q&A session to address your specific questions surrounding this topic.
Don’t miss this opportunity to elevate your FME expertise and drive your projects to new heights of efficiency.
"Impact of front-end architecture on development cost", Viktor TurskyiFwdays
I have heard many times that architecture is not important for the front-end. Also, many times I have seen how developers implement features on the front-end just following the standard rules for a framework and think that this is enough to successfully launch the project, and then the project fails. How to prevent this and what approach to choose? I have launched dozens of complex projects and during the talk we will analyze which approaches have worked for me and which have not.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 3DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 3. In this session, we will cover desktop automation along with UI automation.
Topics covered:
UI automation Introduction,
UI automation Sample
Desktop automation flow
Pradeep Chinnala, Senior Consultant Automation Developer @WonderBotz and UiPath MVP
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
State of ICS and IoT Cyber Threat Landscape Report 2024 previewPrayukth K V
The IoT and OT threat landscape report has been prepared by the Threat Research Team at Sectrio using data from Sectrio, cyber threat intelligence farming facilities spread across over 85 cities around the world. In addition, Sectrio also runs AI-based advanced threat and payload engagement facilities that serve as sinks to attract and engage sophisticated threat actors, and newer malware including new variants and latent threats that are at an earlier stage of development.
The latest edition of the OT/ICS and IoT security Threat Landscape Report 2024 also covers:
State of global ICS asset and network exposure
Sectoral targets and attacks as well as the cost of ransom
Global APT activity, AI usage, actor and tactic profiles, and implications
Rise in volumes of AI-powered cyberattacks
Major cyber events in 2024
Malware and malicious payload trends
Cyberattack types and targets
Vulnerability exploit attempts on CVEs
Attacks on counties – USA
Expansion of bot farms – how, where, and why
In-depth analysis of the cyber threat landscape across North America, South America, Europe, APAC, and the Middle East
Why are attacks on smart factories rising?
Cyber risk predictions
Axis of attacks – Europe
Systemic attacks in the Middle East
Download the full report from here:
https://sectrio.com/resources/ot-threat-landscape-reports/sectrio-releases-ot-ics-and-iot-security-threat-landscape-report-2024/
Kubernetes & AI - Beauty and the Beast !?! @KCD Istanbul 2024Tobias Schneck
As AI technology is pushing into IT I was wondering myself, as an “infrastructure container kubernetes guy”, how get this fancy AI technology get managed from an infrastructure operational view? Is it possible to apply our lovely cloud native principals as well? What benefit’s both technologies could bring to each other?
Let me take this questions and provide you a short journey through existing deployment models and use cases for AI software. On practical examples, we discuss what cloud/on-premise strategy we may need for applying it to our own infrastructure to get it to work from an enterprise perspective. I want to give an overview about infrastructure requirements and technologies, what could be beneficial or limiting your AI use cases in an enterprise environment. An interactive Demo will give you some insides, what approaches I got already working for real.
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
2. 2
Why Should Companies Launch Innovation
Centers?
52% of the Fortune
500 have been merged,
acquired, or have gone
bankrupt since 2000.
We live in an era of digital Darwinism.
As technology and society evolves, it
becomes imperative that organizations
also evolve their business models.
Companies that don’t invest in counter-
disruptive measures will learn that
evolution doesn’t wait. Fifty-two percent
of the Fortune 500 have merged, been
acquired or have gone bankrupt since
20001
. The threat of startups upending
established sectors is greater than it
has ever been. The Wall Street Journal
now tracks over 100 startups globally
valued at US$1 billion or more, over ten
of which are valued at more than US$10
billion2
. These high-value companies are,
in many cases, not creating entirely new
markets, but rapidly eating into traditional
sectors using a combination of superior
technology and a compelling customer
experience.
Over the last ten years, there are myriad
examples of established corporates
that have fallen on difficult times. Nokia,
Blackberry and Kodak are just a handful
of the many companies that have been
disrupted, decimated or reduced to
a shadow of their former selves, after
having once dominated their industries.
How can companies avoid this fate? The
answer is: innovation.
Innovation Has Never Been
More Important...Or So
Difficult
In today’s highly competitive economy,
innovation is more critical than ever. A recent
survey of large corporations found that 65%
of senior executives face increased pressure
to innovate3
.
However, the challenges of innovation
continue to defeat many. In 2014, around
US$1.6 trillion was spent on R&D globally.
Despite this significant investment, the
results are falling short. In consumer goods,
for example, research shows that more than
85% of new products fail4
.
This is a significant concern given the
intensity of today’s competitive environment.
In recent years, tech startups are threatening
or disrupting the fabric of many established
industries:
Markets are becoming increasingly
digital and mobile is becoming the
preferred channel.
Digital customers and employees are
changing the game. Their behaviors,
expectations and values no longer align
with tried and true processes, systems
and technologies in place now.
To excel in these times requires innovation,
to protect against external threats and
create new competitive advantage. But,
many R&D teams at large and traditional
corporations seem ill-equipped to
respond. They can be constrained by
legacy organizational models, risk-averse
cultures, and a rigid approach. A recent
study revealed that only 5% of R&D staff
feel highly motivated to innovate5
. This is
a worrying tendency given the urgency to
innovate.
Enter the Innovation Center
The weaknesses of traditional innovation
approaches have led a number of
ambitiousorganizationstoexploredifferent
avenues and seek new inspiration. These
organizations have launched innovation
initiatives or full-blown innovation centers
in major technology hubs with the explicit
mandate to accelerate digital innovations.
