Cloud computing has provided organizations with numerous benefits such as improved scalability, decreased time to market, and cost efficiency.
Digital Transformation has many meanings, depending on who you ask.
Digital automation, for improved business processes and enhanced customer experience, is on the key priority list of increasing number of companies.
While some tasks can be handled internally, there are others that are better left to a third-party vendor.
Business processes are most likely not going to return to the way they were before the pandemic.
The impact of COVID-19 caught everyone by surprise. Organizational leaders have been forced to swiftly adapt their business processes to adhere to their respective government’s mandates and recommendations.
Right now, organizations are slowly settling into their new normal. They have equipped employees with laptops and remote connections.
Humans are social by nature. This continues to be true even as we work from the comfort of our own homes. Slowly, employees have started to adapt to the new normal and work from home (WFH) is now a reality for most.
Slowly, a new reality is setting in. Organizations continue to address business processes and infrastructure as employees are establishing home offices.
Consumers have grown to not only enjoy user-friendly accessibility, but to expect it. Coupled with the shift in customer demand, digital transformation has expanded across all industries, encouraging increasingly nimble, data-driven campaigns.
Data is being generated, collected, and analyzed by companies at an immense rate, everyday. So massive in fact, that according to the World Economic Forum, the total volume of the datasphere will reach roughly 44 zettabytes by the end of 2020 and continue expanding rapidly.
Data is extracted by businesses to produce differentiating insight to guide their decision-making, however, what if the data that businesses rely on is inaccurate?