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I’m a bit surprised that this is just beginning to be a trend… but nevertheless…

A recent survey of business leaders, conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit and commissioned by Accenture, revealed what those IT and business leaders are discussing in their closed-door budget meetings. The results hint at one thing when it comes to IT: strategy.

via BlueLock - IT to go “strategic” in 2010.

In fact, when discussing technology and the role of IT in an organization, strategic partnerships with the other functional areas should be a primary goal, as technology can directly influence behavior in the organization and more importantly revenue streams.

For example, technical oversight via systems processes can ensure proper and legal behaviors of the staff, integration between business models can influence collaboration and timeliness, and an IS&T strategy can ensure that the functional roles and tactical behaviors of employees are focused on clear value added jobs and responsibilities.

IS&T can also affect customer behavior and employee attitudes towards customers when they have a clear view into each interaction between the firm and those respective customers through proper CRM implementation and how the customer has responded through business intelligence and analytics.

Proper implementation and strategy of information technology and systems is one of the primary strategic goals that any global Fortune 100/500  firm can implement in order to ensure sustained competitive advantage, even if they are focused in other areas for profit.

One reason why this may not have been a trend until recently, is I that it can be incredibly difficult to identify the causal relationship of IT to behavior in an organization and most if not all will be anecdotal. That can cause problems for many ‘quants’ out there.

I would guess — while I believe these systems can and do impact tangible returns like an increase in revenue and a decrease in expenses — there is really no way that you can eliminate (at least in a real business climate) the variables that affect behavior.  But with enough anecdotal evidence, you can piece together a proper idea of the effects of information technology on said business climate.

If we look at a case in which an industry that is primarily driven by other means, such as the Banking sector, one can’t imagine an environment where technology wasn’t a strategic asset. Banks certainly can’t focus on their trading and asset management without a proper IT strategy, and it needs to go to the heart of the organization so that it influences individual behaviors and roles. Otherwise, focusing on any other opportunity or strength is in vain, and the firm is destined to fail regardless. This can be related to any number of industries including the energy sector.

And when they fail at IS&T it can be disastrous for the firm, and should be noted when determining any future strategy.

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The Life Cycle of a Business

by Erik on July 25, 2009

in Interesting, Philosophy

What is a business - anyway?  As usual, Wikipedia offers a pretty good definition:  “In economics, business is the social science of managing people to organize and maintain collective productivity toward accomplishing particular creative and productive goals, usually to generate profit.”  Not surprisingly, as is the case for any highly complex system or entity, this is just one of multiple definitions.

In quantum mechanics we learn that questions like “what is an electron?” are meaningless unless one also asks “what is your purpose in asking this question?”

An electron is sometimes best thought of as a particle, and sometimes best thought of as a wave depending on what models or measurements one is after. Similarly, one cannot separate asking what a business is from how one wants to use the answer. But I am actually most satisfied with the people-centric definition Wikipedia gives, because I truly believe it is the most important one.

[via Irving Wladawsky-Berger]

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Shoppers expect the tags on Wal-Mart items to have rock-bottom prices. In the future they may also have information about the product’s carbon footprint, the gallons of water used to create it, and the air pollution left in its wake. [via NYTimes]

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It’s not just family and friends that Americans are turning to for advice and support to cope with the prolonged recession; many have found a counselor in the Internet.

More than two-thirds of American adults — or 88 percent of U.S. Internet users — went online for help with recession-induced personal economic issues and to gather information on national economic problems, a study released on Wednesday said. [via Reuters]

File this one under: “not surprising in the least.”

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Google Chrome OS: Be A Part of the Cloud

11 July 2009 Cloud Computing

Cloud computing could become mainstream with Google’s annoucement this week to release the Chrome operating system for NetBook PCs.
I believe the cloud is the platform of the future, and Google is uniquely poised with their already popular office suite, Google Docs, and their other Google Apps which do just about everything owners of netbooks would be […]

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Long-Distance Drops As Wireless Gains

1 July 2009 Interesting

NPR has an interesting article on the switch from land-line telephone companies to wireless. This reminds me of the AP piece that talked about how cell-only households now outnumber traditional phone households.That statistic points to problem in our current method of landline national polling for elections, which was brought to everyone’s attention in 2008. As […]

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Restaurants finding Twitter a cheap, effective marketing tool

29 June 2009 Interesting

I was having a discussion the other day with one of my employees about the benefit of twitter and how it can be utilized in a business setting as a value-adding marketing tool. He was not so convinced. He could only see twitter as a way to tell people what you were doing at any […]

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IBM and the Web 2.0 World

24 June 2009 Censorship

Serendipitously, I just uncovered a post relating to IBM and social media use guidelines, which I wrote about yesterday with regard to the Associated Press’ new policy. IBM’s document is a “public submission to the Department of Homeland Security as part of their Privacy Workshops they hosted in Washington D.C. earlier this week.”

photo credit: Tech […]

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IBM’s Green Sigma Adds Coalition of Heavyweights

24 June 2009 Alternative Energy

photo credit: photomequickbooth
IBM has brought Cisco Systems and a host of the world’s biggest energy services companies into partnership with its flagship energy efficiency and carbon reduction consulting service, Greentech Media reports.
Last year, IBM launched a consulting practice, called “Green Sigma,” based on taking sensor data and analysis software and applying them toward reducing an […]

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Gadget Lab – Hardware That Rocks Your World | Wired.com

23 June 2009 Green Tech

photo credit: Argonne National Laboratory
Wired Gadget Lab reports of another Green innovation IBM is in the process of developing:
Massive supercomputers that devour electricity to keep them humming are not exactly the poster children for green technology. But IBM hopes to change that with its plans to build a supercomputer that will use water to keep […]

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