More Related Content More from SAP Technology (20) Simplify IT E-zine -- Issue 22. ©2015SAPSEoranSAPaffiliatecompany.Allrightsreserved.
Simplify.IT
Table of Contents
4 Disrupt or Be Disrupted
6 How to Transform
Digital Innovation into
Business Value
8 CIOs: Integrators and Innovators
in an Evolving Digital World
10 The Digital Transformation:
Are You Ready – and Able?
12 Striking Gold in the Mobile
Mountain
14 The Chief Data Officer:
More Than a Data Minder
16 Attract Top Talent with
HR-IT Collaboration
18 Why Cloud-Based Analytics
Solutions Are Essential for
Tomorrow’s Business
3. 3
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In this issue, Pierre Leroux, director of product marketing,
analytics solutions at SAP discusses how predictive analytics is
redefining marketing strategies, and how your company can take
advantage of it to get ahead of the game.
Sven Denecken, global vice president of co-innovation for SAP®
S/4HANA at SAP, explains how the digital revolution is affecting
business and the value it might unlock for your company.
Ingrid-Helen Arnold, member of the SAP Global Managing Board
and chief information officer and chief process officer for SAP SE,
shares insight on how CIOs can work as collaborators within
their companies to create sustainable businesses. CIOs also need
to take the lead on digital transformation for the future, and
Dinesh Sharma, vice president of marketing and digital economy
at SAP, wants to know if you’re ready. The future is looking more
and more mobile and Rick Costanzo, executive vice president
and general manager for telco industry and global mobility
solutions at SAP SE, shares ways that your company can gain
value with mobile solutions. Tina Tang, director of product
marketing and EIM solutions at SAP, discusses what might be
one of the most important C-level positions at your company –
the CDO, or chief data officer. How does your company attract
and keep new employees? Manik Narayan Saha, chief informa
tion officer for Asia Pacific and Japan at SAP, believes the key to
succeeding at recruitment could be collaboration between HR
and IT. And finally, Neil McGovern, senior director of marketing at
SAP, talks about the barriers that are keeping some companies
from adopting cloud solutions, and how they can be overcome to
move toward the cloud-based future.
Welcome to the latest issue Simplify.IT
4. 4
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Simplify.IT
CMOs are now turning to new technolo
gies to sharpen their marketing focus and
optimize their spend. Predictive analytics
is one of these technologies. It’s not new,
but a growing number of CMOs and CIOs
see predictive analytics as a way of deliv-
ering the tailored experience consumers
and younger generations demand.
So what is predictive analytics? Predictive
analytics is a blend of mathematics and
technology learning from experience
(that is, the data companies are already
collecting) to predict a future behavior
or outcome within an acceptable level
of reliability.
Companies are creating and collecting
data at an accelerated rate, and more and
more they are connecting data sources
together. Data that could only be inte-
grated by an IT-sanctioned team a few
years ago can now be accessed and
combined in minutes using self-service
tools. With a complete digital picture of
customers and by using predictive ana-
lytics, CMOs are in a position to redefine
several key marketing activities and put
their companies in the lead.
Let’s explore three of the most popular
cases where predictive analytics can play
a substantial role in redefining marketing
activities.
INCREASE CROSS-SELL AND UP-SELL
Predictive analytics is used in campaign
optimization to identify the best potential
customers. Instead of sending an offer to
everyone, you let predictive models ana-
lyze the customer data you’ve collected
in order to determine the best target cus-
tomers. This data could include demo
graphics (age, gender, and zip code) and
behaviors (purchases, Web site clicks,
spending for each of the past 12 months).
In the case of cross-selling and up-selling,
predictive analytics allows you to focus
on a small group of customers that rep-
resent the large majority of your poten-
tial buyers for a specific offer. Consider
the example chart below. You can focus
your campaign on a target of 200,000
prospects or customers, which includes
the large majority (40,000) of your buy-
ers for a specific offer. You can also opti-
mize your spend by spending a fraction
of the budget to reach a smaller group
(in the example, only 20%) instead of
saturating your entire customer base.
Predictive analytics allows you to avoid
overreaching. Digital marketers know
that overreaching and flooding customers
with offers may lead to the customers
rescinding the consent to be reached or
worse – customers seeking alternatives
from competitors.
REDUCE CUSTOMER CHURN
Many business leaders and marketers
live and die by the churn rate. Churn rate
is a measure of the number of individuals
leaving your service or product. In any
industry where you have customers sub-
scribing to a digital service (like LinkedIn
Premium) or a traditional product pack-
aged as a service (like Dollar Shave Club),
Disrupt or Be Disrupted
Get More Value from Your Data and Deliver
Tailored Customer Experiences
Pierre Leroux
Director of Product Marketing,
Analytics Solutions, SAP
5. ©2015SAPSEoranSAPaffiliatecompany.Allrightsreserved.
5
churn rate is a key performance metric.
From an annual churn rate, you can derive
the customer lifetime value (CLV).
