Data is a pivotal part of any modernisation initiative, so it must be the first consideration when driving a digital transformation journey.
An organisation must have a clearly-defined use case the cloud will satisfy, and a plan detailing the migration method and process that will be followed.
Just as tech played a vital part in ensuring small businesses survived the pandemic, it can further propel them to success in the future.
The 2024 ITWeb Brainstorm CIO Survey, conducted in partnership with MTN Business, has officially closed for entries.
This annual survey draws insights from CIOs and C-suite executives responsible for technology, providing a critical snapshot of how the industry is evolving.
This year we captured over 100 valid responses and a preview of the findings was presented by Adrian Hinchcliffe, ITWeb’s editor in chief, at the annual ITWeb Brainstorm CIO Banquet on 17 October 2024.
Please watch the ITWeb news feed for a report-back from the Banquet.
The full research report will be published as a downloadable e-book on ITWeb and Brainstorm online in early 2025.
Thank you!The ITWeb Brainstorm Surveys team
Companies are now employing a broad variety of commercial, open source and low-code software where each makes the most sense.
The emerging anywhere/anytime working model requires a distinctly different security posture to ensure the organisation is resilient in the face of changing security threats.
Do CIOs hold the key to unlocking sustainable innovation?
Low-cost data storage, combined with elastic computation and data analytics services, shift big data deployments from on-premises to the cloud.
Using data analytics to become truly customer-centric is now within reach for retailers, but they need to adopt a focused approach with a clear plan − or risk failure.
ORAN is developing momentum for new business cases and with them compelling new revenue streams for African service providers.
Alpheus Mangale, senior executive of IT system stability at the big-four bank, resigns with immediate effect.
The “as-a-service” model is revolutionising the way organisations procure a lot of things. Disaster recovery is one of them − and for a very good reason.