Skip navigation
Twitter   Follow us  •   Share   Share    Become a member

Editor's Notes

2 Posts tagged with the books tag
1

 

We all get so immersed in our busy professional lives that we often forget to reflect on the big picture and human side of information technology and its role in global society. I was reminded of this when I recently spoke with Jiten Patel, whom I had the pleasure of working with when he was CIO at the microfinance organization, FINCA.

 

Like you, Jiten works in IT-driven organizations and deals with the complexities of delivering secure consumer technologies and cloud computing services to internal and external stakeholders. In particular, his lens is open to the worldwide view — especially, developing nations. In his current role as CEO of MicroPlanet Technologies, Jiten provides cloud services to microfinance institutions that, in turn, make microloans in Latin America, Asia and Africa.

 

For some of us, it’s difficult to connect the dots between high-technology platforms such as cloud computing and the poverty, lack of infrastructure and instability that many of the world’s populations face. We frequently hear about the boom in cell phone use in developing nations and the growth of high-tech industries such as call centers, often outsourced from U.S. businesses. But the realities of unreliable electricity, lack of Internet connectivity and insufficient skills are far more common. As Jiten writes in his blog on Smart Enterprise Exchange this month, information and communication technology (ICT) holds out promise and opportunities for these nations despite huge challenges. I encourage you to comment on his blog and to get involved as you can. You can also join a group on this site to discuss issues with your peers in London, India or Mexico Or on the topics of cloud computing, green IT or Web 2.0.

 

 

 

All you need to do is scan the headlines to see stories about ICT’s role in economic growth in countries from South   Africa to Kenya; Brazil to the Philippines. Brazil this month announced that it is offering 75,000 scholarships for secondary students to study science and engineering — fields that lag significantly behind the study of humanities. Right now, Brazil has a shortage of qualified applicants for the high-tech industries that are growing most quickly. This contrasts with other fast-developing nations, such as India and the Philippines, where graduate choices are heavily skewed toward computing, science and engineering.

 

If you’d like a more academic explanation of global economics, several upcoming new business books may provide helpful background and food for thought. The basic principle of Western capitalism is the subject of two upcoming business books — each with a different conclusion. Based on previews of the book Capitalism at Risk: Rethinking the Role of Business, co-authors and Harvard Business School professors Joseph Bower, Herman Leonard and Lynn Paine, argue that while governments must play a role, businesses should take the lead in sustaining market capitalism. Due out in October, the book explains how business “must serve both as innovator and activist, developing corporate strategies that effect change at the community, national and international levels.”

 

By contrast, Standing on the Sun: How the Explosion of Capitalism Abroad Will Change Business Everywhere, due out next February, contends that new economic models will unfold as the emerging economies of the world — primarily, Brazil, India, China and others — surge forward. The co-authors, Christopher Meyer and Julia Kirby, ask: “As these fast-growing, low-income economies mature, will they adopt the practices of the old guard or will they make their own way, and create the next prevailing version of capitalism?”

 

Finally, in India Inside: The Emerging Innovation Challenge to the West, due out in November, leading management experts Nirmalya Kumar and Phanish Puranam describe the quiet, but dramatic rise in innovation occurring in India — from B2B products and R&D outsourcing to process and management innovation. The authors maintain that “for certain kinds of innovation, the long-held monopoly of the developed world is over.”

 

So, as some of you wind down the last days of summer holidays, or perhaps as you travel the globe, observe the rise of technology and weigh its implications for future economies. Then consider: What role will you and your enterprise play on this global stage?

 

 

Paula  Klein

Editor and Community Manager

Smart Enterprise Exchange

0

January 2009 in Editor's Notes

Posted by Paula Klein Jan 15, 2009

Editor's Note

Amid all the sobering headlines and economic news we see daily, it's refreshing for a business leader to offer some optimism — especially when it's backed up with concrete solutions. Judy Estrin is far from naïve about world events or the challenges facing the IT industry. In fact, her long tenure as a Silicon Valley executive — experiencing its highs and its lows — has given her a lucid and long-term perspective.

 

I had the chance to speak to Judy recently on the subject of IT economics for the Smart Insights Q&A we feature this month. I asked her to expand on some of the topics in her recent book, Closing the Innovation Gap (McGraw-Hill, 2008), by advising CIOs on how they can become better innovators and more creative leaders — even in a downturn.

 

It won't be easy, but as she says: "CIOs can facilitate communication, put processes in place, seed small projects and enable ideas to happen. Executives can use the current climate as motivation to move and change the corporate structure; to collaborate better." More than sound advice, her ideas provide a framework for keeping your IT operations moving forward this year.

 

From a technology perspective, many CIOs are strategically adapting their IT infrastructure and data centers to boost corporate efficiency, save money and streamline operations. Among those we profile this month for our Smart Practices report are: Martin Marietta Materials, Arrow Electronics, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals and Nationwide Services Co., where executives are using virtualization and asset management to show bottom-line results.

 

At Nationwide, with 1,500 virtual servers already at its main Columbus, Ohio, data center and 800 more planned, the company expects to save $16,000 per month on electricity costs alone this year. And at a time when some question whether green it initiatives can survive financial scrutiny, Scott Miggo, Vice President of Infrastructure Engineering, says: "This project is enabling us to reduce utility costs and become greener by reducing our carbon footprint."

 

Why is infrastructure agility so important to the business? For Jeff Keisling, Vice President, Corporate Information Services and CIO at Wyeth, it's a way for IT to stay ahead of business changes. When a global business evolves quickly, business leaders expect IT services to do the same, he says. Can your IT department fulfill that mission?

 

Let me know what innovative projects you'll be seeding in 2009...

 

Paula Klein
Editor
Smart Enterprise Exchange
editor@smartenterpriseexchange.com



We encourage your feedback. Reach out via the "Contact the Editor" and "Contact the Concierge" services for any needs, questions or comments. We look forward to serving you!

Paula Klein, Smart Enterprise Exchange Editor
e-mail

Ellen Lalier, Smart Enterprise Exchange Concierge
e-mail
phone 516-562-5727; fax 516-562-5466