Akhtar Saeed, SGWC & Michael Noel, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas It's theCUBE! Covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have two guests for this segment. We have Akhtar Saeed, VP Solution Delivery, Southern Glazers Wine and Spirits, and Michael Noel, Managing Director Applied Intelligence at Accenture. Thank you so much for coming on the show. >> Thank you. >> Thank you for having us. >> I think this is going to be a fun one. We're talking about wine and spirits. >> Absolutely. (laughs) >> Akhtar, tell our viewers a little bit about Southern Glazer. >> Yeah, so Southern Glazer Wine and Spirits is a privately held company. We are in about 44 states, and we are the largest distributor of wine and spirits. >> Okay, in 44 states. What was the business problem you were trying to solve in terms of the partnership that you formed with Accenture? >> Yeah, so we started this initiative before Southern and Glazer merged. >> And that was in? >> It was 2016. So southern was already looking at how to enhance our technology, how to provide better data analytics, and how to create one source of truth. So that's what drove this and we were looking to partner with appropriate system integrator and right technology to be able to help deliver well if the company to be able to do analytics and data analysis. >> So you had two separate companies merging together and I like this idea, one source of truth. What does that mean, what did that mean for you? >> Well what it means to us is that since you have quite a few data marts out there and everybody is looking at the numbers a little differently, we spend a lot of time trying to say, hey is this right or is this right? So we want to bring all the data together saying this is what the data is and this is how we're going to standardize it, that's what we're trying to do. >> Okay, so this one source, now, Michael, in terms of that, is that a common, common issue particularly among companies that are merging would you say? >> No absolutely you have businesses that might be in the same industry but they might have different processes to try to get to the same answer, right, and the answer's never really the same. So having this concept of a clean room that allows you to take your various aspects of a business and combine that from a data point of view, a business metrics point of view and a business process point of view, this one source, helps you consolidate and streamline that so you can see that integrated view across your new business model really. >> So where do you begin? So you bring in Accenture and AWS and where do you start? >> So like you've mentioned, in 2016, Glazer and Southern Wine Spirits came together and merged, it actually accelerated process because we needed what Mike mentioned as a clean room where we could put this data and won't have to merge at data centers on day one and have the reporting, common reporting platform being available for the new SGWS and that's what we started so we said, okay what is the key performance indicators, the key metrics that we need going into day one? and that's what we want to populate the data with to begin with to make sure that information is available when the day one for merger comes through. >> Okay and so what were those indicators? >> There were several indicators, there were several business reports, people needed the supply chain, they needed to understand the data, what the inventory looks like they needed to know how we were doing across the markets. So all those indicators, that's what we put together. >> Okay, okay, and so how do you work with the client in this respect, how do you and AWS sort of help the client look at what the core business challenges are and then say okay, this is how we're going to attack this problem? >> Right, no that's a good question. I think the main thing is understanding, what does the business need? and how is the technology going to support what the business needs, right? that's first and foremost, right, and then getting alignment and understanding that is really what drives a roadmap to say here's what we're going to do, here's the order we're going to do it in and here's the value that we expect to get out of following these steps one by one and I think one thing we learned is you have to be directionally correct, you may not be exact but as long as we're making progress in the right direction, you course correct as you need to, right, based upon as the business learns new things and as the market changes and what not and that's really how we accomplish this. >> And is it a co-creative process or, how closely are you working with Accenture and AWS? >> Oh, very closely with Accenture and AWS, it's very co-creative, I mean we are really working hand-in-hand. I mean, as Mike alluded, you start certain ways a journey and you realize, gee, this may work but I have to change a little bit here and there's several time we had to change team's direction how to get there and how to approach it and to deliver value. >> Well let's talk, let's get into the nitty gritty with the architecture and components. So what did this entail, coming to this clean room, this one source of truth? >> Yeah, AWR architecture is based on AWS' platform or Accenture's AIP, Accenture Insights platform which runs on AWS and we have, what we did right from the beginning we said we're going to have a data link, we're going to have a hadoop environment where we're going to all our data there And then for analytics research we're going to use Redshift, on top of that for reporting we use Tableau, and we have a homegrown tool called Compass for reporting also that we use. So that's how we initially started, initially we were feeding data directly into it, because we needed to stand the system up relatively quickly. The advantage to us, we didn't have to deal with infrastructure, that was all set up at AWS, we just to need to make sure we load our data and make sure we make the reports available. >> Were you going to add something to that? >> Yeah I know that the concept around, because the merger is expediting this clean room which allows you to stand up an analytics as a service model, to start bringing your data, to start building out your reporting analytics quickly right, which should really speak to market to understanding their position, as an integrated company was so important. So building the Accenture Insights platform on the AWS platform, was a huge success in order to allow them to start going down that path.. >> Yeah I want to hear about some of the innovative stuff you're doing around data analytics and really let's bring it back down to earth too and say actually so this is what we could learn and see, in terms of what was selling what was not selling, what were you finding out? >> So at this point we have about 6000 users on the platform approximately. Initially we had some challenges, I'll be very frank upfront, that everything does not go smooth. That's where we then say "Okay what do I do differently?" We started with dense storage, nodes and we soon found it's not meeting our needs. Then we enhanced Tougaloo dense cluster, and they helped us by about by 70%, that it drove the speed, but the queue length was still long, with Redshift we were still not getting the performance we needed. Then we went to second generation of dense computers and clusters and we got some more leverage, but really the breakthrough came when we said "we need to really reevaluate "how we've been doing our workload management." Some of our queries were very short term report queries real quick, others were loading data that took a while. And that's the challenge we had to overcome, with the workload management we were able to create, where we were able to bump queries and send them to different directions and create that capacity. And that's what really had a breakthrough in terms of technology for us, till that time we were struggling, I'll be honest, but once we got that breakthrough, we were able to comfortably deliver what business needed from data perspective and from businesses perspective. Mike would you like to add... >> Yeah, in addition to AWS, using Redshift has really been a really important, I guess decision and solution in place here, because not only are we using it for loading massive amounts of data, but it's also being used for power users, to generate very adhoc and large queries, to be able to support other analytic type needs right? And I think Redshift has allowed us to scale quickly as we needed to based upon certain times of year, certain market conditions or whatever, Redshift has really allowed us to do that. In order to support where the business demands have really grown exponentially since we've been putting this in place. And it all starts with architecting, and we said, and delivering all around the data. And then how do you enable the capabilities, not just data as a foundation but you know real time analytics, and looking at what looking at what could be, you know, forecasting and predicting what's happening in the future, using artificial intelligence, machine learning and that's really where the platform is taking us next. >> I want to talk about that, but I want to ask you quickly about the skills challenge, because introducing a new technology, there's going to be maybe some resistance and maybe simply your workers aren't quite up to speed. So can you talk a little bit about what you experienced, and then also how you overcame it? >> Yeah, I mean we had several challenges, I mean I'll put it in two big buckets, one is just change management. Anytime you're changing technology on this many users, they're comfortable with something they know, a known commodity, here's something new, that's a challenge. And one should not ignore, we need to pay a lot of attention on how to manage change. That's one, second challenge was within the technical group itself, because we were changing technology on them also right, and we had to overcome the skill sets, we were not the company, who were using open source a lot. So we had to overcome that and say how do we train our folks, how do we get knowledge? And in that case Accenture was great partner with us, they helped us tremendously and AWS professional services, they were able to help us and we had a couple of folks from professional services, they had really helped us with our technology to help drive that change. So you have to tackle from both sides, but we're doing pretty well at this point, we have found our own place, where we can drive through this together. >> In terms of what you were talking about earlier, in terms of what is next with predictive analytics and machine learning, can you talk a little bit about the most exciting things that are coming down the pipeline in terms of Southern Glazer? >> I think that's a great question, I think there's multiple way to look at it. From a business point of view right it's, how do they gain further insights by looking at as much different data sets as possible, right, whether it be internal data, external data, how do we combine that to really understand the customers better? And looking at how they approach things from a future point of view, we've been able to predict what's going to happen in the marketplace so I think it's about looking at all the different possible datasets out there and combining that to really understand what they can do from an art of the possible point of view. >> Can you give us some examples of terms of combining data sets so you're looking at, I mean, drinking patterns or what do we have here? >> I mean you have third party data, right, and TD links and those kind of things, you pull that data in and then you have our own data, then we have data from suppliers right, so that where we combine it and say okay what is this telling me, what story is this putting together telling me? I don't think we are there all the way, we have started on the journey, right now we are at what I call the, this one source of truth and we still have some more sub-editors loading to it, but that's the vision that, how do we pull in all that information and create predictive analysis down the road and be able to see what that means and how we'll be driving? >> And so you're really in the infancy of this? >> Yes, I mean it's a journey right, some may say that you're not in infancy, you're in the middle somewhere, somebody said, if they were ahead of us, it's all depending where you want to put this on that chart but we at least have taken first steps and we have one place where the data's available to us now, we're just going to keep adding to it and now it's a matter of how should we start to use it? >> In terms of lessons that you've learned along the way and you've been very candid in talking about some of the challenges that you've had to overcome but what would you say are some of the biggest takeaways that you have from this process? >> Yeah the biggest takeaway for me would be, as I've already mentioned, change management, don't ignore that, pay attention to that because that's what really drives it, second one that I'll say is probably, have a broader vision but when you execute make sure you look at the smaller things that you can measure, you can deliver against because you would have to take some steps to adjust to that so those are the two things, the third have the right partners with you because you can't go alone on this, you need to make sure you understand who you're going to work with and create a relation with them and saying "hey it's okay to have tough conversations", we have plenty of challenging conversations when we were having issues but it's as a team how you overcome those and deliver value, that's what matters. >> High praise for you Michael (laughs) at Accenture here, but what would you say in terms of being a partner with Southern Glazer and having helped and observed this company, what would you say are some of the biggest learnings from your perspective? >> Oddly enough I think the technology's the easier part of all this, right, I think that's fair to say without a doubt but really I think, really focusing on making the business successful, right, if everything you do is tied around making the business successful, then the rest will just kind of, you know, go along the way right because that's really the guiding principles right and then you saw that with technology right and that's really I think what we've learned most and foremost is, bring the business