These innovation centers, comprising
teams of people and often physical sites,
are established in a global tech hub. The
goal is to leverage the ecosystem of
startups, venture capitalists, accelerators,
vendors, and academic institutions that
these hubs provide (see “The Anatomy of
Innovation Centers”).
3. 3
Innovation centers
are physical spaces
and/or teams set up
by organizations in a
global tech hub, with
the goal of leveraging
the startup, industry
and academic ecosystem
that these hubs provide.
The mission of our
innovation centers is
to pioneer and test new
disruptive solutions for
our customers, testing
new business models
and technologies that
advance our position
in the market... We’re
looking at making
significant impact to
the overall business and
not just incremental
changes.
Organizations increasingly want to
understand rapidly evolving consumer
behavior.Theubiquityofsmartphonesand
connectivity has created new behaviors.
Purchase cycles that customers had
followed without change for many years
are now being redrawn completely. This
focus on customer-driven innovation is
echoed by Mark Brodeur, Global Head
of Digital Marketing Innovation at Nestlé,
who observes that “We really needed
to better understand how consumer
behavior was changing as a result of
technology, so that our brands were able
to stay ahead of the curve versus playing
catch-up.”
Debbie Brackeen, Citi Ventures, says that
the mission of their innovation centers is to
“pioneer and test new disruptive solutions
for our customers, testing new business
models and technologies that advance
our position in the market... We’re looking
at making significant impact to the
overall business and not just incremental
changes.” A leading European financial
services group has a team with an explicit
mandate to disrupt their own businesses.
The executive says, “We have a group that
is a set of centrally-funded startups with
the exclusive aim of hiring entrepreneurs
who will build businesses that will disrupt
our business.”
Over the last year, we interviewed leaders
of innovation centers and also conducted
extensive web-based research of the
200 largest companies in the world by
revenue. The research probed a number
of key issues:
What kind of companies are investing in
innovation centers?
Where are the preferred locations for
setting up these centers?
What are their mission and purpose?
What operating models are used?
What are the challenges and critical
success factors?
Howareoutputsandresultsmeasured?
The research methodology at the end of
this paper provides further detail on our
approach.
– Debbie Brackeen Citi Ventures
4. 4
The Anatomy of Innovation Centers
Digital innovation centers are teams of people and often physical sites that are set up by organizations in a global tech hub, with the goal of leveraging
the ecosystem of startups, venture capitalists, accelerators, vendors, and academic institutions that these hubs provide. According to the Vice
President of a major fashion retailer: “An innovation center is a team, a space and a mindset.”
The primary objective of a digital innovation center is to accelerate digital innovation by rethinking the customer experience, improving operational
efficiency and testing new business models through the use of digital technologies such as Big Data, the Internet of Things, Social Media, Mobile,
Robotics, Augmented Reality and 3D Printing. As Ed McLaughlin, Chief Emerging Payments Officer, MasterCard says: “I think the primary goal is to
make sure that we can test, learn, experiment, access, incorporate, leverage all the changes that are happening out there in the industry. It gives us
the ability to fail fast, to incubate things, to invest and engage with very early stage companies.”
Innovation centers also help companies to stay abreast with the latest developments and upcoming technologies in the market. Karin Weining,
Global Innovation Excellence Leader at Dupont, says: “Our Innovation Center Leaders understand what’s happening in the local marketplace and the
capabilities there...they’re focused on finding the trends and cross-business ideas that may not be captured by an individual business.”
Developing New Products and Services or Proofs of Concept
BMW has set up an innovation center “Future Lab” in Mountain View, with the aim of developing cutting-edge digital products and
services. Its flagship product, BMW ConnectedDrive, provides a suite of infotainment features such as MP3 connectivity and weather
information. One of the latest projects, currently in progress, is to develop virtual reality goggles that will help drivers park in tricky spots
by enabling them to ‘see through’ the car1
.
Designing New Business Models
Medical technology major Medtronic has opened a center for Business Model Innovation in Singapore. This new center, based in the
current local Medtronic facility, has the mandate to design, test and scale new business models for developing Asian markets2
.
Connecting with Startups
CVS Health, operator of Minute Clinics and one of the biggest drugstore chains in US, has opened a Digital Innovation Lab in Boston
that is intended to “be a source of new ideas that will drive the company into the future”3
. One of the goals of the Digital Innovation Lab
is to connect with startups that are developing healthcare-related products and services and to ensure CVS can be an ideal learning lab
for early-stage companies4
.
Identifying Potential Partners and Forging Strategic Relationships
AXA Lab, the insurance company’s innovation outpost in Silicon Valley, aims to “connect AXA with leading companies in the technology
industry that have the potential to become business partners for the company’s global marketing and distribution teams”5
. The most
notable of these partnerships has been with Facebook, with a goal of further developing its digital, social and mobile footprint in France
and globally6
.
Developing an Innovation Culture within the Organization
Innovation cannot flourish in a company if it is limited just to an innovation center. According to the head of an innovation center for a major
bank, the innovation culture of the center needs to extend into the wider enterprise. “You want to create a sustainable innovation culture
and model inside an innovation center that resides in a group, and have that permeate throughout corporate,” he explains.
