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Monday, June 30, 2014

5 Healthy organisational habits for CMOs

IDC finds that buyers are evolving their purchase practices faster than vendors are changing their marketing practices. To keep up, the CMO role is quickly moving beyond its traditional boundaries.

As digital customer experience bursts long-established organisational silos and mashes up business processes, marketing executives must also adopt new leadership habits.

  1. Put business first and marketing second.

    CMOs sometimes think of themselves as the 'the most senior marketer' when they should identify as 'the senior executive responsible for marketing'. It's a subtle but telling distinction. Organisationally healthy CMOs speak the language of business to their peers rather than use marketing jargon. When it comes to budget, the CMO's job is not to defend marketing's turf, but rather to steward the resources under their domain to get the best results for the overall business. Companies need a strong marketing function more than ever before. However, it will take a CMO with a business focus combined with a solid marketing capability to best help their companies weather the digital transformation.

  2. Seek out innovative relationships.

    A CMO of a large software company recently told me, "Our CEO believes that because of customer data, soon it will be the CMO, not the CFO, who will have the pulse of the business". This new-found insight and the more powerful seat at the table require new relationships. The CIO- CMOliaison, in particular, must be rethought. Some variations we've seen include the CIO reporting to the CMO or both the IT and marketing functions reporting to a chief customer officer or a chief innovation officer. Other CMOs have moved their office to sit beside the CIO in order to talk daily. Whatever organisational function that marketing finds itself bumping up against (such as sales, customer service, or manufacturing) is a place where an organisationally healthy CMO must lean in to a new type of relationship. HP Pavilion dv2-1004ax Entertainment Notebook PC battery

  3. Let things get out of control (a little).

    We're only, at best, 20 per cent into the transformation of marketing function. CMOs must retain a certain amount of humility about what we still don't know. Becoming buyer-centric, discovering new social norms for digital interaction, adapting to new business models driven by cloud, social, mobile and big data - these are big leaps, not incremental nudges. Many more people must be empowered to affect this level of change. Masses must alter their behaviour. Companies need to let things get a little out of control for a while so that innovation can happen. While it is important for marketers to become increasingly accountable and transparent, the CMO should design success metrics to accommodate some experimentation.

  4. Don't give away power away to sales.

    The CMO's vision horizon must not to stop at the marketing qualified Lead. A full revenue view is required. However, bowing to the demands of a traditionally-oriented sales executive will be lethal to the future of business. A tug of war between traditional marketing and traditional sales is like re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Traditional marketing and traditional sales will both be replaced by a radical new buyer-centric, data-driven, enterprise approach. For most companies this new way will be primarily digital and even human-to-human interactions will be optimised by digital tools. Every demand management consulting company I've talked to tells stories about clients who go through a challenging reinvention of the lead management process, only to slide backwards due to the fussing and outdated sales executive. A visionary sales executive will support the marketing transformation – even though it means less emphasis on traditional sales.HP Pavillion DV1000 DV4000 DV5000 PF723A battery

  5. Proactively bust silos.

    IDC predicts that by 2020, the predominant marketing organisational structure will concentrate around the three main hubs of digital marketing: Content, channels, and data. Today's CMOs find their organisations trapped in silos matching categories of media (advertising, events, Web, social, etc.), each with its own data/audience source and purpose-built content. These silos must be energetically disassembled and new 'systems-oriented' groups designed. Key concepts for tomorrow's marketing teams include diversity, collaboration, integration and multi-everything. To be successful, CMOs will need vision. They will also have to be pushy – a combination of enabling and persistent prodding.

    To keep pace with heightened customer expectations and new behaviors, CMOs must play a new game. CMOs will thrive if they develop new leadership habits geared for this era of tectonic organisational shifts.HP PAVILLION DV4 DV5 DV 4 DV 5 SERIES battery

Interactive Intelligence Positioned in the Leaders Quadrant of Magic Quadrant for Contact Center Infrastructure Report

Report defines leaders as high-viability vendors with broad portfolios, significant market share, broad geographic coverage, a clear vision of how contact centre needs will evolve, and a proven track record of delivering contact centre products

INDIANAPOLIS, June 30, 2014 -- Interactive Intelligence Group Inc. (Nasdaq: ININ), a global provider of software and services designed to improve the customer experience, has been positioned by Gartner in the Leaders quadrant of its 2014 Magic Quadrant for Contact Center Infrastructure report (1) - http://www.inin.com/resources/Documents/Newsletter-featuring-the-2014-Gartner-Magic-Quadrant-for-Contact-Center-Infrastructure.pdf

The Gartner report, which provides an analysis of vendors in the market based on their ability to execute and completeness of vision, is included in the Interactive Intelligence Contact Center Automation newsletter, which can be obtained by visiting - http://www.inin.com/resources/Documents/Newsletter-featuring-the-2014-Gartner-Magic-Quadrant-for-Contact-Center-Infrastructure.pdf.