along, right, educating them and understanding what they really need and focusing on listening, alright, and trying to answer those specific questions, right, I think that's really the biggest factor we've learned over the past journey, yeah. >> And finally so we're here at AWS re:Invent, 60,000 people descending here on Sin City, what most excites you about, why do you come first of all and most excites you about the many announcements and innovations that we're seeing here this week? >> Yeah, so I'll be honest, this is the first time I've come to this conference but it's been really exciting, what excites me about these things is the new innovation, you learn new things, you say "hey, how can I go back "and apply this and do something different "and add more value back?" That's what excites me. >> Now, no I think you're absolutely right, I think, AWS is obviously a massive disruptor across any industry and their commitment to new technology, new innovation and the practicality of how we can start using some of that quickly I think is really exciting, right, because we've been working on this journey for a while and now there's some things that they've announced today, I think that we can go back and apply it pretty quickly, right, to really even further accelerate Southern Glazer's, you know, pivot to being a fully digital company. >> So a fully digital company, this is my last question (laughs) sorry, your advice for a company that is like yours, about to embark on this huge transformation, as you said, don't ignore the change management, the technology can sometimes be the easy part but do you have any other words of wisdom for a company that's in your shoes? >> All the words of wisdom I'll have is just I think I've already mentioned, three things they'll probably need to focus on, just take the first step, right, that's the hardest part, I think Anne even said this morning that some companies just never take the first step, take that first step and you have to, this is where the industry is going and data is going to be very important so you have to take the first step saying how do I get better, handle on the data. >> Excellent, great. Well Michael, Akhtar, thank you so much for coming on theCUBE this has been a real pleasure, thinking about Southern Glazer, next time bring some alchohol. >> Absolutely. (laughs) It's Vegas! >> Thank you, appreciate it. >> Great. I'm Rebecca Knight, we'll have more of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS executive summit coming up in just a few moments, stay with us. (light music)
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Brought to you by Accenture. Thank you so much for coming on the show. I think this is going to be a fun one. Absolutely. about Southern Glazer. and we are the largest distributor of wine and spirits. in terms of the partnership that you formed with Accenture? Yeah, so we started this initiative and right technology to be able to help deliver well and I like this idea, one source of truth. and this is how we're going to standardize it, and the answer's never really the same. and that's what we want to populate the data with they needed to know how we were doing across the markets. and here's the value that we expect to get and there's several time we had to change team's direction the nitty gritty with the architecture and components. and we have a homegrown tool called Compass because the merger is expediting this clean room And that's the challenge we had to overcome, and delivering all around the data. and then also how you overcame it? and we had to overcome the skill sets, and combining that to really understand have the right partners with you and that's really I think what we've learned is the new innovation, you learn new things, and the practicality of how we can start using and data is going to be very important Well Michael, Akhtar, thank you so much Absolutely. live coverage of the AWS executive summit
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Shalu Chadha, Accenture & Kathleen Natriello, Bristol-Myers Squibb | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Life from Las Vegas, it's theCube, covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCube's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. And I'm joined by Kathleen Natriello. She is the vice president and the head of IT, digital design at Bristol Myers Squibb. And Shalu Chadha, senior technology services lead at Accenture. Thank you so much for coming on theCube. >> Sure. >> Thank you for having us. >> So we're going to talk about Bristol Myers Squibb's journey to the cloud today, but I want. Bristol Myers Squibb is a household name, but I would love you to just start out, Kathleen, by telling our viewers a little bit about Bristol Myers Squibb. Just how big a global pharma company you are. >> Sure. We're a global company, as you said. We have about 23,000 employees all over the world. And we're very focused on our immuno oncology therapies. And the way that they work is that they boost the immune system to fight cancer. So it's a really exciting development that we've had over the years. >> And so what was it, sort of, in the trajectory of Bristol Myers Squibb, that made you realize, as an organization, we need to do things differently? What challenges were you facing? >> So, we're very science focused in terms of developing treatments for our patients. And so our highest priority was our scientists' productivity. And so we started our cloud journey about 10 years ago. And our initial focus was on leveraging burst computing in AWS, which enabled us to spin up enough capacity for our scientists to do research with very large volumes of data. That's one of the things about biopharma. We use very large volumes for genomics research. >> And also, with this partnership, using AWS, you also partner with Accenture. So, can you describe a little bit, Shalu, how the partnership evolved? >> Right. And so that journey that Kathy mentioned, We've been part of that journey for the last two years now. And I think it's this nice partnership between AWS, BMS, and Accenture. And the teams have gone on with a lot of quick successes and early successes. And I think, going forward, the focus is really now businesses is going to look for a lot more demand and agility. Clouded adoption is going to be key in how we actually expand on that. And I know we're talking amongst us to say, how do we get there faster now? >> A little less conversation, a little more action please. >> Yes. (inaudible speech and laughter) >> Exactly. So, let's talk about this journey. So you're not only migrating existing applications, you're also building your own applications. >> Yes. >> What's the, sort of the wisdom behind that strategy? >> A couple of things. So I mentioned earlier that we started our journey with our scientists and we've continued because that's where AWS really delivers significant value for Bristol Myers Squibb. So, what we have done is implemented several AWS cloud services that enable our scientists to use machine learning, artificial intelligence, a lot of computational approaches and simulations that significantly reduce the amount of time it takes them to do an experiment, as well as the cost. Because they no longer have to use actual physical material, or patients, or investigators. They can do it all through simulation and modeling, which is exciting. >> So, I mean, we all know that the drug discovery process takes a long time, and it's tedious, um, cumbersome. So can you actually bring it back down to earth a little bit and say, what have you seen? What are your scientists? In terms of how the drug discovery process is going. >> Yeah. Our scientists are our biggest advocates of the cloud and the capabilities it delivers. And they will report back to us that they are doing things with machine learning and artificial intelligence with these simulations, that they're doing in a few hours, that used to take them weeks and months. And so that's how it's really shortening that cycle. >> And are the patients feeling the benefits yet, too? >> The patients will feel the benefits with our focus on clinical trials. And so, being able to speed up a clinical trial is very helpful. And both from the patient experience, as well as the investigators. >> Shalu, can you talk about some of the other innovation and automation capabilities? >> Yeah. So, BMS is really on this really exciting journey, and now that they've, like Kathy said, extended some of those capabilities and actually building and enabling for the scientists, of the commercial, the brand sites. It's now about, really, what do you do next and how you bring that next wave of innovation. And so, what's been nice at Bristol Myers Squibb and the partnership we have with Accenture here, is really looking at taking some of the learnings we had in the back office, in the finance and the procurement. Where we've actually brought a lot of process efficiency through our bots taking some of that learnings and bringing that across in many other different ways. And now we have bots across legal, compliance, and moving into the clinical area that adverse events. And we're looking at really that part which is how do you actually get quicker with how the patients are going to see both responses to the adverse events, as well as how do you actually accelerate the clinical trial process. And all of those innovations are really possible with what Kathy has set up in her organization. And actually having that digital acceleration competency and be able to take this span enterprise. >> One of the things that's so interesting about these partnerships is how you work together. >> (in unison) Yes. >> And is it that you're focusing on the science and Accenture is thinking about the technology? I mean, are you, sort of, two different groups? Or how are you coming together to collaborate and build a relationship? >> I really see it as three groups. So it's Bristol Myers Squibb that's focused on science as well as the technology. And if I take an example of how that partnership works, when we were doing our migration to the cloud, the more aggressive plan that we have in place right now, Amazon partnered with us on a migration readiness program. And that enabled us to move as much as 400 plus workloads into the cloud and to other locations. And then Accenture partnered with us, as well, to actually move the applications and migrate them to the cloud and the two other locations. So, I really see it as a three way partnership. And part of the way, one of the reasons it's so successful is it's not just BMS partnering with Accenture, and BMS partnering with Amazon, But it's Amazon and Accenture partnering together. And they would come up with ideas on here's what we think will make BMS even more successful. >> And how, and how is that? Is it because you were really grasping their business challenges? Or, I mean, how are you able to come up with? You're not a life science person. >> Right. >> It's, how are you doing that? >> It's a good question, and I think when I reflect on what I experience with other clients, I think what's so tremendously making us successful here is everything is about interest based. And it's about how we start the conversation. The patient in the center. And then it's about who's interests are we serving. Let's be clear. And let's try and try trigress into what's the solution that actually needs that. So, I think, whether, Kathy mentioned it in the cloud cumulus work, or even with the SAPS four journey right now. It's the combination of AWS, BMS, and Accenture in that journey of how we going to solve this together. Those critical and complex programs. >> Kathy, you said that scientists were some of your biggest advocates for going cloud native. I'm curious about the rest of the work force. I mean, has it been, sometimes introducing new technologies and new ways of doing things can cause consternation among your employees. >> Yeah., but in my organization, we bring a lot of change to the rest of the company. And your right. Sometimes it's well received. But I think when it is well received, is when across the company they can see the productivity gain with our robotics process automation. At a digital workforce, people are able to have, they are able to get a lot more done. And so there is acceptance of that. And very often, the business functions are the ones that introduce the new technologies because they're really interested in it and curious. So it works out well. >> So they're getting more done so >> Yes >> So then they're more satisfied with their work and life >> Yes >> And, exactly. So tell our viewers a little bit more about what's next for this partnership, for this relationship, in terms of new technologies. In terms of what you hope to be able to accomplish in the years to come. >> So, I can start. I really think that's what is next for us is to move a little faster. So, in our cloud journey, as I mentioned, we started 10 years ago and then, we've build on what we've learned. So, as an example, we put our commercial data warehouse into a Amazon Redshift. And then that laid the foundation for us to do, for example, rapid data labs. We started by building some data lakes in HR and R and D. And then, by the time we got to doing that for manufacturing, we did it serverless. And so we've had a nice progression based on learning and going the next step. But I think, we're to the point where the technology's evolving so quickly we can move a lot faster and get the benefits faster. So for me, that's what I view as what's next. >> Shalu, anything? >> Yeah. I would just add that I think analytics set the core. I think there is such a strong foundation set here that now it's about how are we going to extrapolate from there. And really look at bot machine learning and what that could do for us. And that, and we will take a lot from what we've learned here today about actually evolving that journey. And I think the best part is the foundation is set strong. And now it's about accelerating into those specific business areas as well. So I would say analytics and really extending our machine learning capabilities. >> So move faster, analytics machine learning. Great. So we're going to be talking about it next year's summit. Well, Kathy and Shalu, thank you so much for coming on theCube. This was a lot of fun. >> Yes. It was. >> (in unison) Thank you. >> I'm Rebecca Knight. We will have more of theCube's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit.