Incubate and Invest in Startups
Some innovation centers, given they are at the cutting edge of technology developments, are also tasked with identifying exciting startups
that the parent company can invest in. For instance, Walmart Labs which is responsible for building and testing technology for online
and mobile aspects for Walmart has acquired 14 startups in the past 3 years. However this is relatively rare among innovation centers.
Understanding the Digital Customer
One of the key challenges facing organizations is in understanding the digital customer. The advent of pervasive connectivity, smartphones
and social media is impacting customer behavior significantly. As the innovation lead at a major retailer puts it: “The mission is listen to
our customers about what their needs are.”
Evaluating and Testing New Technologies
One of the big challenges for large organizations is the amount of time it takes for smaller vendors to reach decision-makers, particularly
when it comes to new technologies. This is where an innovation center, with its lean setup, can act as a bridge. Innovation centers
constantly engage with, evaluate and test a variety of technologies with various startups. Sephora’s innovation lab is modeled after their
stores and the labs constantly test beacons, augmented reality applications among other technologies for application within their larger
store network.
Become a Recognized Part of Innovation Communities
Organizations have come to realize that they cannot solve everything by themselves. They need to be a foundation for an innovation
ecosystem and be recognized as a part of innovation communities. Innovation centers help achieve this. Indeed, an innovation head
for a financial major confirms this as a mission for one of their innovation center when he says: “The innovation center has a stated goal
to host over a million external people for different events. An entire team runs a program of external speakers who speak on Big Data,
social media or peer-to-peer lending. The notion is that if you become sort of the epicenter of ideas and innovation in the space, you will
benefit from it.”
Source: : 1
TechWorld, “BMW developing high-tech goggles to help drivers park”, February 2015 ; 2
Medtronic website, “Medtronic To Set Up Global Center Of Excellence In
Singapore For Business Model Innovation”, August 2013 ; 3
CVS Website, “CVS Health to Open New Digital Innovation Lab in Boston”, November 2014 ; 4
The Boston Globe,
“CVS to open tech hub in Boston”, November 2014; 5
AXA Website, “AXA Lab: Fostering innovation and digital culture”, Accessed June 2015; 6
AXA Website, “AXA Announces a
Strategic Partnership with Facebook to Further Develop its Digital, Social and Mobile Footprint in France and Globally”, April 2014
5. 5
Figure 1: Innovation Centers Accelerate the Speed of Innovation
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
Walmart’s internal
search engine, developed
by Walmart Labs in 9
months, drove a 20%
increase in online sales
conversions.
We have cross-
functional teams here
that are able to pull
from the outside world
and reach into any part
of the company in order
to bring new ideas to
the table. That is why
our innovation center
was originally started.
– Innovation lead at a
Telecom major
The Size of the Innovation Center Prize
Innovation centers offer a range of
benefits. They:
Accelerate the speed of innovation
Provide a fresh source of ideas
Enhance risk-taking ability
Attract talent
Drive employee engagement
Build a culture of innovation.
Accelerate the Speed of
Innovation
An alarming 90% percent of companies
believe that they are too slow to market
and often over budget6
. As an executive
at a leading global bank observed: “When
we look at the pace at which digital-native
companies operate and launch new
capabilities, that’s something that doesn’t
really happen in large enterprises.”
According to the innovation lead at a
Telecom major, innovation centers can
help resolve this issue. “We accelerate the
delivery of different strategic solutions,”
she explains. “We have cross-functional
teams here that are able to pull from the
outside world and reach into any part of
the company and be more agile in order
to bring new ideas to the table. That is
why our innovation center was originally
started.”
Walmart Labs helped Walmart develop
its internal search engine in just nine
months, driving a 20% increase in online
sales conversions. Staples’ innovation
lab helped launch a digital wallet service
in 9 weeks - Staples’ fastest deployment
ever (see Figure 1).
Rapid
Experimentation,
Prototyping and
Launch
Zappo Labs enabled Zappos to launch its
“Ask Zappos” digital personal assistance
service in just 12 weeks
Staples’ innovation lab helped launch a digital wallet
service in 9 weeks —
Staples’ fastest deployment ever
AT&T's Foundry innovation centers have significantly cut
the time from idea to launch. Collaboration with startups
has delivered successful solutions such as a personalized
video bill service and self-optimizing network
Walmart's search engine was developed at Walmart
Labs in 9 months with just a handful of employees —
the
tool drove a 20% increase in online sales conversions
6. 6
Figure 2: Types of Innovation Center
Innovation Centers:The Different Categories
Our research has uncovered four broad categories of innovation center. Models include in-house innovation labs, university residences,
community anchors, and innovation outposts. Each of these models differ in their goal and the amount of investment required (see
Figure 2).
In-house Innovation Labs – The innovation engine for their companies, these centers perform all innovation activities from
inception to prototyping using an in-house approach. Given this in-house focus, these centers are typically large in size, with hundreds
of staff. Walmart Labs is part of the Walmart Global eCommerce team, which runs Walmart’s global websites. The two teams work in
tandem so that e-commerce innovations can be seamlessly plugged into the websites.
University Residence – In this model, companies invest to set up a center at a university campus to drive innovation through
university researchers. The Volkswagen Automotive Innovation Lab (VAIL) was established by Volkswagen and Stanford University’s
School of Engineering to drive innovation in automotive development. The Volkswagen Group has donated $5.75 million to the
creation of VAIL, including $2 million for building construction and another $750,000 a year for five years to fund research. Stanford
researchers and international visiting scholars will work with automotive equipment manufacturers and Silicon Valley experts.