According to Gartner, Leaders in its Magic Quadrant for Contact Center Infrastructure report - http://www.inin.com/resources/Documents/Newsletter-featuring-the-2014-Gartner-Magic-Quadrant-for-Contact-Center-Infrastructure.pdf - are "high-viability vendors with broad portfolios, significant market share, broad geographic coverage, a clear vision of how contact center needs will evolve, and a proven track record of delivering contact center products. They are well-positioned with their current product portfolio and likely to continue delivering leading products. Leaders do not necessarily offer a best-of-breed solution for every customer requirement. However, overall, their products are strong and often have some exceptional capabilities. Additionally, these vendors provide solutions that present relatively low risk of deployment failure."

Interactive Intelligence has been positioned as a Leader in Gartner's Magic Quadrant for Contact Center Infrastructure, Worldwide report for six consecutive years.

"We believe that our consistent placement in Gartner's Leaders Quadrant is because we're always looking ahead to what kind of technology innovation will give customers more value," said Dr. Donald E. Brown, founder and CEO for Interactive Intelligence. "Today, we see this next innovation as a result of using the cloud and hybrid solutions in entirely new ways to give organisations unprecedented speed of deployment, scalability, reliability, and unique functionality to more positively engage their customers."

In 1997 Interactive Intelligence introduced its all-in-one IP communications software suite, Customer Interaction Center - http://www.inin.com/solutions/Pages/Contact-Center-Software.aspx™ (CIC), to deliver multichannel applications minus the cost and complexity introduced by multipoint products.HP Pavilion dv2 dv2-1100 dv2-1000 Entertainment Notebook PC battery

CIC, which can be deployed in the cloud or on-premises, offers contact centre automation, unified communications, and business process automation functionality. Vertical specialisations include financial services, insurance, debt collection and utilities.

For more information about CIC, visit http://www.inin.com/solutions/Pages/Contact-Center-Software.aspx.

About Interactive Intelligence

Interactive Intelligence Group Inc. (Nasdaq: ININ) is a global provider of software and services designed to improve the customer experience. The company's 6,000-plus customers worldwide have benefitted from its cloud and on-premises solutions for contact centre, unified communications, and business process automation. Interactive Intelligence is among Software Magazine's 2013 Top 500 Global Software and Service Providers, and has received a Frost & Sullivan Company of the Year Award for the last five consecutive years. In addition, Glassdoor honored Interactive Intelligence with its 2014 Employees' Choice Award as one of the Best Places to Work in the U.S., and Mashable ranked Interactive Intelligence second on its 2014 list of the Seven Best Tech Companies to Work For. The company was founded in 1994 and employs more than 1,900 people worldwide. Interactive Intelligence is headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana and has offices throughout North America, Latin America, Europe, Middle East, Africa and Asia Pacific.

Interactive Intelligence can be reached at +61 2 8918 4878 or info_aunz@inin.com; on the Net: www.inin.com/au-nz ;on Twitter at www.inin.com/twitter; on Facebook at www.inin.com/facebook or on LinkedIn at www.inin.com/linkedin

Interactive Intelligence is the owner of the marks INTERACTIVE INTELLIGENCE, its associated LOGO and numerous other marks. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their respective owners.HP ProBook 4510s 4515S 4710S HSTNN-OB89 IB89 battery

(1) Gartner, "Magic Quadrant for Contact Center Infrastructure," by Drew Kraus, Steve Blood, and Sorell Slaymaker, May 22, 2014.

Disclaimer: Gartner does not endorse any vendor, product or service depicted in its research publications, and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors with the highest ratings. Gartner research publications consist of the opinions of Gartner's research organization and should not be construed as statements of fact. Gartner disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, with respect to this research, including any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.

