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Category: DigitalTransformationTrends

DigitalTransformationTrends

  • Walmart Joins Forces With Microsoft to Fend Off Amazon

    Walmart Joins Forces With Microsoft to Fend Off Amazon

    In its bid to overtake its largest rival, Walmart announced a strategic partnership with Microsoft on Tuesday. According to the biggest US retailer, the company inked a five-year deal with the tech giant to speed up its digital transformation for a faster shopping experience online. Walmart will be utilizing an array of Microsoft’s cloud solutions as its preferred provider.

    It’s no secret that Walmart and Microsoft are two of Amazon’s closest rivals in retail and cloud computing, respectively. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said that the battle against Amazon was “absolutely core” to his company’s teamup with Walmart. He further stated, “How do we get more leverage as two organizations that have depth and breadth and investment to be able to outrun our respective competition?”

    Under the deal, Walmart will use Microsoft’s machine learning and AI technologies to optimize the retailer’s entire supply chain and improve its delivery system. With the Internet of Things platform on Microsoft’s Azure, the retailer can better manage which products should go on the shelves from the ones that go into the refrigeration units. This is one way to reduce costs in operating its physical stores.

    Utilizing technology to assess operations seems to be one of Amazon’s strong suits, one that Walmart appears to lack. Over the past few years, the online retailer has developed its cloud computing business, Amazon Web Services, to become the leading cloud service provider. Microsoft, however, remains second in terms of market share with Azure, but still a worthy alternative for other companies.   

    Although Walmart has developed its own cloud computing operation, it wasn’t as extensive as Amazon’s or Microsoft’s. The retailer only began using Azure recently when it acquired Jet.com, whose operations ran entirely on Microsoft’s cloud platform.  

    Walmart has been more open to the idea of working with tech firms to enhance its systems and improve shopping experience. Last year, it teamed up with Google by adding some of its Walmart.com products on Google Express to allow for voice-ordered purchases, directly competing with Amazon’s Alexa. And for its back-to-school offering, Walmart has also launched its app for faster location of items in-store.   

    Microsoft, on the other hand, has been teaming up with other brick-and-mortar retailers, such as Macy’s and Marks & Spencer, for better retail experience using artificial intelligence.

    Despite the strategic alliance, Walmart won’t be using the tech giant’s services for its planned cashierless stores – another area where Amazon has taken an early lead with its Amazon Go store in Seattle. Microsoft, however, is still keen on developing hardware and software solutions for automated grocery stores, even if it’s not for Walmart.

    [Featured image via Walmart.com]

  • Microsoft and Red Hat Team Up to Offer OpenShift on Azure

    Microsoft and Red Hat Team Up to Offer OpenShift on Azure

    Microsoft and Red Hat have announced their collaboration in offering the first jointly managed OpenShift on Azure, the former’s public cloud. At the Red Hat Summit that opened on Tuesday, the teamup will allow enterprise developers to run container-based applications across on-premises and public clouds.

    Red Hat OpenShift, the company’s Kubernetes container application platform, has been identified as the industry’s most comprehensive solution. With its availability on Azure, container management will become easier since it will be a fully managed service by Microsoft and Red Hat.

    So, how does container application platform works? Runtime components, such as files, environment variables, and libraries needed in executing an application, are distributed into so-called containers. They use fewer resources since app containers can share with the host’s operating system in order to run, unlike virtual machines that have their own OS.

    Red Hat president Paul Cormier pointed out that several organizations often have a mixture of on-premises and public cloud footprint for their IT operations. Its partnership with Microsoft gives customers the opportunity to tap into an innovative hybrid cloud platform without making major adjustments in their existing operations.

    During the summit, Burr Sutter of Red Hat demonstrated how users can load-balance across a hybrid cloud comprised of an on-site rack, Azure in Texas, and Amazon Web Services in Ohio. He showed that the task could be done automatically and in real time using Kubernetes.

    As more companies turn to containerized applications as part of the digital transformation, the demand for managed services around containers is also increasing, observed Red Hat vice president Mike Ferris. Red Hat OpenShift on Azure gives enterprises the flexibility to move workloads around and across on- and off-premises, such as the public cloud. Moreover, OpenShift customers no longer need to manage Kubernetes themselves – a strategy that Microsoft has been nudging on.