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. And I'm joined by Kathleen Natriello. but I would love you to just start out, Kathleen, And the way that they work is that And so we started our cloud journey about 10 years ago. And also, with this partnership, using AWS, And the teams have gone on with Yes. So you're not only migrating existing applications, So I mentioned earlier that we started our journey So can you actually bring it back down to earth a little bit And they will report back to us And both from the patient experience, and the partnership we have with Accenture here, One of the things that's so interesting And part of the way, one of the reasons And how, and how is that? And it's about how we start the conversation. I'm curious about the rest of the work force. And so there is acceptance of that. In terms of what you hope to be able And then, by the time we got to doing that And that, and we will take a lot Well, Kathy and Shalu, thank you so much of the AWS Executive Summit
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Annette Rippert, Accenture & Mahmoud El-Assir, Verizon | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas. It's theCUBE. Covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back, everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have today, Mahmoud El Assir, he is the CTO and Senior Vice President of Global Technology Services at Verizon. And Annette Rippert, Senior Managing Director, Accenture Technology, North America. Thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. >> Great to be here. >> Thanks for having us. >> So we are talking today about Verizon's migration to the cloud, but Verizon is a company that many people have familiarity with, Mahmoud. Just lay out a few facts and figures for our viewers here. >> Sure, I'll say Verizon is Fortune 16 company. Last year we made $126 billion dollars from our, kind of, loyal customers. We are, today we deployed, we were the first people to deploy 5G. And we have 98% coverage in U.S., so we are America's fastest and most reliable wireless service. >> So it's a company that touches so many of our lives. >> Yup. >> Earlier this year, Verizon selected AWS as its preferred cloud provider. What was, one, what was the impetus for moving to the cloud? And two why AWS? >> Yeah, that's a great question. But I'd like to zoom out a little but more and talk about what is Verizon? What's our mission and how kind of tackling it? So when you think about Verizon, our mission is to deliver the promise of the digital world, right? Enable, deploy 5G and enable the 4th Industrial Revolution. And as part of this, it's all about empowering humans to do more, right? And in global technology solutions our winning aspiration is to develop products and services that our customers and employees love. And then we, and also to be the destination for world class technology talent. And be the investment innovation center for the company. So when it comes to digital transformation we look at the enables and where we want to invest our energy and how do you want to leverage the right partners. So the heart of our technology transformation is the public cloud. When you think about what the public cloud, it's like where you want us. It will allow us to spend more of our energy building solutions and for our customers. And creating value for our customers. Also public cloud will allow us, and or business, to experiment faster, better and cheaper. In technology our focus is to always save on efficiency, speed and innovation. So that is our kind of model and at the heart of this, public cloud is a key kind of element for our journey. >> Well I want to get into that journey a little bit more, but Annette, I want to bring you into the conversation here. So, Verizon is one of the leading communications companies that is migrating to the cloud at this scale. >> Yes. >> What are some of the lessons, as you have helped and observed and also helped this partnership grow, what are some of the key takeaways that you would say? >> Well, I think there is a couple you know, if you take a look at some of the lessons that our clients learn. You know when at Accenture we go into the market really helping our clients think about how do we leverage technology for achieving business outcomes. You just talked about some extraordinary business outcomes that you're looking to achieve and you'll do that through a variety of things, including leveraging technology. And so, just like that we encourage our clients to be thinking about what is the business innovation? What is the outcome? The disruption that we're looking to achieve through leveraging technologies like AWS, right? I think secondly, if you think a little bit about the importance in that journey of communicating that vision. Of what will it mean to be able to leverage that kind of technology? You just communicated a very strong vision. And that's so important to the change journey that many of these organizations go on. You know there is the importance of the investment strategy, but ultimately, the innovation that the organization itself the engineers within the organization are a part of delivering, you know, the kind of innovation that you'll be delivering is really, it will not only make such a big impact on those in your enterprise, delivering that. But, you know, to all of us who are consumers of your business strategy which will be fabulous. And I think, in the end, you know, one of the most exciting things, and it's really sitting Alexis, as we were talking a little bit about some of what Verizon is doing earlier in the day, one of the most important things is really thinking about how this provides an opportunity for the enterprise to change. So, you know, moving to be a much more agile enterprise, being able to respond to market changes, and certainly in the business that you're in, the market is changing everyday. And so by leveraging innovative products like AWS' platform, you know it really provides the opportunity to constantly leverage new technology in that environment. >> And that, as you said, the market is changing everyday and customers, they're demanding things and companies are providing customers with things they don't even know that they want until they have them in their hands. How, at a time when customer differentiation is such a key competitive advantage, how are you staying ahead of the game and making sure that you know you're sort of getting inside the heads of your customers? And then you're also delivering what they want and expect. >> Customers comes first at Verizon, right? So it's at the heart of our technology is also leveraging emerging technology. So cloud is one, scaling AIML is another one. One of the big programs we're doing is, how do you move personalization to one-on-one personalization? How do you make every customer feel they have their own network, our network. Like their own network that's personalized for their needs. There own experience, their own plans. Their own recognition. So that's key. So today when you think about most companies do segmentation or personalization at the cluster level. So one of the biggest things is we're shifting now from systems of engagement, and systems of records. We're inserting systems of insights. A system of insight allows to build the DNA for every customer and will allow us to personalize the customer experience for every customer at the customer level based on all the data, kind of, we know about them, from the data they use with us, and will allow us to personalize their experience at every touch point. >> So what, how would that look like? What will a personalized customer experience at Verizon look like in the future going forward? What are some of your goals and aspirations? >> Imagine you're like a, you've bought every iPhone, since iPhone one through like iPhone ten, right? >> I can imagine that. >> So you're an iPhone enthusiast, right? So, when you come up on our website recommend, like the iPhone, the next iPhone say, the next iPhone is up, the next iPhone red is up or so. So we know more about you and your history and we recommend right accessories, we recommend and so we tell you, hey this stuff is coming. So you feel we're watching out for you. You're like we know, we know you. We know you better than anybody. So at any touch point when you come to us we kind of tell you what's the next thing for you. And then even when you don't know we, like from a network kind of performance from everything we proactively, kind of cater for you. That's a big one. The other one, how do you, when you want to talk to us, how do you get leverage technology like Chatbots and conversationally AVRs and stuff. And make sure you feel you're like, we know you. If you have a different accent, we recognize the accent, then you say, hey do you want to speak in that language? >> (laughs) >> So imagine the power of doing that. Versus today you have to do, like you have Spanish AVR, you have to have a, or have a Spanish kind of call center. Imagine through a IML and Chatbots and stuff, you can recognize all the stuff and personalize the experience. Today at Verizon, we are known of our network superiority. And we have great customer experience but we want to be known also for our experience the same way we are known for our network. And we believe that at Verizon, there is always a higher gear. So we all aspire for the higher gear and aspire our customers to feel they have a Verizon for every customer. >> So this, that's from the customer experience. And as you said, the goal is to have the customer feel that the company empathizes with them and really gets them. What about the workforce changes? I mean Annette was talking about the importance of change management and the cultural shift that these kinds of transformations entail. Have you come up against any challenges at Verizon in terms of this migration? >> Sure I would say, at the heart of our kind of transformation, there are four main pillars. The first pillar is, enabling all these modern technologies. This is like cloud, Cloud Native, API, AI, ML. And especially go back to cloud, the time of enabling cloud was very important to get everybody on board at beginning of the journey. So one of our biggest thing is to get like the security team on board, as early in the process as possible, and make sure security team is a development team, not just a kind of a controls team. So having an engineering team on the security side is a big one to kind of automate all this kind of, all the security controls we need in the cloud so we have the right guardrails and have everything automated. Another thing, same thing like with the other teams. Get them on board in the journey have an advisory kind of board with the other team and security team and legal teams and everybody is onboarding on the journey. So that's I'd say key and pay lots of dividends investment upfront but pays lots of dividends so you can move faster. It's like more of a slow down to speed up. So that's a big one. The second one is, technology is one thing, but you need the culture. So you need to have sustainable momentum in this kind of movement. So the proxy we wanted to have is like have AWS certifications. Because you need 10% believers to have momentum. So our proxy to believers is AWS certifications. So we put a program in place we call it: Verizon Cloud Train. And that train basically is like a 12-week, six sprints, and we help our teams prepare for their certification. So last year we did more than a thousand, we have more than 1800 people probably right now certified with AWS. >> That is incredible. >> At the same time, we set up a dojo's, which are like emergent centers. So we have like 40, 50 seats in different cities and with like five six coaches. So if you are a team who wants to come in and move your application to the cloud, we help you do it. If you want to decompartmentalize your application to microservices we help you. If you want to do ABI's, we help you. So we helped you build deep expertise into these technologies we are doing. So that is like, transforming the teams, and up scaling, I would call it up scaling the talent, is key. Hiring great talent in key rolls is also key. The third pillar is changing the way we work from, what you call a project based, to outcome based. And this beyond agile. Agile is an enabler for this, but how do you change the model where everything is outcome based? Where you have the business and the technology team working together to move an outcome. If I want to increase my kind of video-on-demand revenue per customer, everybody making all the changes, experimenting, and making sure that's a need, is moving. It's not like I did my code, I delivered my, I did my testing, I deployed my app. It's what's a business and what's a customer kind of expectation. And fourth one is, how do you establish internal kind of communities and get out of a like the thiefdoms and stuff. And get a culture of kind of sharing and cheering for others. So we have like Dev Ops days internally within the company, bring in external, internal speakers. We have internal kind of intersourcing for some piece of code. So you have to fire on all cylinders I would say. And get as many kind of parties included as early in the process. And have also an objective to have everything as code. And it's a journey, so you have to always keep on exercising new muscles and more muscles and the more muscles you exercise, the faster you can go. >> So Mahmoud, Annette already shared with us her key learnings from your experience and your journey. What would you say, I mean you're hear at AWS reInvent, it's not your first rodeo, you've been to this conference many times before. When you're talking with other CTO's, CIO's and they're saying, hey, so how's it going for you? What's your advice for a company that is really just starting this, this process? >> Sure, I would say the movement to the public cloud is not just a cost play. I mean, cost needs to be, efficiency needs to be there, but that shouldn't be the primary kind of objective. The primary objective should be speed and innovation. At the same time, deliver a cost. Lots of people say, oh do I, is the same, you can't compare it same-for-same. Because it's different. On prem you can do like A, B testing. In the cloud you can do A to Z testing for much cheaper. You don't need everything you have on prem. You can experiment, so think about it as accelerating the speed of innovation. That's the key one. And I said it before, but I'll say it again. It's like all about having the right kind of, from like a security perspective, people will argue, oh public cloud is insecure? I would argue, public cloud can be more secure than on prem because you have all the tools to kind of automatically, kind of protect and detect and recover. And you have more tooling to allow you to be more secure. It's having the right kind of guardrails and the right controls, right automation and right teams. So it's, you have to build muscle across all these fronts. And have them as a front as possible. >> Great, and great note to end on. Thank you so much Mahmoud and Annette. >> Thank you. >> I appreciate it. >> Very good. >> Been really fun having you on the show. >> Thank you. >> Thank you for having us. >> We will have more >> Thanks, Ann. >> from theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit, coming up in just a little bit. (upbeat music)
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Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas. So we are talking today about Verizon's And we have 98% coverage in U.S., So it's a company that touches so many And two why AWS? and how do you want to leverage the right partners. but Annette, I want to bring you into the conversation here. And I think, in the end, you know, And that, as you said, the market is changing everyday So today when you think about most companies So we know more about you and your history the same way we are known for our network. And as you said, the goal is to have the customer So the proxy we wanted to have is and more muscles and the more muscles you exercise, What would you say, I mean you're hear at AWS reInvent, In the cloud you can do A to Z testing for much cheaper. Thank you so much Mahmoud and Annette. from theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit,
