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Short clip: American Airlines’ upgrading its passenger service system
Monte Ford, CIO of American Airlines describes how the companys new passenger service system will work in the future. He says it will be ...
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Short clip: American Airlines social media experiment
Monte Ford, CIO of American Airlines describes how the company is embracing Twitter and Facebook, and how these social networking tools are benefiting interactions ...
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Monte Ford, CIO, American Airlines
Monte Ford, CIO of American Airlines talks to ZDNets Sumi Das about developing a new passenger service system that will allow customers to connect ...
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Shadman Zafar, CIO, Verizon Telecom
Shadman Zafar, CIO of Verizon Telecom talks to ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das about the companys promise to deliver the Internet to television with its ...
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Short clip: Verizon launches widget store
Shadman Zafar, CIO of Verizon Telecom, discusses the launch of the companys new widget store where consumers can buy new social media applications like ...
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Short clip: Verizon invests in growth over cost-cutting
Shadman Zafar, CIO of Verizon Telecom, describes how the company is responding to the current economic downturn by investing in growth and innovation as ...
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Short clip: How American Airlines faced the challenges of 9/11 and the recession
Monte Ford, CIO of American Airlines discusses how the company was able to overcome the tragedy of 9/11 and weather the current economic downturn ...
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Short clip: Verizon CIO: Quick failures, generate quick learning
Shadman Zafar, CIO of Verizon Telecom, talks about how focusing on the growth of the company acts as a great incentive for employees to ...
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Short clip: Sony converges electronics and entertainment
Drew Martin, CIO of Sony Electronics, talks about the convergence of content and consumer electronics. He explains the company's move to hook up its ...
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Short clip: Sony focuses on customer service
Drew Martin, CIO of Sony Electronics, discusses the company's strategy to be more customer-centric. He says, the company is starting to educate customers about ...
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Short clip: Sony uses social networking to listen to customers
Drew Martin, CIO of Sony Electronics, describes how the company is targeting social networking sites to get better customer feedback and enable development on ...
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Drew Martin, CIO, Sony Electronics
Drew Martin, CIO of Sony Electronics, speaks to ZDNet Editor in Chief, Larry Dignan about how IT is facilitating product development at the consumer ...
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Short clip: Adobe and the future of RIAs
Gerri Martin-Flickinger, CIO of Adobe, thinks that in the future Rich Internet Applications are going to have many uses, separate from the browser. For ...
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Short clip: Using Adobe at Adobe
Gerri Martin-Flickinger, CIO of Adobe, explains what it means to "eat your own dog food." At Adobe, it doesn't just mean using their own ...
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Short clip: Meeting in virtual environments
Gerri Martin-Flickinger, CIO of Adobe, believes that collaboration tools are more useful when they center around an activity or event. For example, each employee ...
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Geri Martin-Flickinger, CIO, Adobe
Gerri Martin-Flickinger, CIO of Adobe, speaks to ZDNet Editor in Chief, Larry Dignan about her top priorities at the graphics software maker. Martin-Flickinger shares ...
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Dan Darling, CIO, Turner Broadcasting System
Dan Darling, CIO of Turner Broadcasting System, talks to ZDNet Editor in Chief Larry Dignan about overseeing IT operations for many different brands across ...
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Short clip: Turner communicates globally with telepresence
Dan Darling, CIO of Turner Broadcasting System, says that the company's most important technology is telepresence. Through teleconferencing, they have been able to build ...
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Short clip: Turner's new 'green' council
Dan Darling, CIO of Turner Broadcasting System, believes that almost all companies have "green" issues on their mind. At Turner, they have a council ...
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Short clip: Turner containing costs in a downturn
Dan Darling, CIO of TBS, reveals that, given the state of the economy, cost containment is his number one concern for the coming year. ...
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Short clip: American Airlines’ upgrading its passenger service system
Monte Ford, CIO of American Airlines describes how the companys new passenger service system will work in the future. He says it will be easier for customers to handle reservations, ticketing, and flight information through their mobile devices.