For example, if the churn rate is 20%, it
implies that customers, on average, will
be with you for five years. A customer
consuming US$1,000 of your services
per year would be worth roughly
US$5,000.
Predictive analytics is used to create
models that anticipate if a specific cus-
tomer is at risk of churning and counter
quickly with the appropriate retention
programs and offers. Predictive models
take into consideration a variety of data –
demographics, purchase history, prod-
ucts and services consumed, and cus-
tomer service interactions – and score
each customer’s likelihood of leaving or
canceling service. This allows you to
understand why customers leave – what
the triggers are and their relative impor-
tance. You can also anticipate customers
who are likely to leave and act quickly to
keep them during interactions. Plus, you
can focus retention programs on cus-
tomers more likely to respond positively
to retention activity.
GENERATE TAILORED PRODUCT
RECOMMENDATION
Any business-to-consumer company
needs to understand product associations
for better campaigns, ad placements,
and inventory planning. Product recom-
mendation can be a significant sales
driver. According to Forrester Research,
product recommendations are respon
sible for an average of 10%–30% of
online retailers’ sales. Predictive analytics
is used to analyze customer behaviors
like transactions, page views, and clicks
by comparing them against the same
data from other customers. This results
in a product recommendation or a set
of recommendations for each customer
to provide personalized offers or
campaigns.
Predictive analytics allows you to increase
basket size with real-time, personalized
product recommendations that have a
higher probability of generating sales. It
also simplifies the customer experience,
especially when customers search for
categories or products. Plus you can
understand shopping trends and the
importance of specific products and
brands in the customers’ purchasing
decisions.
INNOVATION THROUGH
COLLABORATION
Predictive analytics provides an excellent
opportunity for CMOs and CIOs to share
a common IT vision. Technologies like
predictive analytics can be used to extract
high value from existing data assets and
ultimately shape the tailored experience
customers are now demanding. Whether
applied to cross-selling, reducing churn,
recommending products, or other mar-
keting initiatives, predictive analytics has
the power to get your company ahead of
the game.
DISCOVER AND FOLLOW
Learn more here
Explore some success
stories
You can follow Pierre
on Twitter @pileroux
6. 6
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Simplify.IT
Today’s digital revolution is
rocking the rafters of busi
nesses around the world. Just
how radical are the changes?
According to IT researcher
and author Andrew McAffee,
“Digital technologies are
doing for human brainpower
what the steam engine and
related technologies did for
human muscle power during
the Industrial Revolution.”
In other words, the repercussions are
nothing short of jaw-dropping.
No market sector is immune to the
upheaval as the digital economy takes
hold. And the pace of digital innovation
shows no signs of slowing down as each
new breakthrough multiplies the poten-
tial for more.
There’s no time to hit the snooze button.
The digital revolution is moving at break-
neck speed as it reinvents how we do
business. And while it brings disruption,
it also promises business transformation
that can unlock the value of the digital
economy. Who’s in?
The answer is quite a wake-up call.
Based on a recent survey by Altimeter
Group, 88% of companies believe they
are already reinventing their businesses
through digital transformation. Yet 75%
admitted major strategy gaps, such as
leaving the role of the customer out of
their digital transformation strategy.
Uh-oh. Big oops.
NO ESCAPING THE INEVITABLE
It’s time to take digital transformation
seriously. If companies don’t disrupt
themselves, they’ll be disrupted by
entirely new competition.
The signs are all around us. If you want
to stay connected to your market and
your customers, digital transformation
is a “must-have” that’s driven by four
inescapable trends.
The empowered customer
Whether Generation Z consumers or multi
national conglomerates, each customer
now demands to be treated as a unique
“segment of one.”You have no choice but
to meet that expectation. Your competi-
tion is just one tap away. To succeed, you
must deliver real-time interactions and
personalized products to each customer,
and do so efficiently at scale.
Competitive and regulatory pressures
Staying ahead of your competition while
complying with rigorous regulations
takes more than sheer energy; it requires
the power of digital innovation. Today’s
competitive landscape demands an
arsenal of digital-driven, low-touch pro-
cesses that make it easy for stakeholders
to make intelligent decisions based on
real-time customer demand and market
conditions. Meanwhile, burgeoning digital
data calls for innovative solutions that
support compliance across the informa-
tion management lifecycle.
Globalization
Being a true player today means going
global. Expanding into new markets
can no longer be done effectively with
infrastructure-heavy international build-
outs. Digital innovations offer far more
cost-effective alternatives – supporting
a pay-as-you-go strategy with scalability
that lets you adjust rapidly to meet
market conditions.
Technological progress
The tide of innovations is unrelenting.
The trick lies in sorting winning inventions
from dead-end novelties – and quickly
adopting innovations that deliver the
greatest value.
How to Transform
Digital Innovation into
Business Value
Sven Denecken
Global Vice President of Co-Innovation
for SAP S/4HANA, SAP
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7
TRANSFORM AT THE CORE
How can you tackle the complexities of
digital transformation and drive innova-
tion in your business? The answer is
simple: start at the core.
