During Accenture’s recent Tech Symposium event, it presented its 2020 Tech Vision and gave a platform to its most innovative clients to share best practices from their journeys to digital transformation. HFS observed a distinct theme running through most of the sessions: using data as an enterprise asset and basing technology initiatives around the best use of data. What we took away from the event is the understanding that Accenture’s Applied Intelligence practice, which brings together analytics, automation, and AI, is going to be instrumental in all its client engagements: from supporting finance and accounting business process services clients to undertaking cloud migration and building IoT platforms. Data is a unifier, and enterprises need to bake data strategy into all aspects of their business operations, a lesson that many Accenture clients shared at its Atlanta event.
All businesses need to become digital natives, says Accenture
“You need to be good at every type of technology today…it’s not about us versus them. We all need to be digital natives,” stated Paul Daugherty, Group Chief Executive, Technology & Chief Technology Officer, Accenture. Paul’s succinct observation reveals a fundamental truth—there is no industry and no company that can claim that it is not impacted by technology today, and every enterprise must proactively explore the role of emerging technologies to stay in business. There are three goals:
Accenture’s clients are prioritizing data initiatives to start the transition
One of our recent research studies asked enterprises what drives their viewpoints on business strategy, and we found that data and predictive analytics are at the heart of the drivers for change in business operations (see Exhibit 1). Businesses also want to create new and personalized experiences for their customers and, ultimately, survive the structural changes that digital disruptors cause in many of their industries.
Exhibit 1: Data explosion, digital disruption, and customer experience are the three most important drivers impacting business operations
We asked 460 senior executives across all industries the top drivers impacting business strategy
Sample size: 460 enterprise customers
Source: HFS Research with Accenture, 2019
At the Accenture Tech Symposium, we saw this prioritization around data and predictive analytics come to life through multiple client stories:
The Bottom Line: Enterprise clients at Accenture’s recent event are cognizant of the importance of data strategies that will no doubt inform their future investments in technology and services.
Enterprises’ data and analytics teams and, subsequently, their partners’ analytics businesses are already at the heart of the change for practically achieving digital transformation goals. While data, analytics, and AI did dominate the client discussions along with allied change agent technologies such as cloud and IoT, we also heard from clients interested in more blue-sky thinking. Accenture organized an “innovation rumble” with the help of two teams from its Atlanta Innovation Hub and a hotel chain client that was interested in hearing innovative ideas. The conference audience voted on which part of the guest experience could be most enhanced, and the teams did a 24-hour turnaround of prototypes. The hotel chain selected the best idea to explore for further development in conjunction with Accenture. The innovation rumble proved two things: one, Accenture is making great investments in talent in cities like Atlanta to be able to pull off something like this in 24 hours, and, two, in many cases, technology is not the barrier to innovation, rather it is aligning objectives and finding the right problems that take the longest time!
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