    Other advantages of the collaboration to developers include faster connections with enhanced security under hybrid networking, and access to managed services like Azure Cosmos DB, Azure Machine Learning, and Azure SQL DB. Thanks to available extensive technology platforms, OpenShift customers can now build cloud-native apps and update existing ones. There will be an overarching support for containerized applications, operating systems, infrastructure, and orchestrator.

    “Microsoft and Red Hat are aligned in our vision to deliver simplicity, choice, and flexibility to enterprise developers building cloud-native applications,” said Scott Guthrie, Microsoft’s executive vice president for cloud and enterprise. “Today, we’re combining both companies’ leadership in Kubernetes, hybrid cloud, and enterprise operating systems to simplify the complex process of container management, with an industry-first solution on Azure.”

    The rollout of the collaboration will happen in two phases, with support for the OpenShift Container Platform and Red Hat Enterprise Linux on Azure. Meanwhile, the jointly developed and managed Red Hat OpenShift on Azure is slated for preview in the coming months.

  • Internet of Things to Drive the Fourth Industrial Revolution: Industrie 4.0 — Companies Endorse New Interoperable IIoT Standard

    Internet of Things to Drive the Fourth Industrial Revolution: Industrie 4.0 — Companies Endorse New Interoperable IIoT Standard

    The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) will be the primary driver of the fourth Industrial Revolution and Cisco and other companies are at the forefront. It’s commonly referred to as Industrie 4.0.

    “Industrie 4.0 is not digitization or digitalization of mechanical industry, because this is already there,” said Prof. Dr.-Ing. Peter Gutzmer, Deputy CEO and CTO of Schaeffler AG. “Industrie 4.0 is getting the data real-time information structure in this supply and manufacturing chain.”

    “If we use IoT data in a different way we can be more flexible so we can adapt faster and make decisions if something unforeseen happens, even in the cloud and even with cognitive systems,” says Gutzmer.

    From the 2013 Siemens video below:

    “In intelligent factories machines and products will communicate with each other, cooperatively driving production. Raw materials and machines are interconnected, within an internet of things. The objective, highly flexible individualized and resource friendly mass production. That is the vision for the fourth industrial revolution.”

    “The excitement surrounding the fourth industrial revolution or Industrie 4.0 is largely due to the limitless possibilities that come with connecting everything, everywhere, with everyone,” said Martin Dube, Global Manufacturing Leader in the Digital Transformation Group at Cisco, in a blog post today. “The opportunities to improve processes, reduce downtime and increase efficiency through the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) is easy to see in manufacturing, an industry heavily reliant on automation and control, core examples of operational technology.”

    Connectivity between machines is vital for the success of Industrie 4.0, but it is far from simple. “The manufacturing environment is full of connectivity and communication protocols that are not interconnected and often not interoperable,” notes Dube. “That’s why convergence and interoperability are critical if this revolution is to live up to (huge) expectations.”

    Dube explains that convergence is the concept of connecting machines so that communication is possible and interoperability is the use of a standard technology enabling that communcation.

    Cisco Announces Interoperable IIoT Standard

    Cisco announced today that a number of key tech companies have agreed on an Interoperable IIoT Standard. The group, which includes ABB, BoschRexroth, B&R, Cisco, General Electric, National Instruments, Parker Hannifin, Schneider Electric, SEW Eurodrive and TTTech, is aiming for an open, unified, standards-based and interoperable IIoT solution for communication between industrial controllers and to the cloud, according to Cisco:

    ABB, Bosch Rexroth, B&R, CISCO, General Electric, KUKA, National Instruments (NI), Parker Hannifin, Schneider Electric, SEW-EURODRIVE and TTTech are jointly promoting OPC UA over Time Sensitive Networking (TSN) as the unified communication solution between industrial controllers and to the cloud.

    Based on open standards, this solution enables industry to use devices from different vendors that are fully interoperable. The participating companies intend to support OPC UA TSN in their future generations of products.

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  • A Connected Product Can Drive Success

    A Connected Product Can Drive Success

    Salesforce is conducting their annual Dreamforce conference this week with a variety of speakers giving talks. One that was interesting yesterday was from Bharat Anand, who is the Henry R. Byers Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School.

    Bharat’s talk was about ‘Digital Innovation Trends Shaping Our Future’ which is also the subject of his book that is launching in 10 days.

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    What is the problem with newspapers?