Community Anchor – These innovation centers actively identify mentors and provide opportunities to startups to work actively
with the company to test the startup’s products. The startups also gain from mentoring and the availability of mature processes to
test their innovations. Allianz Digital Labs invites early-stage companies, students and innovators to run proof-of-concept pilots with
the possibility of eventual licensing, development and commercialization on a large scale in areas such as Big Data, social media and
mobile. Additionally, organizations might take an equity position in startups.
Innovation Outpost – Innovation outposts are small teams that are based in technology hubs, typically Silicon Valley. For large
organizations, the idea is to be involved in the tech community, without committing significant investment. As time progresses,
organizations can then choose to grow these innovation outposts to other forms of innovation centers. Take the case of Renault-
Nissan. The company initially set up a small Silicon Valley Research Office in 2011 focusing on vehicle IT, advanced engineering
research and technology recruitment. By 2013, the office was expanded to specialize in autonomous driving and connected vehicles.
Similarly, Nestlé set up a Silicon Valley innovation outpost in 2013 with the aim of understanding customers better and work with large
technology companies. The company has just announced that they intend to strengthen this team with more investment by Spring
2016.
Source: Company Websites
High
HighLow
Low
Small teams that are based in
technology hubs that act as
ears-on-the-ground
Innovation Outpost
Community Anchor
University Residence
Level of Investment
BreadthofActivities
In-House Innovation Labs
Perform all innovation activities
from inception to prototyping
using an in-house approach.
Drive innovation through university
researchers.
Actively identify mentors and
provide opportunity to startups to
work with the company to test the
startup’s products within the
company and with their customers.
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
7. 7
Provide a Fresh Source
of Ideas
Innovation centers, by virtue of their
location and extensive engagement
with the local community, can be a
rich source of ideas. Many innovation
centers actively reach out to startups,
venture capitalists, academics, and other
industry stakeholders for regular events.
One executive from a major European
financial services firm said: “We have
a stated goal to host over a million
external people for different events from
big data to social media and emerging
payments or peer-to-peer lending. We
host hundreds of people in these events
every day. The idea is that if you become
sort of the epicenter of the velocity of
ideas and innovation in the space, you
will benefit from that.”
Regular engagement with startups
delivers significant benefits, as an
executive from a global financial
institution says: “Engaging with startups
is enabling us to quickly build the domain
expertise and knowledge around new
trends and move much faster.”
Enhance Risk-Taking Ability
Unlike their larger, risk-averse parent
organizations, innovation centers are
inherently “risk-seekers”. In being so,
they move the entrepreneurial risk away
from the parent organization.
This ability to take on risks is crucial
for delivering innovation. In the words
of AT&T’s Ruth Yomtoubian: “Our
innovation center lets us take on risks
that the rest of the organization may
be unwilling to take on.” One common
challenge at large companies is trying to
justify experiments. Innovation centers
help organizations side-step onerous
processes that would otherwise act as
a brake. As an executive at a leading
financial services firm explains: “The
Innovation center has a pool of funds
that is specifically used only for testing,
learning, and experimentation. It is
independent of the business case or the
standard budgeting process.”
Attract Talent
Organizations can use their innovation
centers to showcase their brand strength
and startup culture, and attract top
talent at universities. In the words of an
innovation executive at a leading Fashion
retailer: “We went to campus placements
right after the announcement of our
innovation lab and our ticket was hotter
than Twitter and Facebook.”
Also, in large organizations, the
innovations developed by centers have
the opportunity to see mass adoption,
unlike most startups. This large canvas is
yet another motivation for talent. For the
parent company, the innovation centers
act as a talent magnet that they wouldn’t
have been in a position to attract directly.
Bao Nguyen, from Walmart Global
eCommerce, says: “Technologists say
that when you work at a startup, you
are able to launch things really quickly
like an app, but there isn’t really much
traction. In our company, they can build
something, launch it and millions of
people will use it. That’s what we think
has been key to our success in hiring
these great technologists.”
Our innovation center
lets us take on risks
that the rest of the
organization may be
unwilling to take on.
– Ruth Yomtoubian, business
innovation lead at AT&T
Foundry
Drive Employee
Engagement
The positive impact on employee
engagement is an often-overlooked
benefit of innovation centers. Engaging
with the latest technologies and new
ideas excites and motivates employees,
even those in industries that are slow
to change. An innovation executive at a
large bank says, “If we never graduated
a single concept from the labs into
production, we would still get a ton of
benefit just from employee engagement.
That gets overlooked a lot.”
Build a Culture of
Innovation
The greater positive impact of successful
innovation centers includes the
development of an innovation culture
within the larger organization. The
head of innovation at a leading bank
says: “If your company is counting on
your innovation center to do all your
innovation, you will fail. It should be one
of the tools that help, and it is a sort of
catalyst for serving the business.” The
goal should ultimately be to, as the
executive says: “institutionalize a culture
where people are encouraged and
rewarded for trying new things.”
We went to campus
placements right after
the announcement of our
innovation lab and our
ticket was hotter than
Twitter and Facebook.
– Innovation executive at
leading retailer
8. 8
Who is Investing in Innovation Centers?
While many organizations are struggling to activate their research and innovation efforts, only 38% of the leading 200
companies have set up innovation centers.
The penetration of innovation centers also varies dramatically across sectors (see Figure 3). Manufacturing companies —
particularly those from the high-tech sector — have the highest number of innovation centers. Many of these companies are
tackling developments, such as 3D Printing (for prototyping) and the Internet of Things (to constantly monitor supply chain
or operations).
