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Ray Wang on disrupting digital business

• By People Matters
Ray Wang on disrupting digital business

Transforming India into a digital economy has picked up a rapid pace with the global organizations and government bodies shifting the focus towards the country. Supporting this vision, Oracle is organizing a two-day event, Oracle Open World India 2017 with the aim to bring together government and local enterprises through various digital initiatives crafted exclusively for India.

The event focusing on of what does digital transformation really mean, how can it disrupt business and how can it really be imbibed, started with powerful keynotes by Safra Catz, CEO, Oracle; Shailender Kumar, Oracle; Devendra Fadnavis, Chief Minister of Maharashtra; Rakesh Barik, Partner & Consulting Technology Leader, Deloitte India and Ray Wang, Principal Analyst and Founder, Constellation Research, Inc.

Safra spoke about the awesome initiatives that Oracle is taking up including the launch of a suite compliant with GST, signing a MoU with the Government of Jharkhand and much more. Devendra Fadnavis shared his vision of building a digital Maharashtra and Rakesh spoke about sparking digital transformations within the organizations. But it was the keynote by Ray Wang that said it all about the opportunities that digital transformation presents for businesses.

In his session, Ray discussed how organizations can be successful in this age of digital disruption, the power of data in defining new digital business models and the digital proficiency of the talent. Here are the 5 things that he shared about how you can really bring in digital transformation:

Future of big data-based business models lies in insight-driven experiences where even a little bit of information can lead to the addition of new products. And as you create products of mass personalization yet scale, here are a few things that Ray shared are critical from a design perspective:

At the end, it is about delivering brand promise via personas, processes and graphs. Today, there are 5 generations of digital people not by age but by digital proficiency, as categorized below:

While the Maslow’s hierarchy of needs is well famous for motivation, Ray presented an interesting prevalent hierarchy for organizations where the focus is on margins and the bottom of the pyramid represents regulatory compliance followed by operational efficiency, revenue growth, strategic differentiators and brand on top. Growth in this digital disruption era, on the other hand, requires a flip in the pyramid with automation managing the regulatory compliance and operational efficiency and the major focus being on brand and strategic differentiators.

 

You will get a chance to meet Ray Wang at the People Matters TechHR conference in Singapore on the 28th of February 2019. Register Now!