Global CIO trends - embracing disruption and social
And is a 'Digital Ceiling' holding back female professionals in the technology industry?
And is a 'Digital Ceiling' holding back female professionals in the technology industry?
CIOs should stop trying to deter business-led IT or control it. Instead, they need to build a new model for engaging with business partners
The master data management industry is maturing, but there are still significant functional, scalability and performance differences between the offerings
If Gates and Ballmer are visible during their transition, the new CEO would be undermined, second-guessed, and passively blocked from accomplishing the critical business model pivot that lies ahead
Advice from Philips CIO Jeroen on why technology is only the catalyst for cultural and organisational transformation
The personal device manufacturer business is consolidating - and manufacturers must compete in all three device markets, plus emerging wearable categories, or get left out of the next market shift
Setting up a software company requires imagination, determination, energy and money, and only a few people have access to all these
10 thoughts on why Google bought Nest, and what it means
2014 is an important year for both Google and Microsoft as other vendors try to disrupt the content services space
With technology disrupting the retail landscape, the CIO has a great opportunity to help their business remain relevant
Looking back at the numbers it seems that for all our investment in data management, we have a long way to go to truly improve things
Will 'bring your own encryption' take off as companies seek to deal with the NSA's zealous curiosity?
As governments slowly open up more datasets to the public, there will be more and more opportunities for start-ups to produce innovative applications and create value
Social today is a complement, not a replacement for email - even in the most mature social enterprises employees still check their inbox first and activity streams second
How many existing software companies are frogs whose environment is gradually, almost imperceptibly, being changed by the onset of cloud computing - and how many will react in time?