Getting the right technologies is an important step, but using them effectively means opening our thinking to new ways of running our businesses, says Gerrit Olivier, founder and CEO of About IT.
There is much more to digital banking than checking balances and making payments or transfers, says Stelios Vakis, digital executive: Nedbank Retail and Business Banking.
Digital transformation can improve fiscal efficiency and service delivery, says Andy Dikobo, public sector executive at Dimension Data
By digitalising their processes, insurers can empower customers to access their policies, track claims and exercise more self-service options, says Annalie Terblanche, head of product at SilverBridge.
Remote endpoints are increasingly a vulnerability risk, because, if unprotected, they offer a doorway into a corporate network, says Peter French, MD of Synapsys.
To transform our businesses means extracting deeper value in future from the tools and materials many of us crave because of the global pandemic, says Gregg Sanders, head of digital transformation at NEC XON.
Business can capitalise on the current conversational trend, says Karen Waters, product director at Engage Hub.
Businesses may need to integrate temperature screening into their existing access control systems, such as identity screening for visitors at building entrances, says Stef Du Plessis, MD of Osiris Technical Systems.
Executives, boards and the C-suite can’t transplant their duties to remote working as seamlessly as other parts of a company.
The birth of the fourth industrial revolution will shape the way people, businesses and broader society intercommunicate, says Sivi Moodley, CEO at Macrocomm.
COVID-19 isn’t the only virus you should be worried about right now, says Vishal Barapatre, CTO at In2IT Technologies SA.
The jobs conversation around 4IR should be about upskilling and creating digital skills rather than job losses, says Richard Firth, CEO of MIP Holdings.