    “I went up to the plant manager and asked, what is this room (rolls of paper for newspapers) going to look like 10 years from now?” asked Anand. “I thought I would get a rousing defense of print, but instead he walks up to me and whispers in my ear, I get all of my news on the iPad.”

    Anand asked what is the problem with newspapers and what are the challenges they face? plant manager sayid it’s online news because you can get it quick, you can get it cheap, you have more variety, it’s rich media and you can personalize it.

    Anand wondered how has this has effected news readership? “This has been going on for 60 years,” he said. “Oh my gosh, this has nothing to do with the internet. What started the decline? It was radio, then broadcast TV, then black and white TV, cable TV, 24/7 cable news, and then the internet. If you took out time, the impact of the internet is imperially indistinguishable from everything that came before it.”

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    “And yet, every story we hear is about how the internet has destroyed newspapers,” he says. “It did, but it had nothing to do with the news content. The impact was really on classifieds. Classified ads account for around 40% of the revenue of a newspaper and more than half the profits.”

    Anand points out that if you look at the New York Times between 1994 and 20110, average decline in news readership was less than half a percent a year. Be he says that classifieds on the other hand, lost 90% of those revenues. Why the difference?

    News is Stable, But Classifieds Have Disappeared

    “The reason goes back to something pretty fundamental about behavior, which is how do we consume both of these products?” says Anand. “Which news site would you like to go to? Well, it doesn’t depend on what my friends choose. Even if my friends like Google, CNN and Yahoo, if I like the NYTimes.com, I will go there. In other words, I’m making decisions based on product quality and price.”

    He points out how classifieds have a very different dynamic. “Which classified site do I choose to go to?” he asks. “Where there are the most listings. Where do people list? Where are the most buyers?”

    “More listings, more buyers…more buyers, more listings, exclaims Anand. “We have what I call a feedback loop or what is sometimes called network effects, meaning my decision to go to a particular site depends on the decisions of many other people.”

    A Connected Product Can Drive Success

    Anand says that a connected product means there are connections between users and that news on the one hand is not a connected product but classifieds is. This has fundamental implications for a bunch of things.

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    He points out that for the last decade, circulation revenue for most newspapers was roughly stable. Why? “We had slight decreases in revenue per household offset by price increases, but with classifieds, we basically lose the entire thing, said Anand. “Meaning once we are ahead in classifieds, such as Craigslist and Monster, you get more and more listings, more and more buyers. It’s what we call winner take all dynamics.”

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    “When I have this conversation with news executives and I ask them what are the problems facing newspapers, they (typically) say it’s online news and they explain because it’s better, faster, cheaper,” he says. “At some point I ask how their circulation revenues are holding up. They say, actually pretty well. Then what’s the problem? Oh, classifieds! I say wait, you are in the news business.” He says that even newspaper executives fall into the trap thinking the problem is about content. After all he says, “We never called it a classified ad paper, we called it a newspaper.”

    Where Else Do We See This Dynamic?

    All over the place he says. It’s the history of digital.

    Microsoft vs. Apple and PC’s: Apple has probably been the best product for 30 years, but ends up with 3% market share. Why? Microsoft owned the networks. More buyers, the more likely that other people will buy PC’s because we want to share files, more buyers more app developers, more buyers more app developers and so on.

    What’s interesting about this is that we have just seen the greatest corporate transformation in history, where Apple’s market share in PC’s has increased from about 3% globally to around 9% globally. Barely moved the needle. Conversely, we’ve seen a company (Microsoft) that probably makes every mistake known to mankind, and yet top 5 in market cap. That’s the power of networks.

    Facebook vs. Google+: When Google+ came out many people said, this is a better product, allowing you to create circles of friends (and much more), until someone said, there is no one playing in the sandbox but me.

    eBay marketplaces: When it wins around the world, it wins big. When it loses, like in Japan and China, it doesn’t go from 80 to 75%, it goes all the way down to zero and exits the market.

    AirBnB: Same idea of connections, which is the more people list on the site, more renters, more renters more listings. You end up with winner take all. This is a tweet from an AirBNB executive showing the power of networks:

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    Uber: What’s interesting is that when they started Uber Black with their own drivers it was sort of going nicely. But when they opened up to partner drivers, exponential growth. Again the same dynamic.