Singapore Management University Spearheads Education Innovation with the Desire2Learn Integrated Learning Platform

Raising User Satisfaction Rates from 70% to 85%

Singapore, July 1, 2014 – Desire2Learn (D2L), the learning technology company that created the world's first truly integrated learning platform (ILP), today announced that Singapore Management University (SMU) has successfully implemented innovative models to personalise the student experience using the D2L ILP.

Home to over 8,300 undergraduate and postgraduate students, SMU has a reputation for pushing the boundaries in teaching innovation, creativity and academic excellence.

Professor Pang Yang Hoong—Vice Provost (Undergraduate) and Dean, School of Accountancy at SMU—said the university differentiated itself by pioneering a unique pedagogy that involved interactive, participative seminar style of learning in small class sizes.

The D2L ILP, known as "eLearn" in the university, creates a seamless and pervasive learning environment that, according to Mr. Lau Kai Cheong, Chief Information Officer and Vice President at SMU, "transcends across the physical and virtual learning spaces". This enables SMU to create a blended learning model to complement its unique interactive pedagogy.

To raise student engagement and success rates, SMU has embarked on a strategic initiative to harness the power of big data analytics. "In the area of predictive analytics, the D2L analytics solution gives us insights into students' learning behaviour so we can modify learning strategies and provide timely intervention to deliver better learning outcomes," Mr. Lau said.

Assistant Professor Kenneth Huang from SMU Lee Kong Chian School of Business said the adaptive learning technologies from D2L allow SMU to customise learning journeys to suit the needs of individual students, offering the right content at the right time. "The system provides a personalised experience. Different groups of students can be given different sets of materials based on their answers to questions or responses to instructions," he said. "As a result, the instructor doesn't have to spend excessive time and effort trying to customise materials for each sub-set of students - it can be done effectively and efficiently on the eLearn platform."HP/COMPAQ 361855-004 361856-002 361856-003 battery

The open, flexible architecture and extensibility of the D2L platform enables SMU to develop custom applications in-house and integrate them seamlessly with Desire2Learn Learning Environment. The Peer Evaluation Tool is one such example of a custom development SMU has introduced to foster collaboration and peer learning.

These tools, together with mobile applications and social learning tools from D2L, have created a fully integrated platform that enriches the learning experience of students at SMU. "D2L has a clear development roadmap with a lot of product innovations that will keep SMU attuned to the changing education landscape," said Mr. Lau. "We pride ourselves as a leader in learning and teaching, as well as academic research."

SMU has made significant progress in international rankings in recent years. Its School of Economics was ranked first in Asia in the Tilburg University Top 100 Worldwide Economics School Research Ranking based on contributions from 2009–2012, and its Lee Kong Chian School of Business was ranked second in Asia by University of Texas, Dallas for research contributions from 2009-2013.

Mr. Lau said the university sees D2L as a strategic partner in advancing its institutional goals: "We have been very satisfied with the implementation of the D2L system," he said. "The user satisfaction rate rose from 70% to 85% in 2013. The main reason for such high satisfaction levels is the usability of the platform."

For details on how SMU is using the D2L integrated learning platform to deliver a pervasive and personalised learning experience, please view the video: http://www.desire2learn.com/resources/video/view/?id=1_0lfgnjdvHP/COMPAQ 367759-001 367760-001 367769-001 battery

About Desire2Learn

Desire2Learn (D2L) is the pioneer of the integrated learning platform, delivering an engaging and personalised learning experience for every individual. With a focus on improving the learning experience, the company partners with thought-leading institutions and organisations to accelerate learning and improve results. D2L strives for accessibility in all of its applications, ensuring that learning is available to everyone regardless of geography or ability. A global leader in EdTech, D2L provides an open and extensible platform for more than 1,100 clients and 13 million learners in highereducation, K12,healthcare, government and the enterprise sector, including Fortune 1000 companies. D2L has operations in the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, Brazil and Singapore. For more information, visit: www.Desire2Learn.com.

Gigamon recognised by Network World Asia for excellence in network traffic monitoring and management

Selected by 100 CIOs and IT heads from the Asia Pacific region

SYDNEY, July 1, 2014 – Gigamon® (NYSE: GIMO), a leader in traffic visibility solutions with its innovative Unified Visibility Fabric™, today announced its recognition as the winner of Network World Asia's 2014 Information Management Awards in the 'Network Traffic Monitoring & Management' category.