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Monte Ford, CIO, American Airlines
Monte Ford, CIO of American Airlines talks to ZDNets Sumi Das about developing a new passenger service system that will allow customers to connect more easily to the airline through their web site and other mobile devices. Ford also discusses how his IT organization faced the challenges of 9/11 and the weathered recent economic downturn.
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Short clip: American Airlines social media experiment
Monte Ford, CIO of American Airlines describes how the company is embracing Twitter and Facebook, and how these social networking tools are benefiting interactions with customers.
-
Shadman Zafar, CIO, Verizon Telecom
Shadman Zafar, CIO of Verizon Telecom talks to ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das about the companys promise to deliver the Internet to television with its new Fios platform. The service will include social media widgets like Facebook and Twitter. Zafar describes the companys approach to innovating in an economic downturn and where he stands on the net neutrality debate in Washington.
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Short clip: Verizon launches widget store
Shadman Zafar, CIO of Verizon Telecom, discusses the launch of the companys new widget store where consumers can buy new social media applications like Twitter and Facebook and use the software on their television sets.
-
Short clip: How American Airlines faced the challenges of 9/11 and the recession
Monte Ford, CIO of American Airlines discusses how the company was able to overcome the tragedy of 9/11 and weather the current economic downturn by staying focused, managing to a plan, and developing a set of processes to guide the airline into the future.
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Short clip: Sony converges electronics and entertainment
Drew Martin, CIO of Sony Electronics, talks about the convergence of content and consumer electronics. He explains the company's move to hook up its Bravia TVs with Internet connectivity so consumers are able to stream movies instantly.
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Hilton Hotels CIO: Tim Harvey
In a CIO sessions interview, Tim Harvey, CIO of Hilton Hotels, talks about the company's business intelligence software OnQ and his vision for the hotel of the future, including online check-ins, self service kiosks and personalized RFID cards.
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Short clip: Verizon invests in growth over cost-cutting
Shadman Zafar, CIO of Verizon Telecom, describes how the company is responding to the current economic downturn by investing in growth and innovation as opposed to cost-cutting and automation.
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Short clip: Verizon CIO: Quick failures, generate quick learning
Shadman Zafar, CIO of Verizon Telecom, talks about how focusing on the growth of the company acts as a great incentive for employees to innovatively come up with ideas and create new business cases around those ideas.
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Virgin UK CIO: Gareth Lewis
Virgin Group CIO Gareth Lewis gives an insight into the innovative culture at Sir Richard Branson's company, explains the fine balance between standardisation and unique technology for the various business units and the benefits of offshore outsourcing in this latest CIO Visions interview.
The Virgin story began in 1968 with Richard Branson's student magazine and then a mail order record company before the first Virgin record store opened up on London's Oxford Street in 1971. Since then the company has become one of the few genuine global super-brands with over 200 businesses, including the likes of Virgin Atlantic, Virgin Mobile, Virgin trains and Virgin Cola. silicon.com caught up with Virgin's group CIO Gareth Lewis
Andy McCue: Gareth, the entrepreneurial culture at Virgin seems very much to follow the example set by its famous founder Sir Richard Branson. What are the technology challenges in this fast-paced, risk-taking environment where you are always starting up businesses from scratch?
Gareth Lewis: I think the whole ethos of the place has been set and will always be set for the foreseeable future by Richard. The challenges in terms of getting technology done in that sort of environment are many and various, particularly as Virgin itself is a brand marketing led company, so technology very often takes second place. Having said that it is absolutely central to a number of the businesses that we have, the airlines being one business and the mobile companies in particular being the other set of companies where IT is absolutely central to the company.
AM: And does Sir Richard Branson foster and encourage innovation among his executives and employees?
GL: Absolutely, the whole ethos again is one of establishing a great business proposition usually as a challenger to another business that is quite often already in existence and just doing it better - providing better customer service, providing a better customer experience and underpinning all of that a set of IT systems that provide that experience and underpin the proposition.