Similarly, telecoms companies, which have felt the full disruptive brunt of the digital revolution, have also invested significantly
in innovation centers. However, take-up in the financial services sector, which also faces significant disruption, stands at
28%.
Among companies that have established innovation centers, most have committed significant investment. In 2014 for
instance, P&G opened its third innovation center in Singapore, investing over US$186 million1
. The center focuses on over
18 fields of study — from seeking consumer insights to developing and testing new prototypes, as well as designing new
packaging.
Sources: 1
Today News, “P&G opens S$250m Innovation Centre in S’pore”, March 2014
Figure 3: Penetration of Innovation Centers by Sectors
N=200
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
Manufacturing
Telecom
Automotive
Consumer Product & Retail
Financial Services
Total
58%
43%
30%
30%
28%
38%
9. 9
Asia
London (10)
Paris (9)
Berlin (5)
Munich (5)
53 centers
Silicon
Valley Chicago (4)
North America Europe
Legend
Top Ten Cities
7-10 centers
4-6 centers
1-3 centers
Top Ten Ci
Silicon Valley 53
London 10
Paris 9
Singapore 7
Tokyo 6
Shanghai 6
Berlin 5
Munich 5
Tel Aviv 4
Chicago 4
> 50 centers
Singapore (7)
Tokyo (6)Shanghai (6)
Bangalore (4)
Seoul (4)
Tel Aviv (4)
Focus Area
% of companies
63%
51%
39%
13%
13%
5%
Mobility
Big Data / Analytics
Internet of Things
Robotics
Virtual Reality
3-D Printing
Main Mission of Innovation Centers
% of companies
35%
Gaining access and exposure
to latest technologies
Deeper understanding of
customer needs
65%
Single Center Vs Network of Innovation Centers
% of companies
67%
33%
Companies with Single Innovation Center
Companies with a Networkof Innovation
Centers
Distribution of Innovation Centers by Funding Model
% of companies
4%
23%
73%
Internal
Partnership
Data Not Available
38%of companies have set up innovation centers
61%of companies with centers have a presence in the Silicon Valley...
...But other hubs are also emerging – top 10 locations represent
only 35%of total centers 29%
Asia
25%29%
Breakdown of Innovation Centers by Region
The Innovation Center Heat Map
Centers
N=309
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
N=75
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
10. Most innovation
centers commit one
of two cardinal sins.
Either they think too
far out into the future,
or they get involved
in routine projects.
– Seasoned innovation expert
Figure 4: Critical Success Factors for Innovation Centers
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
It is extremely challenging to make a
success of innovation centers. A seasoned
innovation expert and senior executive at a
leading global bank told us: “About 80 to 90
percent of innovation centers fail, and end
up being a massive waste of resources.”
Such high failure rate results from a slippery
slope of challenges that innovation centers
must overcome to succeed in digital
innovation. The challenges range from
lack of leadership support and an unclear
focus to companies’ inability to scale the
innovation at an enterprise level.
Leading companies avert these perils by
factoring critical success factors into their
journey. These factors broadly fall into three
phases – laying down the foundation of
vision and governance, harnessing talent
and partnerships and delivering on the core
promise of innovation (see Figure 4).
LayingDowntheFoundation
of Vision and Governance
Define the Right Purpose & Focus
Defining the purpose of the innovation
center is critical. Different approaches will
deliver different results, with an innovation
outpost not delivering the same benefits
as an in-house innovation lab.
How can Innovation Centers Successfully Scale
the Slippery Slope of Digital Innovation?
Innovation centers also need to find
the right focus and fight the “forces of
magnetism” (see Figure 5) between
everyday operations and futuristic
projects. An innovation executive told us:
“Most innovation centers commit one of
two cardinal sins. Either they think too far
out into the future, or they get involved in
routine projects.” Successful innovation
centers establish clear space between
themselves and everyday operations yet
ensure their breakthrough innovations can
be turned into commercial reality.
CEO Support is a Must to Nurture
Innovation Centers
Innovation should be a top-down approach
wheretheleadershipteamlookstoentrench
a culture of innovation throughout the
organization. Innovation centers are at the
forefront of this effort to change company
culture. It is imperative that the leadership
team nurture the innovation centers and
champions its initiatives throughout the
organization. Kevin McKenzie, Chief Digital
OfficerofWestfield,says:“Ifcompaniestruly
do want to innovate, it’s got be sponsored
by the CEO… Our Co-CEO has personally
gone out and had a conversation with the
CEOs of just about every major retailer in
our category of retail about this topic, about
our mission, and ultimately that’s ended in
a go-to plan with the management teams.”
Georges Nahon, CEO Orange Silicon Valley
and President of the Orange Institute, adds:
“Our CEO is constantly interested in reading
or listening to what we have to say. He
comes about twice a year here. I’d say that
70% to 80% of the executive committee
visits us at least once a year. ”
Garner CEO
Support
Ensure Business
Units’ Involvement
Harness Talent
and Partnerships
Deliver on the Core
Innovation Promise
Lay Down the
Foundation of Vision
and Governance
Create a
Cross-
Functional Team
Hire Employees that
Thrive in Both
Structured and
Unstructured
Environments
Engage with
Diverse Partners
but Use Sound
Judgment When
Selecting Them
Maintain
Focus by Culling
Unfeasible Projects
Define the Right
Purpose and Focus
Set Up a
Governance Model
Extend
Innovation
Across the
Enterprise
Prove Value with
Quick Wins and
Follow Through
10
11. Figure 5: The Right Focus: Fighting the “Forces of Magnetism”
We bring all sorts of
best practices and
tools and techniques
across the business to
help make people more
creative, more engaged,
more innovative.