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Joe Donahue, Hal Stern & Derek Seymour | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE! Covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have three guests for this segment. We have Joe Donahue, managing director at Accenture. Hal Stern, AVP, IT Engineering Merck Research Labs. And Derek Seymour, Global Partner Leader Industry Verticals at AWS. Thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. >> Thank you! >> So, we're talking today about a new informatics research platform in the pharmaceutical/medical research industry. Will you paint a picture for us right now, Joe, of what it's like today. Sort of what medical research the time frame we're thinking about, the clunkiness of it all. >> Yeah, so it's a great question Rebecca. Drug discovery today generally takes more than a decade, it costs billions of dollars and has a lot of failures in excess of 90%. So it's not an exact science, we're generating more and more data. And at the same time, just our understanding of human disease biology continues to increase. These metrics haven't really changed. If you look back at the last coupe of decades, it's a 10 year plus process and that much money. So we're looking for ways that we can apply technology to really improve the odds of discovering a new drug that could help patients sooner and faster. >> And that will ultimately save lives. So it's a real social problem, a real problem. Why a platform for this? >> I think if you look at basic research, and you talk about basic blood sciences research, the lingua franca there is chemistry and biology. And we still don't really understand all the aspects, all the mechanisms of action that lead to chronic disease or lead to specific disease that we're interested in. So very, very much research is driven by the scientific method. You formulate a hypothesis based on some data, you run an experiment, you collect the data, you analyze it, and you start over again. So your ability to essentially cycle your data through that discovery process is absolutely critical. The problem is that we buy a lot of applications. And the applications were not designed to be able to interchange data freely. There is no platform to the sense of you have one on your phone, or you have one on your server operating system, where things were designed with a fairly small set of standards that say this is how you share data, this is how you represent it, this is how you access it. Instead we have these very top to bottom integrated applications that, quite honestly, they work together through a variety of copy and paste. Sometimes quite literal copy and paste mechanisms. And our goal in producing a platform is we would like to be able to first separate data from the applications to allow it to flow more freely around the cycle, that basic scientific method. Number two, to now start to allow component substitution. So we'll actually start to encourage more innovation in the space, bring in some of the new players. Make it easier to bring in new ideas is there better ways of analyzing the data or better ways of helping shape and formulate and curate those hypothesis. And finally, there's just a lot of parts of this that are fairly common. They're what we call pre competitive. Everybody has to do them. Everybody has to store data, everybody has to get lab instrument information. Everybody has to be able to go capture assay information. It's very hard to do it better than one of your competitors. So we should just all do it the same way. You see this happen in the cable industry, you see this happen at a variety of other industries where there are industry standards for how you accomplish basic commoditized things, and we haven't really had that. So one of the goals is, let's just sit down and find the first things to commoditize and go drive that economic advantage of being able to buy them as opposed to having to go build them bespoke each time. >> So this pre competitive element is really important. Derek, can you talk a little bit about how this platform in particular operates? >> Certainly. Our goal collectively as partners is to help pharma companies and researchers improve their efficiency and effectiveness in the drug discovery process. So the platform that we built brings together content and service and data from the pharma companies in a way that allows them, the researchers, a greater access to share that information. To do analysis, and to spend their time on researching the data and using their science and less on the work of managing an IT environment. So in that way we can both elevate their work and also take away, what we at AWS, call the undifferentiated heavy lifting of managing an IT environment. >> So you're doing the heavy lifting behind the scenes so that the researchers themselves can do what they do, which is focus on the science. So what have we seen so far? What kind of outcomes are we seeing? Particularly because it is in this pre competitive time. >> Well we've just really started, but we're getting a lot of excitement. Merck obviously is our first client, but our intent is that we'll have other pharmaceutical and biotech companies coming on board. And right now we've effectively started to create this two sided marketplace of pharma and biotech companies on one side and the key technology providers and content providers on the other side. We've effectively created that environment where the technology companies can plug in their secret sauce, you know via standardized APIs and micro services, and then the pharmaceutical and biotech companies can leverage those capabilities as part of this industry standard open platform that we're co creating. And so far we've started that process. The results are really encouraging. And the key thing is, you know really two fold. Get the word out there, we're doing that today here. Talking to other pharmaceutical and biotech companies. As well as not only the established technology providers in this space, but also the new comers. 'Cause this type of infrastructure, this type of platform, will enable the new innovative companies, the startup companies, to enter a market that traditionally has been very challenging to get into. Because there's so much data, there's so much legacy infrastructure. We're creating a mechanism that pharmaceutical researchers can take advantage of new technologies faster. For example, the latest algorithms on artificial intelligence and machine learning analyze all of this diverse data that's being generated. >> So that's for the startups, and that's sort of the promise of this kind of platform approach. But what about for a Merck, a established player in this. What kinds of things are you feeling and seeing inside the company? >> You think about this efficient frontier of what does is cost us to run the underlying technology systems that are foundational to our science? And you think about it, there are some things we do which are highly commoditized, we want them to be very efficient. And some things we do, which are very highly specialized, they're highly competitive, and it's okay if they're less efficient. You want to invest your money there. And you really want to invest more in things that are going to drive you a unique competitive advantage. And less in the things that are highly commoditized. The example I use frequently is you could go out and buy a barrel of oil, bring it home, refine it in your backyard, make your own gasoline. It's not recommended. It's messy, it really annoys the neighbors. Especially when it goes wrong. And it's not nearly as cost effective or as convenient as driving over to Exxon Mobil and filling up at the pump. If you're in New Jersey, having someone else even pump it for you. That's kind of the environment we're in right now today where we're refining that barrel of oil for every single application we have. So in doing this, we start to establish the base line of really thinking about refactoring our core applications into those things which can be driven by the economics of the commodity platform and those things which are going to give us unique advantage. We will see things I think, like improved adoption of data standards. We're going to see a lower barrier to entry for new applications, for new ideas. We're also going to see a lower barrier to exit. It'll be easier for us to adopt new ideas. Or to change or to substitute components because they really are built as part of a platform. And you see this, you look at, I would say over time things that have sedimented into AWS. It's been a remarkable story of starting with things that were basically resting our faces on a pausics file system and turned all the sudden into a seamless data base. By sedimenting well defined open source projects, we would like to see some of the same thing happen, where some of the core things we have to go do, entity registration, assay data captured, data management. They should be part of the platform. It's really hard to register an entity better than your competitor. What you do with it, how you describe what you're registering, how you capture intellectual property, how it drives your next invention. Completely bespoke, completely highly competitive. I'm going to keep that. But the underlying mechanics of it, to me it's file system stuff, it's data base stuff. We should leverage the economics of our industry. And again, leverage it as technologist ingredient. It's not the top level brand, chemistry and biology are the top level brand, technology's an ingredient brand we should really use the best ingredients we can. >> When you're hearing this conversation so related to life sciences, medical, bio/pharma research, what are sort of the best practices that have emerged, in terms of the way life sciences approaches its platform, and how it can be applied to other industries? >> What we've seen through the early collaboration with Merck and with Accenture is that bringing together these items in a secure environment, multi talent environment, managed by Accenture, run by AWS. We can put those tools in the hands of the researchers. We can provide them with work flow data analytics capabilities, reporting capabilities, to cover the areas that Hal is talking about so that they can elevate the work that they are doing. Over time, we expect to bring in more components. The application, the platform, will become more feature rich as we add additional third parties. And that's a key element in life science is that the science itself, while it may take place in (mumbles), it's a considerable collaboration across a number of research institutes. Both within the pharma and biotech community. Having this infrastructure in place where those companies and the researchers can come together in a secure manner, we're very proud to be supporting of that. >> So Joe, we started this conversation with you describing the state of medical research today, can you describe what you think it will be in 10 years from now as more pharmaceutical companies adopt this platform approach. And we're talking about the Mercks of the world, but then also those hungry start ups that are also. >> Sure, I think we're starting to see that transition actually happen now. And I think it's the recognition and you start to hear it as you hear some of the pharmaceutical CEO's talking about their business and the transformation. They've always talked about the science. They've always talked about the research. Now they're talking about data and informatics and they're realizing being a pharmaceutical company is not just about the science, it's about the data and you have to be as good and as efficient on the informatics and the IT side as you are on the science side. And that's the transition that we're going through right now. In 10 years, where we all hope we should be, is leveraging modern computing architectures. Existing platform technology to let the organizations focus on what's really important. And that's the science and the data that they generate for the benefit potentially of saving patient's lives in the future. >> So not only focusing on their core competencies, but then also that means that drug discovery will be quicker, that failure rates will go down. >> Even a 10 or 20% improvement in failure rates would be incredibly dramatic to the industry. >> And could save millions of lives. And improve lives and outcomes. Great, well thank you all so much for coming on theCUBE. It's been a really fun and interesting conversation. >> Same here, thank you Rebecca. >> Thank you, thank you. >> Thank you. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more of the AWS Executive Summit and theCUBE's live coverage coming up in just a little bit. (upbeat music)
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Brought to you by Accenture. live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas. platform in the pharmaceutical/medical research industry. And at the same time, just our understanding And that will ultimately save lives. and find the first things to commoditize and go drive Derek, can you talk a little bit about So the platform that we built brings together so that the researchers themselves can do what they do, And the key thing is, you know really two fold. So that's for the startups, and that's sort of that are going to drive you a unique competitive advantage. is that the science itself, while it may take place So Joe, we started this conversation with you And that's the science and the data So not only focusing on their core competencies, Even a 10 or 20% improvement in failure rates Great, well thank you all so much for coming on theCUBE. of the AWS Executive Summit and theCUBE's live coverage
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Takuya Kudo & Hitoshi Ienaka, ARISE Analytics | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas; it's the Cube. Covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to the Cube's live coverage of the AWS executive summit here at the Venetian in Las Vegas Nevada. I'm your host Rebecca Knight. We have two guests for this segment. We have Hitoshi Ienaka the CEO of ARISE Analytics and Takuya Kudo the Chief Sciences Officer at ARISE. Thank you both so much for coming on the program. >> Thank you. >> So I want to start by having you tell our viewers a little bit more about ARISE analytics. >> Well ARISE analytics is a joint venture between KDDI and Accenture. Well last, well last year we established a company yeah. That's family. >> Right and that's you know kind of we provide like tying the capabilities and the KDDI is kind of number two mobile network operator in Japan, has 50 million subscribers, massive data. So that's there a lot of room to cook but they don't have enough capability to support that. So that's why we kind of married together. >> And it helps companies leverage a wealth of knowledge resources and data between firms to bring about digital transformation. >> Right. >> That's what you're doing. So talk a little bit about what you've seen so far. >> Well so we have two assets, KDDI has, well big data and well Accenture has, well a lot of analytic skills. So using this well these assets, we built our integrated analytics platform hosted on a eda-brais. And what our first challenge was to deduce, channel out to the other operators and were which caused a challenge risk to well more than 40 million subscribers and by digging into that data and using machine learning origin and our data includes (mumbles) and life style service usage. And well, we optimize customer channels and contact timing and well to target customers efficiently. And well we well we tried art of well, other event well art of >> (mumbles) >> Yeah yeah. >> Yeah (mumbles) marketing. >> Okay. >> Yeah and we can get a good result and well it was not only due to our activities but only last year, only KDDI well could increase the market share among three network operators in Japan. That is our our achievements yeah. >> That's very impressive! So can you talk a little bit about the initial pilot in particular what you saw. Taku, do want to? >> Right so like as he mentioned like we have two work stream gigantic work stream. One is for consumer facing right. So customer chai and the you know out of on three marketing's or like recommendation engines based upon this stream data because we have massive like this is a consumption data too. Not just about like you know one handset data. In another work stream is a B2B, a business domain which is sounds like not related to mobile network operators but they have massive network to sell to B2B customer. So we utilize those gigantic data, combine those maybe I can mention but data but combine those data creating new service model. So that's quite a new IOT initiatives for B2B layers and consumer initiatives you know to support ongoing current business. >> And you're using this in a variety of sectors in particular I wanted you to ask you about one that you're doing with Toyota and a taxi service. >> Right so (mumbles) so yeah that that one is like five years like example because a, unless otherwise, I don't think that new business model to compete with Uber never happened right? So KDDI provide like Maura Handu said like location data over like you indigenous subscribers creating some, you know demand side riders for (mumbles) right? Over there, on top of that Toyota's transact log, which is technically like kinematics data provide like supply side which is cause, right? Focusing model and taxi also provide like meters, where customer riders get in and get off and combine those three completely different cable and data sets. >> But also with things like weather and those kinds of other >> Exactly yeah. >> outside. >> Open data too. And combine those data sets. We in, we provide, Accenture provides like talents and creating completely new forecasting model it's called AI