To lead in the digital economy, your
company needs a digital core that lets
you achieve the following goals:
•• Deliver real-time insight into all the
information that moves in and out of
your company
•• Reinvent business processes not just
every generation, but every day if
necessary
•• Provide a digital experience to custom-
ers, partners, stakeholders, and
employees
A business core that’s ready for the dis-
ruptions of today’s digital revolution has
three key characteristics:
Efficiency – A digital core automates
processes and delivers insights across
an intelligent business network. Consider
how 3D printing is reinventing the concept
of inventory. Similarly, the digital core
can move manufacturing much closer to
the time and place of purchase.
Effectiveness – The digital core converts
signals in business data into action.
That can mean anything from real-time
demand forecasting that sends new pro-
duction orders automatically, to intelli-
gent financing that takes full advantage
of global capital markets.
Visibility – A digital core enhances
everyone’s understanding of the entire
business and elevates their view of the
organization. This can empower sales
to close higher-margin deals and guide
R&D to focus on projects with the
greatest market potential.
IT’S GAME TIME
Agility is key in the lightning-fast digital
economy. This means taking advantage
of digital opportunities at every turn. A
flexible, scalable digital core is the surest
way to adapt to this reality.
If you’re looking to create greater busi-
ness value through digital transforma-
tion, consider starting at the core with
SAP S/4HANA. It’s our next-generation
business suite designed to help you
Run Simple in the digital world.As your
digital core, it can connect people,
devices, information, and business
networks in real time to deliver new
value in the digital economy.
The time to act is now. Even competing
on the edges of the digital economy will
no longer be an option for those whose
processes are too inflexible to adapt.
But for those who embark on the digital
transformation journey, opportunities
abound.
FOLLOW
You can follow Sven on
Twitter @sdenecken
8. 8
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Simplify.IT
CIOs:
Integrators and Innovators
in an Evolving Digital World
Thanks to the cloud and the digital econ-
omy, today’s CIOs have strong strategic
leadership roles in their organizations,
and technology topics are becoming
mainstream in any boardroom discus-
sion. IT is shifting from being a support
function to a core component of business
strategy, with three key aspects driving
this change:
•• Cloud solutions are comparatively
easy and fast to deploy, allowing busi-
nesses to spend less time and fewer
resources on implementation and
more on improving business results.
•• Cloud solutions remove complexity
around maintenance and updates
through vendor solutions that are
specialized in a particular area, allow-
ing companies to focus on their core
business.
•• The digital economy means business
is evolving at a pace and speed never
before imagined.
With these advances in technology,
CIOs can now focus on preparing their
businesses for an ever-changing digital
future while delivering rock-solid results
today. No longer merely implementation
managers, these CIOs are advising their
organizations on how to use technology
to unlock innovation, enable new types
of engagement, and spark disruptive
business models.
COLLABORATION AND THE CIO
When I speak with other CIOs, I share
with them that I believe we need to be
in close collaboration with the business
leaders in our organization as we drive
our companies’ IT strategies. Only by
collaborating can we ensure that our IT
platforms will provide the high perfor-
mance, secure transactions, and reliable
connectivity needed for sustained
business success – both today and in
the future.
The role of the CIO already requires us to
be both the integrator and the innovator
as we bring together all key aspects of
the business in a more effective and
efficient way than before. And in today’s
digital economy, that means enabling
collaboration not only within our own
enterprises but also with our partners,
suppliers, external agents, and
customers.
According a report from McKinsey &
Company, more than 60% of CEOs
expect 15% to 50% of their earnings
growth in the next five years to come
from technology-enabled business
innovations. Similarly, IDC says that
57% of CIOs expect to be defined in
terms of delivering business innovation
to increase revenue, margins, and new
products. The question then is, how
can we innovate in a way that best
serves the business?
DRIVING INNOVATION THROUGH
BUSINESS NETWORKS
One answer to the question lies in busi-
ness networks. By connecting business
networks with a company’s back-end
systems on one side and its partners on
the other, CIOs can open up tremendous
opportunities to innovate key business
processes and drive efficiency. Not only
do business networks make connecting
and collaborating with a global network
of partners easier than ever, they also
enable new processes that help compa-
nies drive innovation across their
operations.
These networks can automate purchase
orders and invoices and help create
self-service supplier catalogs that are
executed electronically. Processes like
dynamic discounting can allow compa-
nies to secure discounts that can be
reinvested in research, development,
and funding to expand the business.
Ingrid-Helen Arnold
Member of the SAP Global Managing
Board, Chief Information Officer, and
Chief Process Officer, SAP SE
9. 9
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Collaborative supply chain solutions can
also increase inventory and forecasting
visibility, and they instantly generate
audit trails that ensure tax, legal, and
security compliance.
Ardent Partners predicts that adoption
of business networks is expected to
grow by 40% over the next two years.
