Difference between revisions of "Slumdog Millionaire"

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==Time Frame==
==Time Frame==
=====The first 2 Years (2009-2010)=====
=====The first 2 Years (2009-2010)=====
In the first two years enterprises will continue the trend to outsource and offshore to India and other emerging IT-driven economies, due to low costs and high quality and value, therefore high return on investment. They will further implement Web 2.0 tools accepting the switch towards a network economy and hence moving towards collaborative virtual spaces, but will reject most other technological breakthroughs. The Internet will continue its social evolution and more and more enterprises will be interested in crowdsourcing, until the phenomenon reaches saturation.
Driven by financial crisis, in the first two years enterprises will focus on reducing costs and continue the trend to outsource and offshore to India and other emerging IT-driven economies, not only due to low costs, but also due to high quality and value, maximizing the return on investment. They will further implement Web 2.0 tools accepting the switch towards a network economy and hence moving towards collaborative virtual spaces, but will reject most other technological breakthroughs that require high short-term budgets, and prefer to work on improving current technologies. The Internet will continue its social evolution and more and more enterprises will be interested in crowdsourcing, until the phenomenon reaches saturation.
 
=====The next 5 Years (2011-2015)=====
=====The next 5 Years (2011-2015)=====


=====The last 10 Years (2016-2026)=====
=====The last 10 Years (2016-2026)=====

Revision as of 00:10, 8 May 2009

Overview

In a scenario where enterprises turn their back towards technological breakthroughs but accept and adapt to the reality of globalization and worldwide internet presence, the future of Enterprise IT strongly relies on collaboration within the enterprise as well as between the enterprise and influential players, such as potential outsourcing and offshoring parties, or end users and customers.

The emergence of BRIC economies, particularly India's, highly developed in IT competences, knowledge and experience, will be supported by such a scenario, as Western enterprises will continuously seek for outsourcing/offshoring collaboration with Indian IT companies.

Crowdsourcing will be an alternative solution more and more popular, as Web mashups and open source software become more and more powerful for business use.

Implications

Western Economies will stay skeptical to new technologies no matter how revolutionary they may be, due to difficulties of change, given the size of their organizations, but also due to risks and concerns about costs and investment. Therefore, they prefer evolutionary development based on current standards and technologies. Such approach will have an impact on revolutionary technological progress, not only ignoring it, but slowing it down.

Collaborative workplaces will be developed, more social software being implemented within the organization, with the emphasis on remote work and mobility for their employees, empowered by wireless capabilities and mobile internet presence. Furthermore, enterprises will tend to adopt an open approach to innovation. Certain techniques, like mass collaboration, crowdsourcing, open source and open API development, will be applied to trigger the creation of new technologies. Customers and end users will be invited to collaborate with the enterprise and compete with each other via the Internet, in order to benefit from user innovation and crowd wisdom. The involvement of customers will also trigger new marketing strategies that involve customer blogging and social networking, allowing them to interact with enterprise employees and rewarding them for their contributions.

More and more outsourcing and off-shoring will be done to India and to similar IT-driven emerging economies. Due to this situation, BRIC-like economies will experience great economic growth and eventually reach the level of Western economies. When such a situation happens, based on their superior IT knowledge and experience, the BRIC countries may start pursuing a competitive path against Western enterprises and push towards a revolutionary change in the Enterprise IT technology. Even though the current Western approach is against technological change, at the moment India and other emerged economies reach the Western ones and become competitive at an enterprise level, they will embrace technological change. This will happen not only because of their knowledge and experience on IT, but also because of their familiarity with competition and will to be ahead of competition. This will eventually happen due to the lack of agility Western enterprises will have compared to the future BRIC ones.

Time Frame

The first 2 Years (2009-2010)

Driven by financial crisis, in the first two years enterprises will focus on reducing costs and continue the trend to outsource and offshore to India and other emerging IT-driven economies, not only due to low costs, but also due to high quality and value, maximizing the return on investment. They will further implement Web 2.0 tools accepting the switch towards a network economy and hence moving towards collaborative virtual spaces, but will reject most other technological breakthroughs that require high short-term budgets, and prefer to work on improving current technologies. The Internet will continue its social evolution and more and more enterprises will be interested in crowdsourcing, until the phenomenon reaches saturation.

The next 5 Years (2011-2015)
The last 10 Years (2016-2026)