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Keeping the future in focus

Keeping the future in focus

By:  Jeffrey Hutchinson  On: 31 Aug 2008 For: CIO Canada Creator

It is the responsibility of every CIO to ensure that IT is ready for the future and prepared to help the organization move forward. At Groupe Danone, a special team has been formed to explore emerging technologies and help bring them into the business. The company's CIO for North America, Jeffrey Hutchinson, explains how the team functions.

We all have a tendency to look only at what we’re doing today, instead of stepping back and asking: What do we need to focus on for the future? Taking that step back is actually a step toward innovation and away from stagnation.

Maybe you don’t need to be on the bleeding edge and maybe you don’t have the resources to invest in multiple areas. Still, you need to ask the question: What do we need to focus on to ensure the future readiness of our own IS/IT organization and to enable the businesses we support to go forward?

Within DAN’IS North America, Groupe Danone’s North America IS team, we have business-solution and infrastructure-technology teams that focus on maintaining, enhancing and running solutions. They handle the daily block and tackling that makes IS and the business successful – and they make sure that we have the right balance of investment. But those of us in leadership positions also have a responsibility to consider how business resources will use technology in the future.

I’m part of the generation that remembers life before the Internet and that chooses not to go back from e-mail to written correspondence. Yet the generation coming out of school and into the workforce today is moving beyond e-mail in favour of online presence (instant and text messaging, chat rooms and wikis). They don’t believe in being held captive by e-mail; instead, they operate by utilizing social networking tools.

They will change the way we do business, and we have to be ready. To do this we will need new skills and tools to help us innovate and remain relevant in the global community.

To prepare for this change, DAN’IS North America has brought in a separate team called I&I, which stands for informing and innovation. It’s a small team, and its charter is to look at emerging tools and technology and find ways to mainstream them into the way the business operates. I&I not only evaluates the ideas emerging in academia or from the research labs, they also look at what is starting to come into the business workplace, at technologies that we haven’t thought of as tools, such as Facebook and Second Life. They examine leading technologies and tools for their ability to enhance market share, create sales and increase internal operational and employee efficiency. It’s hardly rocket science. Improving these areas are goals for every company yet more often than not, the solutions focus on the present. We created I&I to look beyond that.

Rethinking video conferencing

One area in which my team has had a major impact is in improving Groupe Danone’s North American video conferencing solutions to a point where people want to use them.

Most people don’t like traditional video conferencing because it’s hard to set up and the need to go through outside carriers makes it expensive. However, earlier this year the business came to us wondering how it could cut down on travel within the Americas and internationally (to Groupe headquarters in France). So we started with the question “Can we reintroduce the concept of video conferencing?” What we came up with was a video solution that uses the dedicated networks we already have in our facilities, that costs thousands instead of hundreds of thousands of dollars, and that pays for itself after just a couple of four-person meetings. Plus, it supports our sustainability and social responsibility goals.


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Jeffrey Hutchinson Jeffrey Hutchinson is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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