This is no surprise given that networked
enterprises, according to this McKinsey
report, are 50% more likely than their
peers to have higher sales and profit
margins, gain market share, and be
market leaders.
If CIOs want to build a modern IT plat-
form, business networks are a critical
consideration.
ADOPTING OUR OWN BUSINESS
NETWORK
Within SAP, we knew that to continue
providing high-quality service and miti
gating risk across our supply chain, it was
important to have a simpler and more
standardized source-to-settle process.
That’s why we decided to adopt a leading
business network from Ariba, now an SAP
company. The Ariba® Network has helped
us increase invoice automation, reduce
paper, and achieve rapid, high-quality
transparent sourcing through knowledge
sharing. Using the Ariba Network we have
also improved the usability of sourcing
tools for buyers and suppliers and imple-
mented self-service requisitioning for
employees. The network also helps us
ensure greater supplier compliance and
minimized supplier risk.
THE KEY TO SUCCESS
Effective collaboration was absolutely
key to this successful transformation.
From the beginning, we worked closely
with our chief procurement officer, chief
financial officer, product teams, and sup-
pliers to identify needs, set expectations,
and align our approach.
Our source-to-pay organization achieved
significant benefits in record time by
understanding our technology options
and advising our purchasing and finance
business units on the most effective
rollout. And the value we’re getting from
using a business network is growing all
the time as more of our suppliers get
onboarded, and we manage more of our
resources through it.
We now have a platform that is secure,
reliable, and high performing, and it has
increased the productivity of the pro-
curement team by 20% and lowered
procurement costs by 42%. This effort
is a great example of our corporate
mantra, Run Simple, in action.
SEE AND FOLLOW
See how to build a
modern IT platform
with the Ariba Network
Read more about the
strategic role of the
CIO
Learn more about the
Ariba Network
You can follow Ariba on
Twitter @ariba
You can follow Helen on
Twitter @Arnold_IH
10. 10
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Dinesh Sharma
Vice President of Marketing,
Digital Economy, SAP
Simplify.IT
The Digital Transformation:
Are You Ready – and Able?
The digital economy is being called the
next economic revolution, as it has the
potential to drive $90 trillion in gross
world product by 2020 according a
report from Bain & Company. As with
any evolutionary surge like this, there
is a double-edged sword, where there
are opportunities and, of course,
challenges.
This is especially true for CIOs and IT
departments, as they are being called
into higher levels of service, and for a
digital transformation to succeed, they
must become the transformative leaders.
As a CIO from Hewlett-Packard says,
“It’s a very cool time to be a CIO. We’ve
moved from the back office to the front
lines.”
CIOS AND IT BACK IN CHARGE
This is a bit of switch from past trends,
where business units often had their own
IT budgets and could go off and acquire a
software-as-a-solution (SaaS) application
to run a departmental process. But this
no longer will work in the digital economy.
Business departments now expect IT to
lead the way in fully digitizing their enter-
prises. In fact, according Crisp Research,
only 12% of respondents in a recent sur-
vey consider their business departments
to be a driving force in digital transfor-
mation, while 69% think IT should lead
the charge.
These are prime conditions for allowing
CIOs and IT to take over more important
strategic and operative roles. In fact,
two-thirds of respondents in the Crisp
study think of IT as innovators, strategists,
and implementers.
It’s time for IT to step up and build a
strong digital core that unifies and inter-
connects organizations internally and
externally. The question is: Are CIOs
ready to lead this charge? Can they
deliver on the value that the digital econ-
omy promises? For many, maybe soon,
and for others . . . well, not quite yet.
READY, BUT NOT QUITE YET ABLE?
While this might be an exciting time for
companies to capitalize on the digital
economy, a digital transformation may
not be an easy one. A 2015 report from
the Economist Intelligence Unit says that
60% of senior-level executives believe
that failing to adapt to hyperconnectivity
– the interconnections between people,
organizations, and objects – is the big-
gest challenge they face. Inertia and
complacency are driving these execu-
tives to recognize that there is a deep
need for fundamental organizational
change.
When top executives were asked to rank
their digital maturity against potential
digitization opportunities in a study by
strategy consultancy Roland Berger, there
were significant gaps between these two
qualifiers. In fact, depending on the indus-
try segment, there was a 12% to 28% gap
between maturity and opportunity. The
largest gap (28%) was in energy systems,
with a 36% ranking of digital maturity
and a 64% ranking of opportunities.
The above report also noted that the
digital transformation could have an
especially strong or even disruptive
impact on industries such as automobile
and logistics. But to take advantage of
what the report says is potentially a
$400 billion opportunity by 2025 for
these industries, companies would need
to expand their information and commu-
nications technology (ICT) by 17% on
average. While this kind of investment
may seem minimal, it can be monumen-
tal and quite limiting in companies that
still have constrained IT budgets.
11. 11
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Readiness is one thing, but ability is
clearly another, which is highlighted by
Crisp Research. Even though 93% of
respondents in the Crisp study consider
themselves well prepared for the coming
digital era, only 39% think of themselves
as avant-garde, or as this study calls
them, profiteers or innovators. Another
revealing fact is that only 42% of the
respondents have been involved in
successful digital projects.