Set up a Governance Model with
Stakeholders from Across the
Business
A common challenge cited by many
respondents in our research is the need
to identify the ‘right’ set of stakeholders
from across the business.
An innovation executive from a global
financial services firm says: “It’s not
a good answer to have one or two
champions for an innovation center. You
need a governance body where you have
a number of stakeholders at a senior
level. This will help avoid dependence on
people and move it to a process. This
way, you also help innovation permeate
throughout the enterprise.”
At the same time, organizations should
ensure that the innovation center is not
burdened with multiple stakeholders, with
competing agendas nullifying the center’s
goal and purpose.
Ensure Business Units’
Involvement
One risk that innovation centers face is
that, by working in an autonomous fashion,
they can get disconnected from the larger
organization.Itiscrucialthatbusinessunitsare
closely involved in the selection, scoping and
execution of innovation center projects. The
leadofaninnovationcenterofabankingmajor
emphasized the importance of working in
tandem with the business, saying: “Too often,
innovation centers are looked at as outsiders
by those inside the corporate structure, and
that can create issues when it comes to
deploying their solutions commercially.”
Ownership and clear governance are
critical. In certain cases, innovation centers
are directly managed by the business and
as a result are in sync with the business
requirements. An innovation executive at a
large financial services firm explains, “Labs
are owned by their businesses. This means
there’s better line of sight and integration with
real business needs as well as commercially
viable innovation. A global lab coordinates all
the business-owned labs.”
AT&T provides another example of how to
overcome this potential disconnect between
the business and the innovation center. It has
established a network of ‘Foundry’ innovation
centers in various locations including in Silicon
Valley. But it also has centers in Plano and
Atlanta,bothofwhicharelocationsforimportant
AT&T business units. They have been set up
with the express intent of being close to the
business7
. AT&T’s Ruth Yomtoubian believes
that early support from the business is critical.
“We are not going to do anything unless there
isaneedfromthebusinessunitortheirbuy-in”,
she explains. “This means you have to bring
them in at an ideation stage and put a lot of
upfront energy into creating buy-in for ideas
that challenge the status quo.”
Harness Talent and
Partnerships
Create a Cross-Functional Team
The composition of the innovation center
needstobediverse.Aninnovationexecutive
at a leading American financial services firm
says: “It’s about bringing the right people
along the journey at the right time – not too
soon, not too late – and having the right
integrated teams that include the business
working on ideas together.”
Hire Employees that Thrive
in both Structured and
Unstructured Environments
Shortage of digital skills is an issue, but
attitude is as important as aptitude. The lead
at a telecom innovation center said: “The
people element cannot be underestimated.
It takes a certain kind of person to work in
anyinnovationcenter,wherehalfyourtimeis
spent in a very open-ended and ambiguous
environment working with startups, and the
other half with the traditional and risk-averse
side of the business.”
An associated challenge around skills is
11
Innovation
Center
Pulltowardsday-to-day businessgoals
Forcedto focuson incremental
improvements
Pulltowardsinnovationsthat arefarout
into thefuture
Getsdisconnectedfromcurrent realitiesand
commercialviability
Far-Future FocusDay-to-Day
Business Focus
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
About 80 to 90 percent of
innovation centers fail,
and end up being a massive
waste of resources.
– Senior executive at leading
global bank
– Head of innovation labs at
financial services major
12. 12
the actual ability of organizations to staff an
innovation center with the full range of skill
sets that are required to bring an innovation
to market. For instance, the innovation
executive at a major retailer conveyed her
concerns when she says: “My biggest
fear coming into this role was that my
team would be a bunch of heads with no
arms and legs. We think big thoughts, we
have great ideas, but we can’t get any of
them done. We are a few people and we
don’t have a dedicated IT, UI/UX, creative
support, all these people that we need to
really create and scale.”
Engage with Diverse Partners but
Use Sound Judgment in Selecting
Them
Engagingwiththetechecosystemisintegral
to the mission of an innovation center, but it
is equally important not to waste too much
time. As one innovation executive puts it:
“You need to avoid becoming an innovation
theater where all you are doing is interacting
with a bunch of startups that don’t really
care about your company. There are a lot of
interesting startups out there. The important
thing is to have a judgment as to which
ones to spend time with.”
Deliver on the Core
Innovation Promise
Prove Value by Demonstrating
Early Wins and Following
Through on the Promise
Innovation centers, by virtue of being
standalone units, must constantly prove
the value that they add to the business.
This challenge is exacerbated by the fact
that innovation centers typically work on
projects with significant gestation periods.
Leading innovation centers overcome
this challenge by demonstrating early
wins. When Walmart set up its innovation
center — Walmart Labs in 2011— it made
several key acquisitions upfront to build
momentum. One of its early acquisitions,
Kosmix, proved instrumental to garner
some quick wins. The first key assignment
for the team was to develop a new search
engine to power its e-commerce website8
.
Walmart Labs accomplished the task in
just nine months. The updated website
also increased the conversion of visitors
into buyers by as much as 20%. Today,
WalmartLabs continues to be a driving
force behind digital innovation at Walmart9
.
