EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, the Post Office IT scandal inquiry continues to reveal shocking details – we review the latest evidence. We examine progress of the roll-out of fast broadband across the UK. And as the Online Safety Bill returns to Parliament, we look at the arguments about how to keep the internet safe. Read the issue now.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we talk to snack giant Mondelez, the owner of Cadbury, about how AI and data are transforming its business. SAP is increasing support costs for the first time in years – we assess the impact on customers. And a Ukrainian tech CEO tells us how his company kept going despite the Russian invasion. Read the issue now.
RESEARCH CONTENT:
As account-based marketing (ABM) evolves, so too do the ways leading organizations implement it. In this research report, learn about successful B2B ABM practitioner experiences, successes, and struggles. Glean insight into ABM strategies, and explore the profile of a successful ABM program.
RESOURCE:
This PDF download contains source documents showing how the UK approved export licences to Gamma International UK to supply sophisticated mobile phone surveillance equipment, known as IMSI catchers, to the Republic of Macedonia.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we find out how the world-famous National Geographic magazine is adapting to the digital age and using technology to better engage its audience. We ask what Microsoft's $7.6bn acquisition of GitHub means for the open source community. And our latest buyer's guide looks at developer tools. Read the issue now.
EZINE:
The battle for the right IT staff to transform businesses is changing and recruiters and job-seekers need to be clued up. In this issue, a Belgium-based recruiter gives the lowdown on tech job-seeking. Also read why Dutch beer brewer Heineken has replaced more than 60 different HR systems with SAP SuccessFactors as its central HR system.
EGUIDE:
In this e-guide: HR software had long been a relatively backward zone of enterprise software before the Covid-19 pandemic. It had been catching up, as organisations applied digital approaches drawn from customer experience to employee experience, encompassing the journey from recruitment, through working and learning, to moving up or moving on.
EGUIDE:
The more systems become remote, the less secure they are. On face value a huge cliché – or truism - but sadly actually true. And sadly, for those running networks, something that is going to be truer – or more clichéd – as remote working continues to proliferate in the new normal of the hybrid mode of working.
EGUIDE:
This e-guide to employee experience includes a podcast discussion about the evolution of employee experience management. Also, we explore how advanced companies are responding to skills shortages and millennial employee attitudes by listening harder to their workforces.
EGUIDE:
CRM has a long lineage in enterprise software, starting with salesforce automation in the 1990s, Siebel being a big player back in the mists of time. These days, engaging with customers through every conceivable channel, and doing so by way of the cloud are the novelties of CRM.