taxi dispatch model. So now if you go to Tokyo, majority of taxi has our algorithm like Arizona takes in, you know KDDI and Accenture provide it. >> So that's very cool! Can you talk a little bit about what you've learned, about, in terms of when the weather is like this, taxis happen this >> Yeah, so it's of course weather has massive impact over, like if it's mornings specifically lane, it boosts like demands and also events. We have also events data. Maybe I don't know concerts, some famous singer, celebrities came and it's you know boost like riders demands. So that's actually significant impact of our demand focused model. Rather than using pushing like Uber, you strike you know app, mobile app. we actually treated as (mumbles) like taxi actually go because taxi driver and I can see where is a hot spot to pick up riders. And that's what we try to do. So based up on those, you know people don't even have like maybe like my father's age right, that don't have a smartphone they can get the benefit universality right. So that's the base concepts to provide Universal model to those you know without these >> So even people lacking technology >> Right exactly. >> Can still reap the benefits of this kind of approach. >> (mumbles) is universality so that's also our business strategy. Yeah. >> So you're also using this approach in a manufacturing environment. >> Yeah that's right. We are also working with some manufacturing factory. On the factory field were experienced workers can detect machine breakdown before they occur. But well how can that not be passed on to less experienced employees? So we created a live predictive maintenance which alerts companies ahead of time to pre potential breakdowns. Sensors (mumbles) about things like vibrations, temperature and electrical current. The collected data is analyzed by the AI system. So in this way the prediction of machine (mumbles) can be performed by almost anyone. Well it used to be others by only experienced employees before, yeah. >> So it not only helps the company know when a machine is going to fail, it also empowers the employee to fix it him or herself. >> Right it's a preventive way and so it's up and running over the ad-abreis. We use kinesis in late shift you know, learn the functions and over EC2. So that's completely free stock over ad-abreis capability too. >> So what you're describing sounds like it requires a lot of collaboration, a lot of deep relationship building between not only Accenture and KDDI but also the clients that you're working with. Can you describe how you all work together? >> Right. So maybe I'm going to provide that information. So like of course like KDDI's employee has specific domain knowledge and we provide like you know like data science capabilities and also like maybe through the interview right, found workers or like taxi, they have specific domain knowledge So combine those collaboration. It's called two in the box and we collaboratively paired each employees and you know supply the knowledge each other so that's it. Just one is not enough but as a team integrated over database and created a very strong team and that's a you know we try to cherish and that's culture. And the two boost the data science, data driven companies decision-making process. >> So i think our viewers are pretty amazed and impressed with what's going on. But in this era of 5G and IOT, what's next, what are you working at? It's a relatively new partnership. What are what are some of the most exciting things in the pipeline? >> So the (laughs) the very strategic so we strategizing right now in terms of 5G in IOT. But definitely one of the pieces could be like deep learning right? And also about your realities which nobody has done before. So that's where we try to collaborate with other sectors, industries, to create a new. And to do so we need a massive like computation power like GPU servers and we have to rely on the ad-abreis because otherwise we cannot achieve those goals and specifically 5G maybe changing in the game. Maybe like you know low latency and you know wireless connectivity, you know we don't need connections so maybe the factory lining assembly lines. You know completely change the way crispy like edge computing no more. Maybe like for computing, right, in between like Saba and edge because of the 5G. I don't know but we are strategizing now in a very exciting moment. We are doing right now. >> Indeed it is. >> Yeah. >> Well Hitoshi, Taku, thank you so much for coming on the Cube. This was a lot of fun. >> Thank you very much. I'm Rebecca Knight. Stay tuned for more of the Cube's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit coming up just after this. (Uptempo music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. and Takuya Kudo the Chief Sciences Officer at ARISE. So I want to start by having you tell our viewers Well last, well last year we established a company Right and that's you know kind of we provide to bring about digital transformation. So talk a little bit about what you've seen so far. So using this well these assets, Yeah and we can get a good result and well So can you talk a little bit about the initial pilot So customer chai and the you know in particular I wanted you to ask you about one like location data over like you indigenous subscribers So now if you go to Tokyo, So that's the base concepts to provide Universal model (mumbles) is universality so that's also So you're also using this approach So we created a live predictive maintenance So it not only helps the company know when and running over the ad-abreis. and KDDI but also the clients that you're working with. and that's a you know we try to cherish and that's culture. and IOT, what's next, what are you working at? Maybe like you know low latency and you know Well Hitoshi, Taku, thank you so much Thank you very much.
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Gayle Sirard, Chris Ashley, Dr. Justin Marley | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas, it's theCube covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit, brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCube's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian in Las Vegas, I'm your host Rebecca Knight. We have three guests for this segment. Doctor Justin Marley, he is a consultant psychiatrist for the NHS in the U.K., Chris Ashley, Technology Delivery Lead Associate Manager, and Gayle Sirard, Applied Intelligence Lead North America for Accenture, thank you so much the three of you for coming on the show. >> Thanks. >> Well, thanks for having us. >> Very much, yeah. >> I'm really excited about the topic that we're going to have today. which is a home healthcare system for the elderly. I'm going to start with you, Doctor Marley. In terms, can you just provide the context of what, of sort what this problem is with an elderly person living at home, experiencing loneliness, experiencing isolation, can you paint the portrait for our viewers? >> Yes certainly, so the older adult population is heterogeneous, but what happens is as people get older they retire from work, they lose part of their purpose in life, sadly they lose loved ones in their lives, and can often find themselves at home by themselves. As people get older, they start to develop cognitive impairment, it may not be at the level of dementia or it may be at the level of dementia. And so, they become increasingly isolated. And there's something called a digital divide, which is basically, we're living in a connected world which is permeated with digital technology to help connect people. The older adult population haven't grown up with this technology, so they're a little bit disconnected from all of this, which just adds to everything else. >> So what is the idea here, so he just described older people who are lonely, who are experiencing forgetfulness, they've lost a lot of their friends and social connections. So what's the answer, what's the solution here? >> Our mission is to help people feel socially connected in this, it's always changing, this digital world and stay independent in their own home for a bit longer. So, what we've done is we've made an Alexa Skill and web portal. So, an Alexa Skill is just like an app on your iPhone. And it's really about day to day help. Everyday, little things, so medicine reminders or finding things that are happening in their area. And just a bit more independence, a bit more joy day to day. >> So Gayle, so what did this look in practice? So we have this Alexa who is in a person's home and reminding the person to take his or her pills and just providing a little connection. So, just describe to me what it looks like. >> Yeah, so I mean, well if you kind of take a step back a minute and you think about this, as Doctor described right, the impact of an individual sitting at home alone and you think about their daily lives and what they're doing, this solution starts by really thinking about what are they doing on a daily basis and what's going to motivate them to get up and get engaged? So, fundamentally this solution thinks about the process that they do and it's constantly learning the behaviors that they're doing on a daily basis and as you know there's constant reminders. You start to get forgetful, so there's activities that you have to do and if you don't do, you become stagnant, lonely. And so, getting a system that allows them to learn their behaviors, understand what those behaviors are, and what's going to motivate them to wake up, get excited everyday, feel engaged. Fundamentally, this system is about learning that and nudging them to get engaged and move forward. The thing I really love about this is, if you think about sort of what we're doing here, fundamentally we're taking really sophisticated technologies, artificial intelligence, and voice recognition and applying it to an everyday process. Which is like so exciting to see the application of the elderly adopting a solution like this. And being able to reach out and engage through this new technology channel. >> And it is, as you said, learning the behaviors, it's learning their proclivities, but it's also providing a bit of social interaction for these people who are incredibly lonely. What have you seen, Doctor Marley? >> So, what we've seen is from the Hanover Project, which the Liquid Studio team in London have been working on. Which is some of the work in sheltered accommodation with older adults and Chris can talk a little bit about that, we've also been trialing it in a young onset dementia group, as well. So, we're looking at people with dementia across the lifespan, both young and old. And we've had some very promising feedback from the younger group, as well. >> So yes, how are you using this for people who are experiencing the onset of dementia? >> So, the idea is that, well first of all what we've had to do is to start a trial, a pilot study. So, we're currently going through the ethics committee process, which is very important for vulnerable adults, we can't just trial a new technology in this group, but we've had a design session with the Liquid Studio team, they've come in and they've showcased the technology within the group. And this is a group of people with young onset dementia and their carers, and we've had some very interesting feedback about how they can communicate with it and how easy it is to understand, and some of the features that we've been developing, such as the information about the condition that they can access from the home care solution. >> Chris, I wanted to ask you about the role of empathy in technology, so here's artificial intelligence which is it's not human intelligence. >> Absolutely. >> It's not our human social intelligence, but yet empathy is so important. Particularly in a technology like this. Can you, can you talk about how you approach this question? >> So, I take your point completely. It is AI, it's not a real human. And ultimately, we would love it if every single old person had human contact everyday, but it's just not the case. And I have sat with people, one of whom is my nan, and genuinely she was just like, it's really nice to have a voice in the house, my grandad's been dead for 15 years, she's been alone for 15 years in that same house and she loves it, when Alexa sang her Happy Birthday because it was configured with the birth, I put her birthday in and she was just like, I love it. She says goodnight to it's like, oh sleep well, I do call her regularly, but knowing that she has that is amazing. >> So it's giving peace of mind to the loved ones, too. >> Absolutely, yeah. >> Exactly, so talk a little bit more about what, so we've already seen great success, adoption is on the rise, what are some of things that you hope to add to this application going forward? >> So, we see it at the moment as a companion. So, it might be for people with dementia. It might just be for people who are alone and they feel a bit socially isolated. So, the Alexa platform is very powerful. It offers a very simple way to do things, like radio, if you want to mess around with an iPad, unlock it, make sure it's charged, find your contacts, call it, it's much easier to say, Alexa call my daughter. So, that's the things that we have and that's a great service, what we can add very quickly is IoT sensors, so if you put a sensor on the fridge, on the bathroom door, in the bed, you work out whether people are sleeping enough, whether they're eating enough food, whether they're drinking enough. And you're augmenting that role of the caregiver that comes along and sees, hang on, this person hasn't been sleeping very well at all for the last few days. One of the things we get people to do when they interact with home care, is just say, how are you feeling today? And they say, good or bad, and over time you build up a picture of that person's mental health. >> Because Alexa has built a rapport with her roommate. >> Yeah, absolutely. >> So, what you're describing it sounds like a very user-friendly, a straightforward interface that is perfect for people on the other side of the digital divide, as you just described. So, how do you work with technologists, Doctor Marley, in terms of helping the technologists understand where these customers are, I mean so many, I had a member of my family who had Alzheimer's and the idea was meet the person where they are. So, if they come to you and tell you that it's Christmas Day and you say, it is, Merry Christmas, but how do you help the technologists sort of get that? I mean it comes back to the empathy. >> So, in terms of where the person is, there are many different barriers to the use of technology, the sensor impairment, there's for example if someone has a moderate to severe level of dementia, then it would be very difficult for them to interact with the device. So, we have to kind of work with carers to work with them. So, there's all sorts of kind of complications about taking this out into the real world. And what we're also looking to do is develop a service with the AI at the front end, backed up by healthcare professionals at the back end. So, that we can quickly escalate if there's problems because the last thing that you want is someone to run into problems, for the technology to be able to detect that there's something is amiss, and not being able to do anything about it. So, I think combining the AI with all of the warning signs flagged up by the algorithms with healthcare professionals in the background ready to escalate in-house services is the best of both worlds. And gets the right services to the person at the right time, and I think that's only possible through this combination. >> Yeah, it's an extraordinary story. >> It is. >> It's really been a great conversation. Thank you all so much for coming on theCube and sharing it with our viewers. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> It's a pleasure, thank you very much. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, that wraps up our coverage of today's AWS Executive Summit. Join us tomorrow for more from AWS re:Invent. (quirky upbeat music)
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AWS Accenture Executive Summit, brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian I'm going to start with you, Doctor Marley. level of dementia or it may be at the level of dementia. So what is the idea here, so he just And it's really about day to day help. and reminding the person to take his or her pills have to do and if you don't do, you become stagnant, lonely. And it is, as you said, learning the behaviors, Which is some of the work in sheltered accommodation and some of the features that we've been developing, Chris, I wanted to ask you about the role of empathy Particularly in a technology like this. had human contact everyday, but it's just not the case. to the loved ones, too. in the bed, you work out whether people are sleeping enough, with her roommate. So, if they come to you and tell you that it's And gets the right services to the person at the right time, Yeah, it's an extraordinary and sharing it with our viewers. of today's AWS Executive Summit.