Sunset Programs and Ideas that
are Unfeasible… But at the Right
Time
Innovation centers are all about
experimentation, and a trial-and-error
approach is one of its defining features.
At the same time, it is crucial to focus
resources and energies on the most
feasible and viable projects. Since only
a small proportion of projects usually
succeed, the ones that are unfeasible
need to be terminated, and quickly. The
VP at the innovation lab of a leading
retailer said: “You need to be honest
with yourself and with what is working,
regardless of the amount of time,
money, or personal capital you have
spent. Some of our projects that were
initially promising were just not flying,
and we had to kill them.” At this retailer,
ideas are tested in 1-2 stores and based
on feedback, prototype is created for a
pilot in 10-15 stores to quickly assess
their potential.
It is important to rigorously scrutinize
each innovation before sunsetting
it. An innovation executive confirms:
“We try to assess each of our projects
against key metrics such as market
differentiators, net new revenue or cost
reduction, but we are trying not to
conduct this assessment too far upstream
in the process where it might kill any
kind of innovation activities The key is to
implement the right set of controls and the
right level of controls at the different stages
of the innovation process.”
Extend Innovation Across the
Enterprise
An innovation center can be said to
have reached its pinnacle when it is
able to extend the innovation practices
far beyond its walls and deeper into
business units and functions. One way
of doing this is to ensure that learning
from innovation centers is constantly
routed back to the business. The head
of innovation labs for a financial major
confirms this by saying: “We bring all
sorts of best practices, tools and techniques
across the business to help make people
more creative, more engaged, more
innovative”.
You need to avoid
becoming an innovation
theater where all you are
doing is interacting with
a bunch of startups that
don’t really care about
your company.
– Innovation executive at
banking major
You need to be honest
with yourself and
with what is working,
regardless of the amount
of time, money, or
personal capital you
have spent. Some of
our projects that were
initially promising were
just not flying we had
to kill them.
– VP at innovation lab of a
leading retailer
13. 13
To create a sustainable
innovation culture
and have it permeate
throughout the
corporate structure,
you need a governance
body with senior
stakeholders.
The Road Ahead
Organizations need to take a structured
approach towards operationalizing their
innovation centers.
Set Up a Governing Body
of Senior Stakeholders
to Create a Sustainable
Innovation Culture
The innovation center will only succeed
if its innovations, and a culture of
experimentation, are backed by
leadership. According to the Director of a
global bank’s innovation center: “To create
a sustainable innovation culture and have
it permeate throughout the corporate
structure, you need a governance body of
senior stakeholders. This is necessary to
build a strong and sustainable connectivity
with the businesses and the technology
organization. This means that they’re all
part of the journey and that the innovation
center is not like an internal ‘agency’
pitching for innovation activities.”
There are multiple governance models
that can be deployed. Figure 6 shows
the centralized, decentralized and
autonomous options:
In a decentralized model, innovation
centers are closer to the business
and, as a result, are in sync with local
requirements.
Centralized models, on the other hand,
operate with a network of innovation
centers spread across locations that
are also linked to a technology-focused
central lab. This enables better control
and closer co-ordination across the
centers.
The autonomous model allows for
working with specific executives (CIO/
CMO/CEO) on targeted missions,
working largely independently.
Figure 6: Governance Models for Innovation Center
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
DECENTRALIZED CENTRALIZED AUTONOMOUS
Co-ordination (Formal or Informal)
Innovation Centers
Central Lab
Liaises directly with
CEO/CIO/CMO
Business Units Business Units CXO
– Director of innovation center
at a global bank
14. 14
Build Cross-Functional
Teams that Give a Diversity
of Perspectives
Building a team with people from various
functions across the organization will
create a rich mix of diverse perspectives.
It will also enable the innovation center to
maintain strong links with the rest of the
organization.
Allocate Independent
Budgets, but Keep the
Reporting Aligned to the
Business
Budgets should be centralized and kept
independent of the business units within
the company. This ensures that the
innovation centers have the independence
to create prototypes for the business units
rather than business units selecting which
ideas make it to the prototype phase. An
innovation center executive said: “We had
the complete, independent budget to pay
for everything and all of the people and
resources required to run a certain number
of tests to play around with technology.
We could just do it independently. Even
if the business was integrated into alpha
tests, we were self-funded, so we did not
have to ask for anything.”
Establish Suitable Metrics
to Measure and Monitor
Performance
Giventhefluidandambiguousenvironment
that innovation centers operate in, having
the right metrics is critical for success.
Some examples include number of new
products/services developed, reduction
in costs, increase in operational efficiency,
and so on. But it is not just the output
that is important, measuring the quality of
inputs and the efficacy of processes is of
equal importance. As the innovation lead
at a manufacturing major explains: “We
measure the outputs that we are delivering
to our corporation, as that is what they are
interested in. But internally, we also take
into account what we are taking as inputs
and also what we are doing as processes.”
Further, the metrics should be ultimately
aligned to business objectives. A senior
innovation executive at a financial services
firm drives home this important point,
saying: “Evaluation metrics may be very
different from the business ones, but
in the end they need to tie back to the
overarching business objectives.”
15. Parameter Question Recommendation Rationale
Dedicated
Center
Innovation Center or
Innovation Team?
A dedicated innovation center(s ) - Dedicated centers enable sharper focus, greater
freedom and stronger ecosystem collaboration
Number of
Centers
One center or a
network of centers?