Without a doubt, many CIOs and their IT
departments have some catching up to
do across the board.
WHERE TO START?
GET A NEXT-GENERATION
IT PLATFORM
To fully take advantage of the opportuni-
ties of the digital economy, companies
will need a next-generation IT platform
upon which they can build a digital core.
This platform will need modern tech
nology, such as the SAP HANA® Cloud
Platform and the SAP S/4HANA suite.
Together, this technology provides a
business foundation that is essential for
building an end-to-end digital business.
It can help organizations combine the
opportunities of the digital economy with
the process simplification and capabilities
necessary to achieve true, sustainable
digital transformation at a time where
there are billions of connected devices.
With the SAP S/4HANA suite, companies
get instant insight coupled with contex-
tual information and personalized expe
riences. And with scalable, real-time,
predictive, and simulation capabilities,
they can unlock the power of data to
become a business that is primed for
success in the digital economy.
It’s technology like this that will make
transformation possible.
Clearly, there are abundant opportunities
for companies around the globe that are
willing to embrace digital transformation.
And it’s equally apparent that wise
investments in the digital core will provide
a concrete foundation to best capture
these opportunities.
How can a digital core help you succeed
in the digital economy? Check out this
video and find out.
SEE AND FOLLOW
See how a digital core
can help you succeed
in the digital economy
You can follow Dinesh
on Twitter @sharmad
12. 12
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Even though mobile devices – our
constant companions – have penetrated
nearly every aspect of daily life, the mobile
mountain keeps on rising.While worldwide
mobile subscriptions (both smartphones
and traditional cellular connections) have
surpassed 7 billion, according to the
International Telecommunication Union,
the 2015 Ericsson Mobility Report
predicts big changes over the next five
years. Besides a doubling of smartphone
subscriptions to 6.1 billion, this report
projects a staggering 26 billion connected
devices – including cars, utility meters,
and other machines – as the Internet of
Things (IoT) begins to take hold.
THE HEART OF THE DIGITAL
ECONOMY
This extreme connectivity has resulted in
a deluge of data. In fact, some estimate
that 90% of the world’s data has been
produced just over the past few years.
It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that
much of that information comes from
smartphones, which track the interests,
whereabouts, and online interactions of
users.
Affordable storage, processing, and trans
mission costs have allowed businesses
to stockpile huge amounts of information,
but figuring out what to do with that
data is another story. The research firm
IDC describes 90% of this data as “dark,”
meaning it’s information businesses are
not using. Now imagine what will happen
once the IoT brings more traditionally
unconnected machines and appliances
online. The changes could make what
seems like a tsunami of data today look
like just a ripple in a few years.
Companies need to adapt to take full
advantage of the unique opportunities
ahead. At SAP, we consider mobile the
heart of the new digital economy.We help
companies reimagine their mobile busi-
nesses by delivering industry-specific
and context-aware mobile applications,
and providing an open and flexible mobile
platform. Not only do we enable secure,
on-the-go access, but we also embed
mobile services into our SAP HANA Cloud
Platform. That gives our customers a
streamlined, intuitive, comprehensive
product. When all of these technologies
work together – whether mobile, analytics,
core database, or the IoT – it is incredibly
easy for our customers to innovate.
THE TRANSFORMATIVE POWER
OF MOBILE
Mobile enables deep personalization.
Companies can push user-specific offers
if they know their customers’ histories
and can tie that information to real-time
data, such as when customers enter
specific stores. Instead of targeting a
group such as working moms or millen-
nials, businesses can now reach a market
of one. Hallmark, for example, launched
a new specialty retail concept called
HMK using SAP Mobile Platform. This
technology allows the card company to
gain real-time visibility into inventory
and service activities as customers
create unique, personalized gifts. SAP is
also developing the Barcelona for You
Tourist Network, which is designed to
deliver customized recommendations,
location-aware special offers, and
sightseeing information (wait times at
attractions, for instance). The network
uses SAP City Connect, a new solution
designed to simplify the way people
experience cities.
How transformative is mobile technology?
Utilities now use sensors and predictive
analytics to monitor expensive enterprise
assets in remote areas, such as wind
turbines in oceans. These capabilities
provide a warning function, allowing
utilities to dispatch the right technicians
to fix a machine before it actually fails.
Mobile technology also can improve effi-
ciency and save money. Hydro Tasmania
used the SAP Work Manager mobile app
to enable a mobile workforce, eliminating
paperwork and improving decision
making throughout the organization.
Mobile technology can even provide new
revenue sources. For instance, an SAP
client, a tire company, is experimenting
with putting real-time sensors in tires to
monitor wear and tear. The sensors
could help the company shift from its
traditional low-margin products-oriented
economic model to a more lucrative
service-oriented one.