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Miha Kralj, Matt Lancaster, Merim Becirovic | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas it's theCUBE, covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit, brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian in Las Vegas. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have three guests for this segment, we have Merim Becirovic he is the Managing Director of Accenture's Global Cloud Initiative. Matt Lancaster, Associate Director of Technology, Architecture, Science, and Miha Kralj, Managing Director of Cloud Strategy at Accenture, thank you so much for coming on the show. >> Pleasure. >> Thank you. >> Thank you for returning, I should say, Miha, you're a veteran. We're talking today about event-driven architecture. Before we get into the nuts and bolts of it, I need a definition, so what is event-driven architecture? >> Sure, so event-driven architecture, I think the simplest way to think about it is when we're doing complex series of transactions it's actually breaking it down into its constituent pieces and treating all of the segments of a transaction as separate events that can be reacted to as they happen. So if you're shopping and you're putting something in the cart, that's an event. If you're going to the next page, that's another event, if you're checking out, that's another event, right? And as opposed to treating those all as one step follows the other, right, a lot of times there are sequences and things that can happen in between there. If there's a next best offer or a product marketing interstitial that needs to be put in those things can be reacted to and composed much more simply than actually writing all the logic to put them in a big sequence. >> So on a high level I would say it's an architectural style, right, it's a style of putting systems together, which is an evolution of the most common styles that we used so far, and we went through several evolutions, about every decade we get a new and better architectural style, so a reactive event-driven style is just the one that is currently shaping to be the one that is going to replace the older architectural style called microservices. >> So why would an organization implement this event-driven architecture what kind of business challenges would the organization be looking to solve? >> Well if you want I'll start there, I mean just think so, you have a world where today I believe we're in the slowest time we're ever going to be from a technology perspective. >> Which is mind boggling. >> And what we saw this morning, right gentlemen, the amount of innovation that everyone is doing including AWS is going to be mind-numbing, so the question is going to be, how can we and what tools can we use to help us adapt for those capabilities in the future? So I think that's really one of the things is, Matt'll say I think it's easier than ever now, it was harder before but it's getting easier as the providers and everyone else is making their services more readily available for consumption. >> I think in a lot of ways as an industry, we're almost forced to move to this paradigm, whether we like it or not because I think everyone understands that every company has now become a software company once again, whether they like it or not and that means major changes to the organization model, the way people deliver. We need to be much more product-focused, and teams need to own their product and things like that, right, which is becoming the common business model that successful companies are operating around. If the architecture is still a traditional command and control architecture, two years later they're going to be back to that old work style, and frankly the market is going to punish them out of existence. So we need something where all of these wonderful, complex components that we saw in the sessions today can be decomposed into one team doing one thing with one set of components and they don't necessarily need to be aware of what all the other teams are doing because they just need to react to one another's events when they're interested in them. >> So the system, business systems always grow to the largest possible extent of what is still manageable and controllable, and using traditional architectures on top of this modern technology that allows us now to make way more complex systems, we already having clients that we see that the governance control and transparency is at its limit. So if we want to go beyond that barrier of complexity and not fear that suddenly systems will become chaotic, we need a new architectural style and we see already those limits happening, and that's why we already have an answer, we have an answer that is after microservice architecture which is reactive event-driven. >> Would you say that moving to this kind of architecture is difficult? >> It's a great question and I think it's gotten a bit easier. There's definitely some magic to actually taking a step back and decomposing the business systems and saying this component or this piece of the transaction or this piece of the organization fundamentally does this, these business events are what they really need to focus on and then make the components, functions, and systems actually emit and perform the business logic of those events and do more demand-driven design, then get into picking and choosing which, whether it's serverless functions or micro-nano-service some Kubernetes, the components allow us to cleanly separate and stream out events and react to each other but if we don't do that initial stuff on the business side, then it becomes really difficult to know who gets value where. >> I think the art of the possible in this space is very much anything can happen, and I think about things like we run a lot of our Cloud footprint, we're already 93% of the public Cloud for Accenture's IT, and I think about how we consume those things, what can we optimize, how can we do things differently, even on the concept of running infrastructure, if I have better event-driven capabilities, I can react more efficiently, I can really make a consumable service more utility service than I've ever had before, so I think that's one of the draws for me. >> When you say difficult, here is if developers that are writing code today and they already went through a couple of waves of reinventing themselves, if they already know that they need to do that again, then it's not difficult. For the developers that feel that they arrived and they already can code for the Cloud and that's it it's a difficult reinvention when they realize that although yes, their existing knowledge of procedural programming of traditional way of coding systems in the Cloud, they need to throw lots of that knowledge away and relearn how the systems are properly composed so they use Cloud the way that Cloud was intended to be used. >> And just to add to that a little bit, there's a lot of folks that will take a very traditional imperative programming paradigm and try to jam it into things like AWS Lambda and Kinesis streaming and what they end up with the end is sort of a tortured circus freak of an architecture. It doesn't help anyone and ultimately people spend six months and then get super discouraged on doing this stuff when they could have taken a step back and done it right the first time which I think is why it's important to understand that's only a few code composable components, the more layers you put in, the more complexity you're adding, the more you horizontally grow the better off you are. And if you're streaming events, you have functions that react to those events, microservices that react to those events and then gateways that can actually stream those out to interfaces, that's all you need. We don't need to overcomplicate this like we have every other generation of architecture. >> I'm trying to picture that tortured circus freak of an architecture, it's ugh, in terms of Accenture's own experience in this area I know that your company is already leveraging event-driven architecture. Can you tell our viewers a little bit more about your own experience? >> So let's start with our clients first. We serve a very broad spectrum of clients. And luckily not everybody is at the forefront and also not everybody is at the tail-end, right. We have lots of clients in the high tech industry in communications and media where the needs for the leading edge is very clear, and we are focusing particularly when it comes to that latest innovation, event-driven included, particularly on those industries. We kind of belong in the front part of there, and that's why Merim and his organization is extremely versed in those modern styles. >> I think just to add to that a little bit, since I play in a slightly different space than you most of the time, I work with a lot of banks, insurance companies, capital markets, and the adoption that I see in those industries of this stuff is massive. The problem with most banks is that they've tried to change core banking systems now two or three times, they're still sitting on mainframe stuff that they built in the 70's and 80's and most of what they with payments and with different financial services and stuff they can't actually add that stuff to the speed and convenience that their customers are determining and so there's a lot of fintech startups that are disrupting that market. And if they don't change those core systems and they don't become more event-driven and we don't decouple, decompose and then eventually rebuild we're going to find folks really fall behind in the marketplace, and I think they realize that. The real magic of this is that we can, it's not a big bang three year transformation anymore, right we can build the core and then realize value within the first six months and then continually iterate and evolve and hollow out those legacy systems and eventually turn them off which is very opposed to the old way of saying we're going to do this three to five year transformation, after five years, you probably maybe kind of will realize some technology value. And to Merim's point earlier, no CEO is going to go in front of his board or her board and pitch a five year transformation, that's a really good way to get fired. >> Yeah even in our own internal environments one of the things we always think about is what are we trying first, what are we failing fast at, 'cause that's one of the key things for us and all of these capabilities and the other thing, what's happening with this space, Cloud, microservices, event-driven architectures, everything is enabling this powerful change of making for the first time I would say in a long time the network engineer, the app architect, the technical architect, the infrastructure engineer, every one of them working together to start to think about this, all of these things are happening in my environment, these events are happening, what should I do differently? How does this help me automate my capabilities? How do I react to things differently? How do I make sure that I'm catching my infrastructure before it fails, my application before it fails, there's many many levers that you could use in this space, and we're frankly trying all of them because I think the goal to me that helps is I want an automated IT experience that has less people managing it but more people reacting to the events and we're creating the world where this event-driven architecture you could say eventually is going to evolve into all this AI stuff, we're going to be the managers of AI in the future. The AI's going to run our infrastructure and I think that's the most fun part part about this. >> I think two additional points to that, I think it was very well said, one of the things the really excites me about this space is that it becomes very understand... The technology piece, the software piece becomes very understandable to the folks who understand the business side and the marketing side, et cetera. If what you're doing is just sending out events which are a piece of business functionality or marketing functionality or whatever it becomes explicable in plain English, you're reacting to one another's simple business events, and then all of those composed together can create the same value chain that before had to take six months and only a math PhD could understand. (laughing) >> It's approachable to much broader businesspeople, not just to arcane, unique eyes. >> Yeah and to the AI point I think one of the most disappointing things to me in our industry is that most of the AI projects have boiled down to a shitty chat bot that nobody actually likes to interact with. >> I know and this is the part we're missing, right. >> Because they can't actually do anything, when you finally get to a person they have none of the same knowledge, so if we democratize that information, it all gets streamed out to all interfaces all at once, and they can say okay, if you didn't get your room in time the system will go ahead and rectify that and it creates a great customer service experience instead of an IVR in text, which nobody likes. >> And I like the point, I think you hit on the point that's very near and dear for me is, as IT practitioners we've dealt a long time with the siloed ownership of data, this democratization of data is a very powerful tool I think that helps gets enabled by some of this event-driven capability because so many times people feel that oh, I own the data, I can't share this with you or I need to understand what you're doing with it, expose your data, give your teams a chance, give them the events, let them react because you don't know what you're going to create coming from it. >> Set your data free, we heard that this morning from Andy Jassy. >> There's very relatable examples of this, right, I mean how many of us have gotten off a flight, the gate has changed, it shows that on your mobile app, you walk up to the gate agent, you're in an unfamiliar airport, where do I go? And they say oh your gate hasn't changed, it's not updated on my screen. You go to the board in the airport, oh it's not updated here either, right. Then you go to the original gate, they say what are you doing here, you have five minutes to get over to the new gate, right? And then you book it all the way over there, you look at the defibrillators on the wall, you're thinking I'm really glad those are here. You get to the gate and they haven't even started boarding yet and you finally get the late boarding announcement, right? It's three bad customer services experience in one, and if all that data goes to all those interfaces all at once you have none of those bad experiences. >> Well if event-driven architecture can solve that problem, I'm all for it. >> You're in? >> Merim, Matt and Miha thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. >> Thanks for having us. - Absolutely, pleasure. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, we will stay tuned for more of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit. (digital music)