A network of centers is preferable
over a single center
- A network of centers allows the parent company
to harness synergies across sectors, markets and
capabilities
Location In a tech hub, or
close to business
and customers?
Companies should set up a
network of centers to address all
(or most) of these aspects
- Proximity to tech, business and customers - each
has its own importance. AT&T, for instance, has
set up its “Foundries” in Silicon Valley and Israel
to leverage the tech ecosystem, and in Plano and
Atlanta to be close to business and customers
- Availability of niche skills is another criterion. For
an example, New York and Boston have emerged
as Big Data hotspots, while Israel is a frontrunner
when it comes to cybersecurity
Governance
Model
What reporting
structure is most
effective?
Could be centralized,
decentralized or autonomous
Key is to involve diverse set of
senior stakeholders
- A centralized model enables closer coordination
between the centers; a decentralized model
offers the practical convenience of working with
the relevant BU; while an autonomous model
provides the freedom that is often indispensable
for success
- Having senior stakeholders from multiple
functions ensures that the innovation center has
strong, organization-wide support and backing
Funding
Mechanism
Which funding
mechanism is most
desirable?
Funded by corporate
headquarters, not by individual
executive sponsors
- Having direct corporate funding ensures both
a greater amount of funds, and a promise of
continued support even in the absence of
immediate, short-term results
Source: Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter Analysis
Innovation Center Checklist
15
16. 16
The Next Innovation Wave
The digital economy offers a solution and
an inspiration for the perennial challenge
of successful innovation. The advent of
thriving technology hubs, and the appetite
Leadership/CEO Checklist
Have purpose and a clear area of focus for your innovation center
Ensure innovation centers keep business priorities, rather than technology considerations, at the fore
Have a mix of quick-wins vs. audacious goals for the innovation center
Ensure you are quick to translate even small gains from the innovation center back to the larger organization
Do not measure innovation centers with traditional metrics, but at the same time ensure metrics are tied to
larger business objectives
Ensure there is a spread of innovation centers across key tech hubs
Ensure innovation centers are not seen as a third-party – Make them a key part of discussions on future
strategy
Encourage a culture of fast-failure within the innovation centers; encourage innovation centers to experiment
Apply insights and new models to organizational design to improve and optimize culture and work
of new digital entrants to relentlessly
disrupt and innovate, has created an
innovation ecosystem that traditional
organizations can tap into. By combining
the culture and approach of innovation
centers with the budget firepower and
access to customers that they enjoy,
traditional organizations have an excellent
opportunity to re-energize their innovation
capability.
17. 17
Research Methodology
For the purposes of this research, we considered a company to have an innovation center only if at least one of its centers
was located in the following tech hubs:
o Silicon Valley, Tel Aviv, Los Angeles, Seattle, New York City, Boston, London, Toronto, Vancouver, Chicago, Paris, Sydney,
Sao Paulo, Moscow, Berlin, Waterloo (Canada), Singapore, Melbourne, Bangalore and Santiago (list based on a study of
global tech ecosystems conducted by Telefonica and the Startup Genome in 2012 Telefonica Innovation Hub, “Startup
Ecosystem Report”, 2012)
• We adopted a comprehensive research methodology leveraging both primary and secondary approaches:
o Focus interviews with executives from leading organizations, overseeing innovation related activities. Representing diverse
industry sectors, all of these are large organizations with most having revenues greater than US$5bn. (see below for list of
executives who agreed to be named)
o Web-based research of the largest 200 companies by revenue based on the Bloomberg list. We covered the following
sectors — Automotive, Financial Services, Consumer Products & Retail, Manufacturing and Telecom, and picked the forty
largest companies by revenue within each sector. In all, 309 innovation centers were analyzed.
The research explored innovation centers along multiple dimensions :
• Mission behind the centers (e.g. increase innovation output, form relationships with ecosystem partners)
• Focus areas for the centers (e.g. mobility, Internet of Things, Big Data)
• Collaborative relationships forged (e.g. with large companies, startups, universities)
• Governance models adopted (e.g. centralized, decentralized, autonomous)
• Challenges faced
• Results delivered
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the numerous executives who graciously spared their time for this research. In particular, we would like to thank:
Ruth Yomtoubian, AT&T; Bridget Dolan, Sephora; Mark Brodeur, Nestlé; Kevin McKenzie, Westfield; Georges Nahon, Orange;
Bao Nguyen, Walmart; Debbie Brackeen, Citi; Karin Weining, DuPont; Ed McLaughlin, MasterCard.
1
HBR, “Making Sense of Digital Disruption”, May 2015
2
Wall Street Journal, “The Billion Dollar Startup Club”, February 2015
3
Lithium, “Corporate America Under Pressure From Consumers’ Rising Expectations”, June 2015
4
Nielsen, “HOW TO FLIP 85% MISSES TO 85% HITS: LESSONS FROM THE NIELSEN BREAKTHROUGH INNOVATION PROJECT”, June 2014
5
Forbes, “Why U.S. Firms Are Dying: Failure To Innovate”, February 2015
6
Oracle, “Understanding the Best Approaches and Tools to Manage the Complexity of Innovation”, 2013
7
Capgemini Consulting Interview
8
Fast Company, “Walmart’s Evolution from Big Box Giant to E-Commerce Innovator”, November 2012
9
Capgemini Consulting, “Walmart: Where Digital Meets Physical”, July 2015