With the right tools, businesses can strike
gold in the mountain of mobile data now
available. The hugely valuable insights
to be mined in this data can help them
optimize their operations, discover
new revenue streams, and delight their
customers with superior experiences.
Striking Gold in the Mobile Mountain
Simplify.IT
DISCOVER AND FOLLOW
Learn more about
mobile solutions from
SAP and how we can
help your business
succeed on its enter-
prise mobility journey.
See how running
simple has provided
organizations with a
competitive advantage
You can follow Rick on
Twitter @rickcostanzo
14. 14
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Simplify.IT
The Chief Data Officer:
More Than a Data Minder
Effective data stewardship is
undoubtedly a key aspect of
the chief data officer (CDO)
role. But these top executives
are more than just data
minders. Increasingly, they
are seen as innovative,
achievement-oriented leaders.
Their task: to convert one of
today’s most precious com-
modities into new sources
of revenue and growth.
Data is the lifeblood of the modern
enterprise. In a healthy organization,
it flows freely and enriches all of the
functions, processes, organs, and limbs
of a business. Indeed, data has become
so essential that the CDO is emerging
as one of the most important executives
in the new C-level suite.
DATA AS AN ASSET
In every kind of organization – large or
small, from public sector to retail, data is
now regarded as an asset. And because
any asset needs more than reactive
management of day-to-day issues to
deliver maximum value, businesses are
recognizing the need for proactive and
visionary data leadership.
To provide this, the CDO position was
first introduced as a key strategic role in
the highly regulated government and
finance sectors. The last couple of years
have also seen CDOs appointed across
multiple other industries.
The CDO role is still not widespread –
there were only 250 people with this job
title at the end of 2014, according to
David Mathison, the founder and CEO
of a professional association known as
the Chief Digital Officer Club. However,
the chief data officer position has been
identified as one of the top emerging
executive posts.
MORE THAN DATA MANAGEMENT
While chief information officers (CIOs)
own an organization’s IT systems, CDOs
oversee all of the data that flows through
those systems. Data policies, procedures,
and governance are normally part of their
remit. In addition, CDOs are increasingly
spearheading data monetization and
value creation efforts.
Building a strong data foundation is just
the beginning of a CDO’s responsibilities.
By ensuring the free flow of sophisticated
data and healthy analysis behind the
scenes, the CDO can help the rest of the
business simplify processes.
A top-notch CDO is one who has a deep
understanding of how data yields growth,
and how new data flows can lead directly
to new sources of revenue and cost con-
trol. Well-thought-out data strategies can
make complex transactions look routine
and unlock hidden insights that identify
a company’s best customers and its
least valuable suppliers.
MAXIMIZING POTENTIAL RETURNS
As CDOs are hired in industries beyond
finance and government, we see their
potential to protect and enhance return
on large investments. For example, a
first-class CDO is essential to successful
mergers and acquisitions.
Too many of these projects suffer delays
and diminished returns because the
newly combined organizations simply do
not speak the same language. Parallel
systems limp along for months or even
years.
Tina Tang
Director, Product Marketing,
EIM Solutions, SAP
15. 15
©2015SAPSEoranSAPaffiliatecompany.Allrightsreserved.
CDOs can change that, because they are
masters of rationalizing and translating
data. They can accelerate the timeline of
a postmerger transition on every dimen-
sion, from delivering a comprehensive
view of joint customers to ensuring that
sales teams are properly compensated.
WORKING WITH THE CIO
In the early days of enterprise computing
as a discipline, data leadership was typi-
cally associated with the CIO. Without
question, CIOs have been essential to
creating, implementing, and maintaining
the automation that has helped business
realize massive economies of scale.
Today, however, data is such a rich disci-
pline that understanding and leveraging
it requires the specialization and focus
that a CDO offers. At the same time, the
demands on a CIO’s time have expanded
exponentially, due to the rapid pace of
digital transformation.
CDOs bring with them an intimate under-
standing of how data impacts the busi-
ness. This means they can help the CIO
to choose the most appropriate and tar-
geted solutions to support the sheer vol-
ume and variety of data that this digital
revolution is generating.
Because data has traditionally been part
of the IT fabric, the CIO/CDO relationship
can become contentious. There is no
one-size-fits-all approach to defining the
right mix of responsibilities and duties of
the two technology leaders. However,
whether the CIO and CDO are peers,
have a reporting relationship, or are man-
aged in completely separate depart-
ments, there is ample room for harmony
and joint endeavors.
TRANSFORMATION AND INNOVATION
Because most organizations are still
introducing the CDO into the hierarchy,
the CIO has a unique opportunity to take
a proactive role and lead the discussion
about the creation and definition of the
new role. One common approach is to
allow the CIO to focus on responsibilities
that emphasize risk management, excel-
lence in execution, and enterprise-wide
security and stability. The CDO, in turn,
can focus on transformation and innova-
tion, identifying new opportunities to
spin enterprise data into gold.
LET’S CONNECT
Connect with me on Twitter @etalors1 to
talk further about the bright future for
chief data officers.