The Network World Asia (NWA) Information Management Awards are the only regional Editor's Choice Awards to recognise Asia's leaders in information security, storage and data management – a mature and high growth category. The awards are backed by Network World Asia, Networks Asia, Security Asia and Storage Asia, including a team of editors, publishers, conference organisers and a panel of CIO advisors with broad industry experience and expertise.

Gigamon received the recognition after being selected by 100 CIOs and IT heads from the Asia Pacific region in a voting process.

"Gigamon is honoured to be recognised by Network World Asia for our performance and leadership in traffic visibility for network monitoring and management," said David Sajoto, Gigamon VP Enterprise Sales, Asia Pacific and Japan. "Our team is proud to provide best-in-class traffic visibility technology and services throughout the Asian region, and we value Network World Asia as a guide for the Asian market to understand the landscape of these rapidly growing enterprise IT technologies."

Gigamon's Visibility Fabric is highly regarded for its intelligent, agile and scalable architecture, serving enterprises, data centres and communications service providers around the world. Over the past several months, Gigamon has received industry acclaim for its products and technologies, including recognition as a Leading Lights award finalist for Gigamon's NetFlow Generation application, which the company announced in June. NetFlow was also recognised as a Best of Interop 2014 Finalist.

"The volume, velocity and variety of data are straining monitoring and security tools in addition to network bandwidth, storage capacity, and uninterrupted availability of data centre resources for business-critical applications," said Victor Ng, South-East Asia Bureau Chief of Network World Asia. "Meanwhile, networking and security technologies are converging, as organisations face new threats every day, and solution providers like Gigamon have once again proven their understanding of industry needs and market demands in the Asia Pacific region with their innovative traffic visibility technologies." Launched in 2012 to recognise Asia's leaders in Information Security, Storage and Data Management, the 2014 NWA Information Management Awards were presented at an awards dinner in Singapore on June 12th, 2014.

About the NWA Information Management Awards

The Information Management Awards are the only regional Editors' Choice Awards for this mature but growing enterprise IT segment. The awards are backed by leading Asian publications and portals – Network World Asia, Networks Asia, Security Asia and Storage Asia - and its team of experienced editors with deep and broad industry knowledge. Additionally, publishers, conference producers, marketers and a panel of CIO advisers with domain expertise and deep insights in Information Management select companies for each category of the Network World Asia awards program. HP/COMPAQ 383492-001 383493-001 391883-001 battery

About Gigamon

Gigamon provides an intelligent Visibility Fabric™ architecture for enterprises, data centres and service providers around the globe. Our technology empowers infrastructure architects, managers and operators with pervasive and dynamic intelligent visibility of traffic across both physical and virtual environments without affecting the performance or stability of the production network. Through patented technologies and centralised management, the Gigamon GigaVUE portfolio of high availability and high density products intelligently delivers the appropriate network traffic to management, analysis, compliance and security tools. With over eight years' experience designing and building traffic visibility products in the US, Gigamon solutions are deployed globally across vertical markets including over half of the Fortune 100 and many government and federal agencies. www.gigamon.comHP/COMPAQ 396600-001 398065-001 398752-001 battery

OrionVM Wholesale Cloud Named As State Merit Recipient and National Finalist in 2014 iAwards

OrionVM IaaS Cloud Platform distinguished in premier technology awards program for ICT Industry, recognising Australian innovation.

OrionVM® (www.orionvm.com), a leading provider of wholesale Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) and next-gen cloud technology, was named as a state merit recipient and national finalist today in the Tools category of the 2014 iAwards, Australia's premier technology innovation awards program for the ICT industry.

The iAwards (http://iawards.com.au) honours both companies at the cutting edge of technology innovation as well as leading professionals across the ICT industry. Most importantly, the iAwards recognises the achievements of home-grown Australian innovators. The key goal of the iAwards is to discover, recognise and reward the ICT innovations that have the potential to, or are already having, a positive impact on the community—at home, in the office and on a global scale. The iAwards also recognises the achievements made and value added by ICT professionals, CIOs and other innovators.