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brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit Thank you for returning, I should say, Miha, as separate events that can be reacted to as they happen. and we went through several evolutions, Well if you want I'll start there, so the question is going to be, and frankly the market is going to punish them and not fear that suddenly systems will become chaotic, and react to each other and I think about how we consume those things, and relearn how the systems are properly composed and done it right the first time I know that your company and also not everybody is at the tail-end, right. I think just to add to that a little bit, and the other thing, what's happening with this space, and the marketing side, et cetera. not just to arcane, unique eyes. Yeah and to the AI point and they can say okay, or I need to understand what you're doing with it, we heard that this morning from Andy Jassy. and if all that data can solve that problem, I'm all for it. Merim, Matt and Miha thank you so much Thanks for having us. of the AWS Executive Summit
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Andrew Wilson & Mike Moore, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas It's theCUBE covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian in Las Vegas. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have two guests for this segment. We have Mike Moore, Senior Principal at Accenture Research, and Andrew Wilson, Chief Information Officer at Accenture. Thank you both so much for returning to theCUBE. >> Good to see you as ever, Rebecca, and to be back in Las Vegas as well. >> Exactly, back in Sin City, right, here we are. So our topic is innovation. A buzzword that is so buzzy it's almost boring. Let's start the conversation with just defining innovation. What does innovation mean? >> An objective, a behavior, a way of working. To me, innovation is what we need to do with modern technology to enable the enterprise and the business world and be creative humans and to use disciplines which we didn't typically bring to work before. >> And is it creativity, or is there sort of logic and rationale too? >> I think there's logic and rationale. But there's also entertainment, fun, modern consumer-like experimentation, risk-taking, things of that nature. >> I think that a big key is actually striking a balance between creativity and logic and rationale and that's the really tricky bit, because you need to give your employees the license to be creative but within a certain set of boundaries as well. >> The rules of work have definitely changed, and behaviors that we encourage, even the clothes we wear, how we work, when we work, those are all characteristic of a more innovative, accepting diverse world, and a world that can keep up with the modern technology and the advancements and the announcements like we're hearing about here at re:Invent. >> It's the ultimate right brain, left brain behavior and activity. So Mike, you've done some research recently about the hallmarks of innovative companies, what they do differently from the ones that are not innovative, that are failing here, so tell our viewers a little bit about what you've found in your research. >> We surveyed 840 executives from a variety of different companies, different industries, different geographies, to understand their approach to innovation, and those who were doing it particularly well, and those maybe not so well. And around about 14 percent of our respondents were turning their investments in innovation into accelerated growth, and there were lots of different reasons for their success but three things really stood out. So first of all their outcome lacked in terms of the way they approach innovation, so they put a clear set of processes around their innovation activities, and then linked those to operational and financial performance metrics. They're also disruption minded, so they're not just pursuing incremental tweaks to their products and services, but their investing in disruptive technologies that could actually create entirely new markets. And then finally they're change orientated. They're not just using innovation to change their products and services, but also to fundamentally change the nature of their own organizations as a whole. >> So 14 percent are knocking it out of the park. Does that mean the rest of them are all laggards or are sort of some in the middle? What is the state of innovation in industry today, would you say, Andrew? >> I would say it's hugely variable by industry, geography, type of company, and individual instance of leader and culture, but I am sure that the most successful companies, those that are pivoting to the new, those that are imaginative, those that have recently arrived, all have that DNA that we're describing, all have that way of working, all have that ability to operate cleverly, intelligently, humorously, and at speed. I think innovation is very much characterized by something that can be fast-failed, do, step, move sideways, do again. The way of working has changed in modern enterprises. We as CIO's have to accept that. We have to speed up. We have to create the environment in where that productivity, where that creation can occur, and I think all of that's key. >> You keep mentioning this, the way of working has changed, and I think we all sort of know what you mean but explain a little bit what you're seeing. >> Experimentation, the ability to get more done with the resources that you have. So here we are at AWS re:Invent, cloud-based operations. Cloud gives you, gives me as a CIO the means to do more, more quickly, more rapidly, on a greater scale, in more places that I ever could have imagined in my old old-fashioned data senses. So the services we can consume, the data we can connect together, the artificial intelligence we can bring to it, the consumer-like experience. All of those things, which by the way, are drawing on innovative behaviors in their own right, are absolutely what the game is about now. >> How does AWS figure into your cloud transformation? >> Well for our cloud transformation at Accenture, AWS is one of the core cloud platform providers who power Accenture. We are nearly 95 percent in cloud. So as an organization that's very pronounced, and typically ahead of most organizations. But we sort of have to be, don't we? I mean, we have to be our own North Star. I can't sit here and explain the virtues of what Accenture can bring to a client's cloud transformation if we haven't already done it to ourselves. And by the way, that drew on innovative approaches, risk-taking approaches because over the last three years we've moved Accenture to the cloud. >> So I love how you said it, we are our own North Star, and other people would say we eat our own dog food, I mean that's just kind of more gross, but in terms of having experienced this transformation yourselves, how do you use what you've learned to help your companies transform as well? And make these moves, take these risks, what would you say to that? >> Well I think we keep an eye on the research with our colleagues there, they're our own North Star. I think we look at the ecosystem, we assess readiness for enterprise, security compliance, scale, availability, and then we also look and say, and what's ready for prime time in terms of Accenture scale, half a million people nearly. You bring all of those things together and it's a recipe, and that's why we consult our business, that's why we guide and educate and experiment and innovate together. And that's very much how we adopted cloud, it's very much how we do a number of other things, and the creative services we have. >> In terms of, let's get back to the research. So how do you, I mean as you said, the research is, as Andrew said, it's something that executive leaders are looking at to figure out what's actually happening in the market as well as what's happening within the organization itself. So how do you set your research agenda in terms of figuring out where you want to focus your time and energy and resources. >> Well I think we do it in a very similar way to in which we consult with clients, we speak to them. We talk to them about some of the key issues that they're facing and we always interview a series of executives and also academics to get their perspective at the start of their project. And that's something that we did in this particular instance and what we heard from many executives was that, to the point that Andrew was making before, the speed and scale of innovation today is happening at a completely different pace than in the past. So product cycle times are just diminishing in every single industry and as a consequence, executives now need to build new innovation units to make sure that they can respond to that changing market. So that's we wanted to explore through the research. >> So in this research, with the 14 percent doing it well, the 86 percent sort of either, somewhere on the spectrum of doing terribly or figuring things out, getting better, what are their pain points, and what's your advice to those companies? >> Well I think, and we take the positive spin on it in terms of what the companies are doing well, one of the points that Andrew was making before was how Accenture works with other partners to become more innovative itself. And that's something that we saw many of the high performing companies doing. So many of them were what we call networks powers. Not just innovating using their own resources, their own people, but their drawing on a broader ecosystem of partners to bring the very best products and services to their customers, and their spending not just on R and D internally but also on accelerators, incubators, technology based M and A, and actually their spending as much on inorganic innovation as they are on organic innovation. >> At Accenture we actually help our clients look for trap value, and what we mean by that is if an organization with a history, with a set of business processes, a set of technologies, and a set of disciplines and employees that have been successful and worked possibly for decades in that model, then they're going to be in some pretty tight guide rails. How do you innovate out of that, to deal with all of the destruction that's now available, good healthy disruption, that actually reveals the next level of efficiency, customer satisfaction, product creativity, and innovation in it's own right, so that's innovation in action, if you like. >> I want to ask, here we are at AWS re:Invent, Andy Jassy on the main stage this morning announcing a dizzying number of new products, services, and AWS, this is Amazon, this is a huge company that really seems to know how to innovate, and do it constantly, but is that is that, can every company be Amazon? You know what I'm saying? I mean, is this really possible and attainable? >> Is such a thing as innovation fatigue perhaps? >> Well, exactly, right! >> My view is that you have to find a way to make innovation a constant and a norm. It doesn't mean that you always will have to operate with the same ridiculous pace, but creativity and pace do go hand in hand to a point, but to be ahead, to stay ahead, and to lead an organization of technologists, who can comprehend all of these announcements, so you have to innovate in both how you lead and operate as well. It's not just your product, it's your behaviors, because there's just so much coming all the time. >> Right, and we've seen a number of large companies, not necessarily technology companies, but I'm thinking of Sears and Toys-R-Us, that have really, you've seen what can happen, the cautionary tales. >> Look at the attrition in the Fortune 500, and you can see how companies have a, a half life now, which perhaps is very different to 20 or 30 years ago. >> Right, right, exactly. Well, Mike and Andrew, thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. This was a really fascinating discussion. >> Thanks. >> Thank you, good to see you again. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, stay tuned for more of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit. (techno music)
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Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit here and to be back in Las Vegas as well. Exactly, back in Sin City, right, here we are. and to use disciplines which we didn't typically bring I think there's logic and rationale. and that's the really tricky bit, and behaviors that we encourage, It's the ultimate right brain, left brain behavior and then linked those to operational Does that mean the rest of them are all laggards all have that ability to operate cleverly, intelligently, and I think we all sort of know what you mean So the services we can consume, I can't sit here and explain the virtues and the creative services we have. in the market as well as and also academics to get their perspective of the high performing companies doing. and employees that have been successful and to lead an organization of technologists, Right, and we've seen a number of large companies, and you can see how companies have a, a half life now, Well, Mike and Andrew, of the AWS Executive Summit.