FOLLOW
You can follow Tina on
Twitter @etalors1
16. 16
©2015SAPSEoranSAPaffiliatecompany.Allrightsreserved.
Simplify.IT
Attract Top Talent with
HR-IT Collaboration
Tech-savvy millennials expect to have
access to the same technology in their
professional lives that they enjoy in their
personal lives.To attract and retain today’s
top talent, companies must continually
push to adopt the latest technology that
will empower employees to do their jobs
more efficiently, while simultaneously
facilitating professional development and
identifying new career opportunities.
Otherwise they risk losing talent to the
competition.
To meet these demands, IT and HR leader
ship must forge a tighter collaborative
bond. Without that bond, companies
will be left scrambling for a competitive
advantage on the recruiting trail, particu
larly in ultracompetitive sectors like
software and technology.
At SAP, our approach to the modern
workforce is to embrace their way of
working, rather than resist it. To hire the
best team, IT and HR work in alignment
to identify and implement the best tools.
We believe that people and technology
are the strategic pillars for any modern
company.
We strive for employee excellence at SAP
and make significant investments in five
areas along the employee lifecycle that
signal our commitment to exceeding the
expectations of the modern workforce.
SIMPLIFICATION
On one hand, employees want to use
increasingly advanced tools; on the
other, they want increasingly simpler
interfaces that reduce the steps required
to make decisions and complete tasks.
At SAP, we use SAPFiori® apps to feed
both of those appetites at the same time.
Complexities are kept behind the scenes,
allowing end users to focus on their core
tasks. Users enjoy the fact that the inter-
face is clean and intuitive and transfers
well to whatever size device they are
using.
COLLABORATION
Collaborative work is the new way of
the workplace, so it’s critical to provide
tools that allow collaboration not just
in physical environments, but also in vir-
tual environments, across geographical
boundaries. SuccessFactors, an SAP
company, offers a modern way to suc-
cessfully manage interactions between
teams.The SAP Jam™ social software
platform, our key internal collaboration
platform, allows groups of employees to
discuss projects and share solutions with
peers around the globe.
CONTINUOUS LEARNING
At SAP, based on feedback and results
from the past several years, we‘ve moved
away from extended courses that stretch
over multiple days or even weeks, in
favor of shorter courses and online
e-learning.
We use the openSAP platform to deliver
massive open online courses, or MOOCs,
which are available on a variety of
cutting-edge technology subjects and
empower professionals to learn and grow
at their own pace. The MOOCs are also
available through the openSAP mobile
app, so employees can access them from
various devices. The e-learning solutions
from SAP can be used as a part of an
employee’s talent-development path as
a result of a continuous dialogue
between an employee and a manager.
Manik Narayan Saha
CIO, Asia Pacific and Japan, SAP
17. 17
©2015SAPSEoranSAPaffiliatecompany.Allrightsreserved.
A successful e-learning program is a
perfect example of a shared initiative
between the CIO and chief human
resources officer (CHRO). As the HR
team gains a better understanding of
the specific programs and courses that
provide value to employees, the IT team
works to ensure that the best tools and
platforms are in place.
PERFORMANCE MONITORING AND
IMPROVEMENT
For employees of a modern, successful
company, the traditional annual review is
becoming only a small part of tracking
performance and development.
At SAP, HR policies and strategies are
now fused with IT tools and automation,
like with the SAP SuccessFactors®
Performance & Goals solution. The
solution provides an easy way for
managers and employees to interact
regularly and document achievements
and progress, while at the same time
managing long-term progression in a
transparent way.
CAREER ADVANCEMENT
It is important to support your employ-
ee’s career path if you expect them
to stay with your company. The SAP
SuccessFactors Recruiting solution pro-
vides a transparent way of posting jobs
and recruiting staff. Any SAP employee
can easily explore opportunities for
career advancement. A transparent and
open platform provides the employees
greater choice and flexibility when it
comes to new options within SAP, while
accelerating their career plans.
DISCOVER AND FOLLOW
Read more about
about how HR-IT
collaboration is driving
the future of work
You can follow
Manik on Twitter
at @maniksaha
18. 18
©2015SAPSEoranSAPaffiliatecompany.Allrightsreserved.
Simplify.IT
Why Cloud-Based Analytics
Solutions Are Essential for
Tomorrow’s Business
As cloud adoption spreads,
the demand for cloud-based
analytics is following suit.
But the cloud is still viewed
with suspicion by some IT
leaders. Here, we look at
some of the findings of our
recent white paper, “Moving
to the Cloud,” to see what
your organization stands to
gain.
In a recent EMA study, 56% of businesses
cited cloud-based analytical strategies
as “essential” or “important” to their
corporate strategies. However, not every-
one is convinced. A number of perceived
barriers are still preventing some business
leaders from taking their crucial first
steps into the cloud.
THE CIO: AN ENDANGERED SPECIES?