The iAwards for the New South Wales (NSW) State territory were presented at a ceremony in Sydney on June 25, 2014. The iAwards State Presentations are where iAwards host organisations, local branches, sponsors and members of the local ICT industry announce the state and territory winners and national finalists for the prestigious 2014 iAwards. These awards honour the best and most innovative solutions in each state or territory. Winners and merit recipients of these state and territory awards go on to represent their state or territory at the national phase of judging, which is being held in Melbourne on 29 August at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre. OrionVM was named a merit recipient and national finalist in the Tools category for the 2014 NSW State iAwards.

OrionVM helps IT solution providers drive profit and deliver high-performing, enterprise-grade cloud infrastructure. Fuelled by strong demand for its market-leading wholesale cloud platform, OrionVM achieved a record year in 2013 with a 20-fold increase of customers, adding enterprise clients such as Fastly, D-Link, and Vodafone, and launched key technology partnerships with Cumulus NetworksTM and Mellanox. OrionVM is Australia's largest wholesale cloud IaaS provider and recently announced their US expansion in early 2014 with a new headquarters office in San Francisco, CA. HP/COMPAQ 398065-001 398752-001 398832-001 battery

"Our entire team is honoured to be chosen as a merit recipient and finalist among so many innovative Australian companies nominated for this year's iAwards," said OrionVM Co-Founder and CEO Sheng Yeo. "This recognition validates the impact of disruptive technologies like OrionVM's cloud offering that are helping companies to remain competitive, increase efficiency, and generate new business. We are proud of our company's Australian roots and appreciate the efforts of the iAwards organisation to highlight the cutting-edge achievements that Australia is offering to the world."

Judging of the group awards is divided into two stages. Phase one determines the state winner for each category and is undertaken by an online review of the nomination submitted. This first phase of state judging is an on-paper review carried out by ICT industry professionals. The judging panel will assess all iAwards nominations in order to select winners in each category for each state. iAwards judges will assess nominations against the relevant selection criteria. State winners progress to phase two. This is a face-to-face presentation that will take place in Melbourne. The second national phase of judging is designed to enable each of the state winners to present their nominations to a panel of iAwards judges in person.

For more information on OrionVM, please visit http://www.orionvm.com. Details about the iAwards and the list of winners and finalists in all categories are available at http://iawards.com.au/index.php/winners/2014-winners/2014-winners-nsw.

About OrionVM® OrionVM is a wholesale Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) provider. The company's revolutionary technology suite (virtual storage, compute, orchestration and virtual networking) enables the delivery of high-performing, highly reliable cloud solutions at market-leading price-to-performance ratios. The OrionVM Wholesale Cloud Platform supports private, public, and hybrid cloud deployments and is built either for internal consumption or resale. Efficient and distributed enterprise-grade architecture allows clients to provide their own cloud offerings at margins of up to 80% off Amazon. Partners have full control—from a complete white-label rebranding to billing integration and flexible account management. OrionVM's technical vision represents a fundamental advancement for Cloud 2.0 infrastructure, which inspired tech luminary, Gordon Bell, to become a company angel investor. Global customers include publicly listed telcos, IT service providers, and leading enterprise SaaS companies. OrionVM company headquarters are in Sydney Australia and in the San Francisco Bay Area. For more information, please visit HP/COMPAQ 404232-001 407834-001 407835-001 battery

About the iAwards iAwards is the premier technology awards platform in Australia delivering the most comprehensive program that recognises the achievements and innovation made in ICT across all facets of the economy. The iAwards program's goal is to provide external stakeholders from business, industry and government with a clear view of the people leading ICT in Australia and the quality of innovation being produced. The iAwards honours both companies at the cutting edge of technology innovation as well as leading professionals across the industry. Most importantly, the iAwards honours the achievements of home-grown Australian innovators. For more information, please visit http://www.iawards.com.au or follow the conversation on Twitter @theiawards.

CMOs Feel the Heat from Seven Transformational Forces

Each day, a CMO spends a significant portion of time on things that didn't even exist 10 years ago. In 10 more years, the changes to the marketing function will be even more acute.

IDC believes CMOs are feeling the heat from seven powerful transformational forces. CMOs are responding with a multitude of initiatives requiring substantial investments in people, process, and technology. These technology investments are spurring the growth of the CMO as the most important new IT buying centre.

CMOs are feeling the heat from seven transformational forces at play in their world. Four of these forces (which are described below) - new buyer demographics, the power of social, the rise of mobility, and the business process mash-up - are demand-side driven. That is, they arise from forces outside of the CMO's control. Like it or not, they push CMOs to make an immediate and significant response.

