Technology has made working more efficient for a great deal of organisations across the globe.
When it comes to business productivity, letting technology take the lead on manual, everyday tasks allows technology leaders and their teams to focus on other priorities, be they strategic decision-making or creative collaboration.
How are businesses reacting to this âtechnology transformationâ and what more can be done to improve business productivity overall?
With Lea Sellers moderating this roundtable debate, the speakers include:
Leon Gauhman, Chief Product and Strategy Officer, ElsewhenÂ
Brian Brackenborough, Global CISO, Channel 4Â
Nick Reeks, Director IT, Tata Steel UKÂ
Fergus Boyd, CTO, IP DividualÂ
Juan Villamil, CIO, Imperial College LondonÂ
Conor Whelan, CIOO, Experian
The new technology organisation
âTransforming an organisation to become a technology organisation allows employees to optimise performance and better deliver the businessâ core valueâ. Moderator Lea Sellers asked the speakers what their view was on this statement to kick off the roundtable discussion.Â
Technology is a central part of Tata Steel UK, according to their Director of IT, Nick Reeks.Â
âWe often think from an IT sense about technology⊠service, applications et ceteraâ, he said. In the manufacturing context, Nick believes that technology is quite âwideâ. His organisation is funding R&D in order to understand how technology is going to affect the nature of their products in the future, and how they can proactively evolve alongside that change.
In addition to this, they are trying to explore ways to improve the carbon footprint for steel manufacturing using technology.Â
âThere is absolutely another revolution on the technology sideâ. Delving into this, he explained that alongside carbon, the next big topic is energy. âWeâve been deploying technology using lasers to measure the heat and the heat control within the furnace areasâ, he stated, explaining how the remit for technology has evolved past competitiveness, but also to purpose.
On the other hand, Experianâs CIOO Conor Whelan doesnât believe there is a revolution; instead a continuation. He talked about how automation has been around for several years and how this has been integrated into their core plans.Â
âOne of the things that we are looking at is bringing more artificial intelligence and machine learning into the automation to ensure we can keep learningâ, he said.Â
Conor feels that technology is changing at an incredible pace, and that it is getting faster each year. Over the recent years, he has seen the advances of AI and automation. This, he believes, will continue as they are not able to match this quickening pace. âWe apply about 30,000 changes a week to our environment⊠to do that in a manual way would be very expensive and unproductive of our timeâ.
Whatâs blocking business productivity?
Lea asked the speakers if the human mind could act as a blocking factor. Imperial College Londonâs CIO, Juan Villamil, replied: âWe donât ask basic questionsâ; that for him is the missing aspect. He wants technology leaders to ask themselves what they are trying to achieve and be realistic. Setting those foundations, he argued, is important.Â
âThe biggest mistake we can make is implementing technology for the sake of technology because itâs the next shiny thingâ. The change process for adopting and implementing technology is considered âdifficult and challengingâ. Juanâs advice for technologists is to win the hearts and minds of the organisation and show the value of technology. âWeâre all creatures of habit and weâre all going to feel threatened somehow by changeâ, he said.
Channel 4âs CISO, Brian Brackenborough, had a different view of this.Â
âI think particularly within broadcasting, it used to be a case of build not buyâ, he said. He argued this was because technologists couldnât find the right products to suit their needs.Â
Brian highlighted further that people are starting to realise that this is about companies who work in silos. âYou can find yourself with three products that do exactly the same thing but slightly differentâ, he explained. Brian outlined that if technology leaderâs compromise, they can have one platform which works across the whole company. He added that itâs about convincing people what is right for the entire company, not solely the individual department.
Technology tools and processes
âWhat I would love to see invented is organisations taking more advantage of the data that they haveâ, said Elsewhenâs Chief Product and Strategy Officer, Leon Gauhman.Â
He was asked whether there were any tools or processes that he would like to see invented or redesigned that could help his organisation. Leon considered this question with the context of having legacy and off-the-shelf tools while thinking about where the organisation would go next.Â
In banking, steel, gas and oil sectors you could see the implementation of technology, argued Leon, and that people in these sectors are in a state of âhaving something is better than having nothingâ. He believes the organisation has an opportunity to move forward and work with different types of tools. âIncrease productivity by providing people [with] tools that are utilising the organisationâs data in the context that theyâre inâ, he said.
Watch the roundtable above to see the full discussion for âWhere is Technology Truly Unlocking Business Productivity?â.