Some chief information officers (CIOs)
fear that the cloud spells doom – or, less
dramatically, marginalization – for their
departments. However, rather than antic-
ipating their imminent demise, many
now believe that the CIO role is simply
evolving. IT leaders must rethink their
priorities in line with changing business
requirements.
In 1990, IT’s role was to create applica-
tions. In 2015, it is to provision applications
and manage the immense complexity of
the infrastructure necessary for those
applications. Instead of being hardware
jockeys, IT leaders must now focus on
being data scientists.
KEEPING YOUR DATA SAFE
Another barrier to cloud adoption is a
perceived risk in keeping data off-premise
and entrusting it to a third party.
However, storing data in an on-premise
data center is no longer any safer than
transitioning your data warehouse into
the cloud.
Target’s credit card breach in 2013 and
Sony’s hacked e-mail fiasco earlier this
year demonstrate the difficulty of keeping
one’s own data secure. Although security
is still one of the most frequently cited
objections to cloud deployment, the risks
associated with the cloud are no greater
than those associated with operating
on-premise. They are merely different.
SAFETY IN NUMBERS
For vendors like SAP who are supplying
cloud-based services to thousands of
businesses, security is even more critical
than it would be for an individual organi-
zation. A successful attack on one would
be an attack on the peace of mind of all.
Hackers target neglected and outdated
systems. Large companies typically have
thousands of these in place, and at least
one of them is likely to lack the latest
security patch. In the cloud, security
updates are applied universally and
immediately. Simply put, there are fewer
doors for intruders to enter, and those
doors are better guarded.
FASTER, MORE AFFORDABLE
SOLUTIONS
More and more unstructured data is
flooding into organizations. The good
news is that this data has more value than
previously assumed. The bad news is
that making sense of the data can be an
onerous task with a prohibitive price tag.
Previously, line-of-business leaders
anxious for actionable business intelli-
gence traditionally had two options.
Firstly, they could wait for IT to provide an
internally built solution, taking months
or even years, depending on other priori-
ties assigned to IT. Secondly, they could
Neil McGovern
Senior Director of Marketing, SAP
19. 19
©2015SAPSEoranSAPaffiliatecompany.Allrightsreserved.
cobble together a Frankenstein solution
of Excel spreadsheets and other applica-
tions – frequently proving to be an error-
prone and unreliable fix.
In contrast, a cloud-based solution is
instantaneous, high quality, and affordable.
So, business leaders get the information
they need when they need it, without
breaking the budget.
BOLDER EXPERIMENTATION
By taking a cloud-based approach to
data analytics, companies also provide
their staff with the opportunity to try
out new ideas and experiment in a cost-
effective way.When relying on on-premise
solutions for analysis, it is difficult to test
hypotheses, due to the high overhead
associated with building a new report or
analyzing a new data set.
However, the cloud offers access to
instant provisioning and the analytical
power of solutions like the SAP HANA
platform. So, businesses can more easily
test and prototype, driving innovation
and enabling performance improvements.
REAPING THE BENEFITS
In the cloud, new solutions can be deliv-
ered faster than ever before to meet the
needs of your organization more pre-
cisely. Improving agility, reducing costs,
and taking advantage of instantaneous
provisioning remain leading drivers of
cloud adoption. But expect data security
– once considered a risk factor – to
increasingly inspire organizations to look
beyond their own four walls.
To learn more, read the “Moving to the
Cloud” white paper or take a look at
specific use cases to see how SAP is
helping customers reap the benefits
of cloud-based analytics.
When a European sports club
experienced significant growth,
it leveraged SAP HANA and
the SAP HANA Enterprise
Cloud service to optimize
performance. This gave the
organization’s IT department
the power to focus on core
processes – and the confidence
to know that it could support
the business through daily
operations and future growth .
FOLLOW
You can follow Neil on
Twitter @neilmcgovern
20. Studio SAP | 40682enUS (15/10)
© 2015 SAP SE or an SAP affiliate company.All rights reserved.
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YOUR IT SO YOUR COMPANY CAN BE MORE AGILE, PLEASE VISIT OUR
WEB PAGE TO EXPLORE CUSTOMER STORIES AND THOUGHT LEADERSHIP.
MODERNIZE: SAP HANA IS THE ANSWER
What is SAP HANA? No matter your question, the answer is SAP HANA – a powerful in-memory platform built to
deliver unprecedented insight.
Learn more at http://discover.sap.com/hana.
ACCELERATE INSIGHT
With analytics solutions from SAP, you have the power to harness the full value of your data for competitive
advantages such as informed decisions, timely action, and game-changing innovation.
Learn more at http://discover.sap.com/accelerate-insight.
INNOVATE: MAKE YOUR WORLD SIMPLE
With in-memory infrastructure-as-a-service and platform-as-a-service cloud solutions from SAP, you can make your
world simple by solving today’s infrastructure problems while innovating for tomorrow.
Visit http://discover.sap.com/innovate.
REIMAGINE
SAP S/4HANA, the next-generation business suite, is designed to help you Run Simple in the digital economy.
Visit http://discover.sap.com/s4hana.