Unlock CIO Trend Report 2017
Get Instant Access
CIO Trend Report 2017
Signals, Drivers, and Scenarios.
- The IT department continues to lose influence over what technology the business adopts. This is the result of IT’s difficulty in addressing the adoption of the last set of mega-trends known as the “SMAC-stack” – Social, Mobile, Analytics, and the Cloud.
- Without a keen awareness of how trends impact the business, and how the business can exploit a trend, the IT department will always be relegated to back-office maintenance work. The problem is that the next, latest and greatest technology is always on the horizon. But just as one seems like it’s about to rise, it fizzles, and another “hot” trend emerges.
Our Advice
Critical Insight
- Trend reports can provide an academic outlook as to what is happening in the technology landscape, but not much else.
- CIOs need a framework to develop concrete insight into what the future is likely to bring, and how it might impact how they operate IT and how their organization does business.
Impact and Result
The role for the CIO moving forward into 2017 will be to help the organization become more proactive about competition and disruption. The CIO can accomplish this by doing the following:
- Scanning the organization’s environment signals in order to spot trends.
- Focusing on the critical uncertainties pertaining to any given trend and analyzing them to determine the art of the possible.
- Building agility into the organization’s technology strategy to make room for discovery.
In 2017, IT can become a center of foresight and innovation for the organization, observing technology trends at their onset and helping shape business strategy.
CIO Trend Report 2017 Research & Tools
CIO Trends Report 2017 – Executive Brief
Read our introduction to the CIO Trends Report 2017 that contains summaries of our eight key trends.
1. The Digital Ecosystem
New service bundles, cost reduction strategies, ways for users to self-manage, and opportunities for collaboration are on the horizon. The Digital Ecosystem is driven by near ubiquitous connectivity, powered by a meshed network of objects and devices, and the capacity to have them all access the internet.
2. Automated Cognition
The business is demanding real-time responses to increasing amounts of data; this is where the need for an extension of the human mind is born from. Outsourcing analysis and interpretation of information to a machine is the response to the human mind’s finite ability to process and react to data in an expedient manner.
3. Immersive UX
The external environment, through devices, can now be re-rendered and fitted with an overlay of information that technology users can observe and interact with. This environment can also be totally immersive, where users no longer view what is external, and their reality becomes virtual. These same users can also interact with their technology, physically, in a broad range of wearable experiences.
4. XaaP (Everything as a Platform)
Organizations can now share their challenges, pain points, and opportunities, and in doing so, extend their capabilities far beyond the confines of their “four walls.” The XaaP trend is driven by the convergence between open data and the proliferation of the Application Programming Interface (API).
5. Autonomous Machines
Machines represent the opportunity for humankind to eventually stop having to do any activities deemed to be undesirable on the basis of physical difficulty, repetition, monotony, and danger. Augmenting the human physical capability can lead to immense benefit in terms of increased productivity and locomotion.
6. Distributed Validation
From the trend towards peer reviewing goods and services online to the social sourcing of news media and information, there is a growing comfort and appetite for leveraging the collective crowd to help make individual decisions. This could replace our current system for processing transactions, moving assets, and any and all other cases where an institution is a middle-man.
7. Adaptive IT
Business needs have become very diverse and groups are consuming technology in different patterns. As such, an adaptive IT operating model must support and enable multiple groups of technology service consumers, while continuously pivoting to meet changing business conditions and needs.
8. Decentralized Making
Conventional construction and creation is being challenged. The world of complex logistics, centralized manufacturing, and the waste it creates coupled with the desire for more flexibility have given rise to a new trend towards decentralized making.
About Info-Tech
Info-Tech Research Group is the world’s fastest-growing information technology research and advisory company, proudly serving over 30,000 IT professionals.
We produce unbiased and highly relevant research to help CIOs and IT leaders make strategic, timely, and well-informed decisions. We partner closely with IT teams to provide everything they need, from actionable tools to analyst guidance, ensuring they deliver measurable results for their organizations.
What Is a Blueprint?
A blueprint is designed to be a roadmap, containing a methodology and the tools and templates you need to solve your IT problems.
Each blueprint can be accompanied by a Guided Implementation that provides you access to our world-class analysts to help you get through the project.
Talk to an Analyst
Our analyst calls are focused on helping our members use the research we produce, and our experts will guide you to successful project completion.
Book an Analyst Call on This Topic
You can start as early as tomorrow morning. Our analysts will explain the process during your first call.
Get Advice From a Subject Matter Expert
Each call will focus on explaining the material and helping you to plan your project, interpret and analyze the results of each project step, and set the direction for your next project step.
Unlock Sample ResearchAuthor
Mitansh Dave
Contributors
- Wayne Sadin, Chief Information & Digital Officer at Affinitas Life
- Shane Saunderson, VP at IC/Things at Idea Couture
- Cynthia Artin, President at Artin Arts
- Mike Asoodeh, CIO & IT Professor at Southeastern Louisiana University
- Tom Andriola, CIO at University of California
- Steve Strout, VP Corporate Systems atSabre Corporation
- Tom Anfuso, CIO at National Life Group
- Yusuf Abu-Hatoum, Consulting CIO at NABCO Entrances, Inc.
- Yu Bai, CIO at GE Oil & Gas
- Ken Bainey, Former CIO at Alberta Government
- Lorie Baddock, AVP – Client Services at Canadian Western Bank
- John C. Martin, CIO at Georgia Department of Natural Resources
- Matthew Spoke, CPA, CA, CBP - CEO, Co-Founder at Nuco
Related Content: Innovation
Search Code: 82227
Last Revised: November 18, 2016