AM: How challenging is it to drive a culture of innovation across a company that consists of many different and often autonomous business units?
GL: Well it comes in two flavors really. One is getting the business units to work together more effectively and there's no doubt it has been challenging but actually over the last 12 months we have made some very significant strides working typically from what I call the bottom up so the standardization, the homogenization, the simplification a lot of the computing and datacoms infrastructure, and we're working our way through that. So yes, they are autonomous but for the things that are in many ways commodity in nature and which every one of the major businesses needs then we are standardizing piece by piece across the various entities and the various group companies.
AM: How do you balance innovation with the push to drive some commonality and standardization in technology across the different Virgin Group brands?
GL: Well as we develop the model going forward then a lot of the hygiene computing, as I call it, will over time become standardized. We'll have standard models as today we do. We have standard PCs across the group, we have a standard common datacoms supplier within the UK, we have group-wide deals in all sorts of areas from a procurement perspective, so we're working from the bottom of the model upwards. At the top of the model we allow individual businesses complete and total freedom in terms of what their proposition is and therefore what underlying IT systems they need to have that proposition. So we have two ends of that spectrum really. One where we have uniqueness depending on the proposition in the marketplace and one where we are driving for standardization where there is little or no differentiation in terms of the underlying IT infrastructure.
AM: You've primarily used India and South Africa for offshore IT and call center work. What other emerging countries and locations having an impact on these kind of decisions in the future?
GL: There's many and varied offshored outsource across the globe and I'm sure you can name them as well as I can. Our original choice of India was really as an IT destination. We then found that for certain call center activities, and it is a very specific set, that worked very well for us. And we opened up South Africa as an opportunity to provide what we term high-quality voice. So a real engagement with the customer. We found the cultural fit, particularly with the UK and South Africa was excellent and we've exploited that and we'll continue to do so. Other geographies? Well we're growing businesses in the US, we're about to launch in the last quarter of this year some businesses in China, so expect to see geographies that align in terms of offshore outsourcing, align with those geographies. So I'd expect some offshore outsourcing in China in the fullness of time, I'd also expect offshore outsourcing to probably support our US businesses in either Mexico, Costa Rica, possibly the Philippines, but those decisions are yet to be made. But that's the sort of area we are looking - Spanish-speaking.
AM: So what would your advice be to companies looking to outsource some of their IT operations offshore for the first time?
GL: Have a go I think is probably the key thing. Most people who have taken something offshore never bring it back and the reason is because, frankly, the outsourcers particularly in India because they are mostly the most mature market although there are some of the Eastern European markets coming up very quickly. It's a great experience. They are much, much better than you ever dreamed and in fact I'd go as far as to say they bring a lot of process discipline that you quite often don't find within UK IT shops, which is a great thing. It allows us to leap a long way forward in some of our businesses. So give it a go but tread carefully. Don't go into any huge long-term deals. Probably work with someone who has either done it before or who can give you some help and guidance along the way. But don't be afraid to experiment and I don't think you'll regret it.
AM: And finally, what emerging and disruptive technologies will have a big impact on your businesses in the future?
GL: You've got to look to some of the models, in terms of business models, that people like Google have brought to the table. I think that's an extraordinary phenomena over the last five years. So that's one dimension - the way you can create communities of interest around different things and actually have the ability to go out and search the web and pull things back that are relevant to very specific criteria. A massive change, and I think you're going to see the impact of that in various of our businesses. So that's one dimension. There's also the dimension in terms of some of the technology - the base technology infrastructure - which will have a dramatic impact on some of our mobile businesses, by which I mean wi-fi Mesh and wimax technologies. That has the capability of fundamentally changing the way we deliver content and services to our mobile users both in existing businesses and some of the new businesses that we're looking at establishing. So those two things I think are the key determinants of how we are going to use those discontinuities in the way people have applied technology to some of our business ideas
AM: Gareth Lewis, thank you.
GL: Thank you Andy, a pleasure.

