The other three transformational forces - analytics, multi-channel orchestration, and operational optimisation - are supply-side driven. CMOs can choose whether to participate. However, few will sit on the sidelines because these forces offer tremendous transformational benefits and CMOs will be unable to go very far to address the urgent, exciting and occasionally frightening, demand-side forces unless they also tackle the supply-side.

CMOs urgently need technology to respond to each and any of these seven forces, creating a marketing technology marketplace that is potentially huge. However, today this marketplace is noisy, crowded, confusing, and full of overlapping, yet insufficient and immature products. The opportunity is just beginning. Technology winners will be those that best assist CMOs to master these forces.

Four Supply-side Transformational Forces

1. New Buyer Demographics

Today's buyers are fundamentally different from those in the past. They are digitally equipped and savvy, interconnected (social), and informed. Due to social and economic shifts, they are also more value-oriented, less trusting, less loyal, and with higher expectations for respect, service, and entertainment. One-to-one marketing has been the holy grail of marketing for many years. While it is still out of reach, changes in buyer demographics demand that vendors dramatically step up their efforts to create personalised, relevant, and valuable, commercial experiences – or pay the price. CMOs require technology to listen to and monitor buyers, as well as the ability to respond in personalised, service-oriented ways.

2. The Power of Social

Companies are just beginning to realize the implications of the extremely fast and pervasive adoption of social technologies. Initially, CMOs consider social to be an exciting new PR or ad channel, another place to get news out, influence the influencers, and maybe go viral. However, the true power of social is far more transformational and, perhaps, more frightening. Social media represents a shift in marketing norms (what's acceptable and what's not) so that companies must learn new ways to engage. CMOs require technology to participate in the many-to-many social conversations, including social listening, socialytics (social analytics), and social dialog tools – both owned by the company and external platforms)

3. The Rise of Mobility

Smart devices explode the wealth of interaction capabilities available to marketers. Smart mobile devices are in one sense, another incremental, albeit important, 'screen' for communications or apps. Even at this level, smart devices are an important new content channel for many CMOs. However, smart devices offer much more promise that just content delivery. Sensors including those for proximity, light, vibration, temperature, and movement, deliver new kinds of data about consumers and offer opportunities to engage in innovation and game-changing ways. Mobilising marketing requires a large range of technologies. Only a few CMOs have begun true mobile initiatives.

4. Business Process Mash-up

As the brand steward and the default owner of the digital dialog, the CMO cannot avoid broader responsibility when the digital customer experience bursts traditional organisational and process boundaries. An online consumer is oblivious to which business function is responsible for his or her experience. Buyers couldn't care less that the sales rep forgot to check out the buyer's preference profile or that the annoying email that they just opted-out of was from customer service, not marketing. Especially important is the integration of marketing and sales. The sales process has become, at best, compressed, and in some cases completely dis-intermediated. CMOs must double-down on the alignment with sales in order to deliver the required quality of customer engagement. Technologies for business process mash-up include those for lead management and sales enablement.

Three Demand-side Transformational Forces

5. Analytics

Digital channels produce an abundance of data that can be mined for insight and optimisation. Analytics transforms marketing because it reveals critical information that was previously unavailable, but now changes everything. Analytics is also transformational because of the deep changes needed in the marketing mindset and skill-set. IDC divides analytics into three types:

  • Psychologically predictive analytics – evaluating signals that provide clues to customer behaviour, leading to an informed next step of engagement or next-best-offer.

  • Operational analytics – making the best choices in the face of constraints (money, talent, time, etc.) this operations research supports process efficiency and improvement.

  • Financial analytics – planning and monitoring of marketing activities and initiatives, determining the portfolio of investments across marketing, and related processes from a cost and profitability perspective.

6. Multi-channel orchestration

In the last decade, digital technology has added dozens of new engagement channels and 'screens' to the marketing arsenal and there is no slow-down in sight. The goal of multi-channel integration is to provide seamless, coherent, customer experience regardless of where the customer is. Combined with analytics, multi-channel integration offers the promise of recreating the intimacy of the corner-store. But while value accelerates as new channels are added, so does management complexity. Significant organisation changes and technology support is required for content management, data management, and campaign management across the myriad of channels.