    Network Connections Can Be Created

    Anand also talked about how companies, such as Pokemon, can create the network effect out of thin air. “There is nothing about a card that says this is a connect product,” he says. “But Pokemon goes to great lengths to convince you and me that the value in this card lies in trading with others. Suddenly, I don’t want to be the only kid in school who doesn’t have a card.”

    He also gave the example of how building tools can help news organizations create a network dynamic. Trove is a personalized news reader build by the Washington Post that was doing okay, but took off after they connecting it to Facebook, prompting millions of new readers. Unfortunately, Facebook later changed their algorithm!

    Another example he gave was of a Norway newspaper called Schibsted, which actually saw this dynamic about 15 years ago. “They looked at classifieds and said this is a winner take all dynamic and that if we don’t move fast, we lose the entire game,” Anand said. “They actually built out just when the dot com bubble was crashing. Everyone was moving away from newspapers, they moved in.”

    He added, “They create the online classified site, with the results being that when you win in classifieds you are 3-5X ahead of the second player. There is something quite fascinating about their market share, they now have a 90% market share of jobs and real estate in Norway, but they say in their annual report that we have a 100% marketshare in cars. I wondered why. They said that our size is actually so liquid that people all over Europe are actually listing their cars on our site.”

    The Norway newspaper created this network dynamic even more spectacularly in response to the European volcanic ash crisis that started in Iceland where air travel was disrupted. “The challenge for everyone in Norway was how do I get from point A to point B with all air travel disrupted,” commented Anand. “They noticed that people were actually exchanging conversations on their website. Someone saying, anyone going from Oslo to Trondheim? Someone replies, yep, I have a car and I’m going at 3pm and I can pick up 3 people at the train station. This stuff was feeding on itself.”

    What did the newspaper do? The had their IT team build an app called Hitchhiker Central that became the most important product featured during this crisis, with everyone in Europe using it.

    How Companies Can Gain the Network Effect

    Now, every time there is a major news event Schibsted asks, how can we help readers help each other? “As a result, their front page traffic is off the charts, online CPM’s are as high as print CPM’s, which is unheard of in the Western world,” says Anand.

    “It’s about user connections,” he says. “One thing you can see is that companies that win on connections, they really don’t have to market. Think about how much Microsoft spends convincing you and me to buy the next Microsoft operating system. Effectively, the installed based is their sales force.”

    He says that if you win the network game that often trumps product quality.

  • Study Looks At Pressure On Business Leaders To Meet Rising Customer Expectations

    A study out from Lithium Technologies reveals that 42% of business leaders claim that consumers shame them on social media. This is based on a Harris Poll in April and Mayamong 300 corporate execs who work at companies with revenue of $1 billion or more.

    82% of these executives, who are VP level and higher, say their customers have higher expectations compared to three years ago, and 60% say it’s hard to please them. 42% indicate that customers use social media to shame them into doing what the consumer wants, the report says.

    “The consumer is forever changed,” said Lithium Technologies CEO Rob Tarkoff. “Social media and the rise of non-traditional, web-based entrants into established industries have evolved their expectations. Consumers use digital channels to find and share information, reviews, and insider tips. At the same time, they are using those channels to suggest improvements and sometimes shame brands into solving their problems. Business leaders are taking note of what this means to their image and bottom line—and rushing to find innovative ways to adapt.”

    Another interesting finding from the report is that 78% of business leaders think the Internet and consumer app companies are setting a new benchmark for customer experiences.

    “Yelp has changed dining experiences and made it possible for everyone to be a food critic,” said Tarkoff. “Uber has forever changed urban transportation. Airbnb has pressured the hotel industry. Netflix has changed the way we watch TV. And of course Amazon has changed the rules of retail for every retailer—online or otherwise. Whether a company competes directly with these companies or others like them, the Internet has created a consumer expectation that all companies now must meet.”

    65% of those polled cited innovation as one of the top pressures felt from rising consumer expectations, while 58% cited competition with other companies, and 52% cited customer turnover. 30% said slowed revenue growth, 28% said increased amount of discounts their company provides for to customers, and 17% said reduced market share.

    “All businesses need to get savvier about responding to the new consumer—and find ways to reap the benefits of digital business while minimizing the negative impacts,” said Tarkoff. “The good news our survey showed is that 93% of business leaders say their company is adapting to the digital transformation. But do their approaches have scale and staying power? That is the next big question.”

    Via AdWeek

    Image via Lithium Technologies