7. Optimising Operations Many marketing leaders believe that in the future Return-on-Investment (ROI) will be the primary metric on which CMOs will be evaluated. While some CMOs in some industries have been able to measure the value of discrete programs, marketing ROI has been mostly immeasurable. CMO seek technology that will help them become accountable and transparent. In addition, CMOs can only attempt so much transformation before the lack of infrastructure, lack of skills, and process complexity push operational requirements into the urgent category.

Marketing will undergo the same operational transformation that earlier transformed other company functions such as finance, manufacturing, and customer service. Technology is needed to master a wide range of marketing processes. They range from basic budgeting, planning, and resource management, through the management of specific program elements such as pricing, events, creative, couponing, partner programs, and much more.

Saturday, June 28, 2014

In Pictures: Beyond Google Glass, wearable tech that will revolutionize business

Beyond Google Glass: The wearable tech that will revolutionize business Think wearable technology is only about porn on your glasses, silly watches, and digital pedometers for runners? Think again. Companies like SAP, Epson, IBM, Plantronics, and even Walt Disney, are bringing wearable technology to business.

In the not-too-distant future, mechanics will see the schematics of heavy equipment they need to repair on a heads-up display, and flexible semiconductors will be implemented within the bodies of patients to broadcast data to their doctors. Office workers will connect directly with customer data via a telephone-like head set, and visitors to Disneyland will wear wristbands that double as admission tickets, hotels keys, and payment cards.

Following are real-world examples of wearable tech geared toward transforming business.

In Pictures: The earliest days of your favourite social networks

In 1844, Samuel Morse sent the phrase "What hath God wrought!" down the Baltimore-Washington telegraph line, inaugurating the age of person-to-person electronic communications. In the last decade or so, the social aspects of the Internet have really flourished. Where are the equivalents of Morse's famous Biblical quote in our modern social media services? We hunted down some of the earliest communications and profiles across a variety of famous social sites.

In Pictures: 15 most powerful Big Data companies

The world of big data vendors is divided into two camps. There are the pure-play Big Data startups who are bringing innovation and 

buzz to the marketplace. And then there are the established database/data warehouse vendors who are moving into the world of Big Data from a position of strength, both in terms of an installed base and a proven product line. Here's a list of the 15 Big Data companies to watch, divided into 10 that you're already familiar with, plus 5 newcomers.

In Pictures: Samsung’s new Galaxy gadgets

Everything but the kitchen sink Samsung made waves with the announcement of several new gadgets at the Unpacked event in Berlin on Wednesday. Along with new models of its Galaxy Note phablet and Note 10.1 tablet, the company showed off the first mass-market smartwatch, the Galaxy Gear. Here's a quick look at the new lineup.

In pictures: Cadbury's Joy Generator matches consumers through social to Dairy Milk flavours

Cadbury launched its Joy Generator vendor machine in Sydney to mark the launch of a new social media-enabled app which allows consumers to discover what Dairy Milk flavour they are best matched with using their Facebook personality and interests.
In pictures: Cadbury's Joy Generator matches consumers through social to Dairy Milk flavours

Friday, June 27, 2014

Move store blends fashion with technology

A new resident of Westfield's Bondi Junction store opens its doors this Saturday: The Move store, which aims to sell bring the worlds of fashion and technology together.

The Dick Smith-backed concept store includes a section of tech accessories that will chosen by a series of celebrity 'editors'. The first of the "leading figures in fashion and design" to take part is 4th and Bleeker blogger, Alexandra Spencer.

"It is an exciting brand that targets customers who are interested in wearable technology – a trend we've witnessed overseas where the demand is growing," Nick Abboud, CEO of Dick Smith and Move, said in a statement.

"Move is at the beginning of its evolution and we plan to make the brand available to more customers in equally unique stores in new locations soon".

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In addition to choosing from curated selections of wearable tech, including designs from Romance Was Born, Move customers will be able to customise items using an "inspiration scrapbooking table".HSTNN-DB65 HSTNN-IB0V HP Compaq nc2400 nc2410 2510p battery

In pictures: Data Strategy Symposium 2013

More than 160 attendees headed to the Hunter Valley for the inaugural Data Strategy Symposium in November. Here, we present some of the pictorial highlights of the three-day event.

Guests at the Cypress Lakes Resort in the Hunter Valley for the Data Strategy Symposium