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Chad Duncan, Accenture & Jim Goode, Capital One | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live (lively music) from Las Vegas it's the Cube covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to The Cube's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit I'm your host Rebecca Knight. We have two guests for this segment we have Chad Duncan, Managing Director of Financial Services Technology Advisory Cloud Lead North America at Accenture, it's quite a long title. (laughs) And Jim Good, Senior Director Product and Portfolio Delivery at Capital One. Thank you both so much for coming on the show. >> Thanks for having us. >> Thank you. >> So we're talking today about Capital One's migration to the Cloud, but Jim, let's start out with Capital One the bank and why moving to the Cloud was a business imperative for you. >> Essentially, as we look at Capital One, we have national reach and in credit cards, people are very familiar with that, but we also wanted national reach in banking services too. And the approach we're using is not to go the old fashioned way, bricks and mortar, but it's to actually go more into the way people like to interact with their financial services partners and that's through mobile devices. And the only way to really get the kind of innovation you need, and to get the features to customers that they want on a regular basis is to be a very nimble, and use strategies like DevOps, et cetera. And the Cloud really puts us in the position to do that. By the dynamic provisioning of infrastructure, all the different things that our Agile practices can take advantage of so that we can regularly deliver new features to customers that they want. >> So, Agile delivery, you mentioned Agile. What is it about Capital One's culture in terms of it's approach to innovation that sort of enables that? >> Well we've adopted Agile a number of years ago and this is something where we'd like to really empower teams to work with the business to deliver these features on a recurring basis, regular releases. That's ingrained in our culture. I don't think we'd be able to actually do this Cloud migration without that structure because the teams themselves are doing the work. The teams themselves now have control over the infrastructure. No more centralized group doing all the work for them. It's really distributed to the teams. And so that's really become what's expected of our teams that they can actually deploy when they need to and actually build as needed. Again, without the Cloud, without the AWS services that we're using, we simply would not be able to realize that and the teams could not innovate the way that they are. >> Chad, in terms of you, you've been working with Capital One for a few years now on this migration. What would you say about this company and about how it's migration has gone? >> Their innovation strategy right? They want to be innovative, you heard Jim talk a little bit about that just now, and how they go to market for their customers. How they create new service offerings for their customers. Be their new cafes. Right? They don't have typical branches. You walk into a cafe, you can get a cup of coffee, yes there's financial advisors in there, but that's not the main focus it's not walking into a traditional branch bank. So taking that, if you think about that theme across all of their different product sets, and being able to very quickly and iteratively roll out new products to the market, and services that customers are desiring and really kind of being a disruptor in the industry. Frankly, is the approach that they're taking. >> And is Accenture says, we are living in this age of epic disruption so >> Epic disruption. >> (laughing) Exactly. So Jim, one of the challenges in the migrating legacy platforms is this lack of megadata metadata, I'm sorry. (laughs) Megadata. >> There's megadata. >> There is megadata. >> (laughing) I think we need the aid of the U.S. house bans to talk about that. >> The mega needs meta. (all laughing) >> But this lack of metadata, so how do you overcome that obstacle? >> Well it's been one of the more challenging things that we face. We have a lot of legacy systems that we're kind of unwinding and migrating to the cloud. We're building new platforms for those new services of those. There's been a lot of rolling up the sleeves work just to understand what all this is the old fashioned way. But, what we're really able to do now because as we move things to the Cloud as we move new applications to the Cloud, we're able to use information that's now available to us that was not available to us before. VPC Flow Logs for example, from Amazon, allow us to know what are the connections between all these different services, and we've been able to use some of their tools and other tools that we've developed internally to start to visualize this in a much better way. Would not have been able to do that in our legacy setup. And so this is something that now we're actually using to aid the migrations, to understand how things connect in a much better way. And really, looking forward, we're in a much better place and we now know what we have, and we're able to track it very well. >> So Chad, Capital One is making it sound like it is pretty easy, (laughing) but we know that moving to the Cloud is actually really hard for so many financial institutions. Why has Capital One been able to succeed at a time when so many other banks are really struggling to do this? >> Yeah, I think about it in a couple of ways. They're not afraid to lead and innovate and fail fast, right? So you get out there, you talked about an MVP, and how you would stand up a new surface offering, or one of the applications in the cloud, right? Go ahead and do that, get some momentum, get people excited about the progress that's being made. That's one thing. And really understanding that security shouldn't be an issue, right? There's ways to secure your data in the Cloud. You can run core banking in the Cloud, Capital One's doing that, right? So, there's things like that that some other institutions sort of have analysis paralysis and they're like, "Well I don't know if I can secure my data, "I don't know if I can get the throughput that I need." The data latency may be an issue for banking and really bring the right architects to the table and do that. Capital one did a great job from the beginning of getting their people trained and certified in the Cloud technologies. A lot, mostly with AWS, right? Frankly. And really making that a culture of their organization. They don't consider themselves a financial services institution really. They consider themselves a technology company. >> Yep. >> And that's the culture. When you walk into a Capital One building, not a bank ... >> A Pete's cafe. (laughs) Right? Yeah. >> People center. >> The center, yes right, and headquarters building. You feel like you're walking through a technology company. You don't feel like you're in a bank. And setting that culture and that expectation with all of the Capital One associates I think is a huge key to your success and how you guys were able to get everybody on board. >> Yes. >> You had your CEO your CIO all talking about we're moving to Cloud. We're going to close our data centers. We're going to be all-in in public Cloud and that's the marching orders. And that's the drum beat, right? And you kind of feel that when you're there. >> And also from our inception, we've been a test and learn company and culture. That is what we have built Capital One on is finding out what customers really want, responding to that and iterating, and iterating, and iterating in different offerings. And it's no different with how we've approached our migration to the Cloud. We're going to set the minimum viable product as far as outcomes are concerned. We're going to test and learn, test and learn, test and learn. We learn from those, it's the fail fast kind of mentality, and we learn from some of those failures and adjust. And it's been, again, it really does fit our culture very well historically. >> And that's how, because there are so many trade-offs involved when you're thinking about these things. And is that how you sort of stick with the minimum viable product? This test and learn ethos? >> Well the test and learn is a way to get there. The minimum viable product is like this is our goal let's kind of be focused there so we can get to that. It takes some discipline to be able to say no there's shiny objects over here and over here, but if we go that way it's going to take us a little bit off track. So we spend a lot of time discussing what is MVP for the migration, for an application, whatever it might be, and sticking to that and making sure we stay true to that. So we have regular reviews at a team level, at a program level, to make sure we're staying the course and driving toward that. >> And that's critical. So many of our customers think they have to have it all thought out, all planned out, the entire strategy, all of the different dependencies mapped out, how we're going to develop this in the Cloud and they never get anywhere. Because you can't absorb all of that at once. So you start small, you gain, you iterate, and you go from there. >> When you're talking about getting inside the brains of customers and figuring out what they want and then delivering that, when we think about the bank of the future Capital One has this digital first strategy, what do you envision? For how people will interact with their financial services institution? >> Well I have four kids and they're all in their 20s and so I observe them a lot and I learn from them a lot and I can see what people want to do. They want to use their mobile devices. That's what they want to be able to do. They want to have access to their information at their fingertips, when they want it. The cafes Chad mentioned are kind of our big step toward, it's an educational offering more than anything else. Like here's how you can do that, here's the things you can do with this. It's not a sales oriented thing, it's an educational oriented thing so people can understand what tools they have available, understand what products we have available to help them, and then go about their lives the way they want. >> Great. What are some of the most exciting applications coming down the pipeline in terms of this new way of banking that Capital One is showing us? >> Do you want to take this one? >> We've actually built our primary customer servicing application that our customers use every day native in the Cloud. And we're continuing to iterate on that so I think you don't have to look much further than our mobile app to see what we're super excited about and what we already offer to folks. And again, that's been enabled by our migration to the Cloud so it's going to continue to iterate, we continue to learn from our customers what they want, what new features they want, we continue to build those out. >> Great. >> And even from a call center perspective you guys are using Amazon connect, right? >> Yes we are. >> To man your call centers and that has enabled a different way to interact with the customer. You have more data at your fingertips. You're learning some of the patterns from your customer calls in a way that you've not been able to do that in the past. So enabling some of that data is also been effective and kind of servicing those accounts and having that very good interaction with your customer. >> Great. Chad, Jim, thank you so much for coming on the show it was really fun. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. Thanks. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more of the Cube's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit. (lively music)
SUMMARY :
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Brian Bohan, Roy Bacharach, & Jim Phillips | AWS Executive Summit 2018
(upbeat music) >> Live, from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE. Covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have three guests for this segment. We have Jim Phillips, Cloud Architect, Mutual of Omaha. Roy Bacharach, Senior Principle Technology, Accenture. And Brian Bohan, Global Business Lead, AWS. Thank you so much for coming on the show. >> Thanks for having us. >> Thank you. >> Thanks for having us. >> So we're talking about the transformation of the Contact Center but before we get started there, let's tell our viewers a little bit about Mutual of Omaha, your business, your target demographic and what you do. >> So Mutual of Omaha's a 109 year old insurance company. We have, our biggest market segments are in the senior health space and then, in the life space. So we service customers with a wide variety of needs, everything from Medicare supplement policies so we have like seasonal surges in business and things like that to people who are concerned about like, how do they, how do they prepare for their family for their life insurance needs and things like that. So, we've been around for quite a while. Predominantly, we'd been servicing our customer base through agents and as that shift occurs, right, we've been looking at how do we provide a much more finely focused view of the customer and emphasizing that within our contact centers with the recent creation of our service practice. >> So it was really just this idea of let's think about how to touch the customer in a different way. That that was really the business imperative toward this move. >> Right, so previously, we had, this all started in 2016 when we decided to take a focus on the customers, specifically from the service practice. So instead of service kind of being like an overhead associated with a product line, what we decided to do is we decided to really have something where the focus was on the end to end customer experience and how do we make that consistent across your interaction with Mutual of Omaha. That then lead us to reevaluate how we were doing our contacts centers and that's when we became involved with Roy and Accenture to look at what are our options to really kind of improve that experience for the customer. >> So when a customer like Mutual of Omaha comes to you Roy, with this business problem, what, how do you walk them through it and have them think about it? >> Okay, so we typically start at the top, you know, and understanding not only the business strategy but their current state of their technology architecture. And then, you try to work through the specific gaps, you know, gap analysis. What are they missing to get them there? With Mutual of Omaha, it was really they were being held back by their legacy on premise solution. You know, high levels of technical dept, huge complexity to support maintain and to make the changes. You know, so it was in that analysis we -- It was easy to see that the cloud was probably the best option for them. >> And did Amazon Connect immediately stand out? >> So even initially, when we were looking at options for this, Amazon Connect wasn't actually even on our list, so that was something that was brought to our attention during the sort of short-listing of candidates process. And then, you know, when we really looked at it, it just kind of blew our minds. So, you know, Roy had mentioned about taking a look at the gap analysis. So, as sort of as embarrassing or sad as this may seem, right, the decision to do something is a lot easier when there are a lot of gaps. We had a lot of gaps between what we could deliver with our current technology solution and then, what really the business strategy outcomes were wanting us to do. So, it did make a decision to look at completely sort of reinventing how we do the contact centers a lot easier position to consider. >> Bryan, in terms of the nuts and bolts of making Amazon Connect, can you give our viewers a little sense about really what is the infrastructure we're talking about here? >> So the interesting thing with Amazon Connect is it's really the call center platform capability that Amazon.com has been using for a number of years and that we decided to commercialize and externalize to customers like Mutual of Omaha. And so, like a lot things with AWS, what's nice about it is that it's you can start small. You can layer it in and it can integrate into some of the existing technologies and investments that you've made. It's not a rip and replace and then you can scale it as you see success and you can scale it up and down. So it's very economical as well. And so, it's an area we're really excited to see Mutual of Omaha really on the cutting edge there but we're seeing, with Accenture, a lot of momentum with this platform in insurance, financial services, even as CPG companies become more focused on delivering services, it's changing how they have to interact with customers so it's a great platform for that, a great starting place. >> So Amazon, a famously customer centric company. So what are the kinds of. You think, oh customers will love this but in fact, we were talking before the cameras were rolling, there was a little bit of resistance. >> So you have to think about like, how do you introduce this type of sort of radical change from what was traditionally just an exclusively a hands on service process that was, you know, agents and contact centers with an audience demographic that is not what you would think of as being like cutting edge in terms of technology adoption. But what we found through things like paying a lot of attention to our call flow development with Accenture. Paying lot of attention actually to our voice tuning and getting the voice of the customer to understand like what that voice tuning and how well that worked. We were able to actually get a more positive reception for the Connect solution that we even over like professionally recorded voice talent on it. So, you do have to address like all of the, all of the like customer touch points within the contact center and think about how do you manage the change within your audience demographic and how do you manage that adoption. But, you know, it's your customers, it's your agents. How do you make them comfortable with the solution? Right, because the, you know, customer can detect it, an agents uncomfortable with the solution that they're using. Right, how do you make this kind of like really seamless? So we took a, put a lot of emphasis on customer experience development as part of this. We didn't, we did not take any of our existing call flows and just put them in Connect. So all of our call flows were re-architected. >> What are some of the best practices that have emerged because he has just pointed out so many of the kind of challenges of implementing this new kind of approach and system with both clients and also the workforce itself. I mean, what would you say, what is sort of your advice in best practices that have emerged in terms of Mutual of Omaha's experience? >> You know, I think it's really start with the desired customer experience that you want. You know, so start with that customer experience and then with Amazon Connect, you know, likes Amazon Web Services, you can deliver that experience. So start there, throw out the legacy call flows, the legacy IVR scripts and start from scratch with the customer experience at the top of mind. And then you can get there. >> Yeah, I would second that. The, 'cause managing change internally organization, like if your focus is exclusively on what the customer experience is, that shortcuts a lot of arguments within the organization about what's the right thing to do because you know, everybody tends to kind of sub optimize for whatever their stakeholder perspective is. >> If your clearly focused on what the customer is looking for, that actually clarifies a lot what your internal conversations are. >> How do you three work together in terms of this tri-partnership? Accenture, AWS and Mutual of Omaha. How do you collaborate? >> Yeah, so I guess first from the partnership perspective, like I talked about, Connect and modernizing customer care, is a really big focus area for us as a partnership and a big investment area. So, we worked with Accenture and gotten their teams very much skilled up on the new platform and they have done a great job of integrating it into their existing practice. So now, when we come to a customer like Mutual of Omaha, we, you know, Accenture's got a very strong point of view, they've got technology skills behind it and they know how the solution can solve customer problems. So that's my job is to make sure that foundation is there and then, the team takes it from there really with the client. >> Yeah, I would say our experience with Amazon around this, is they're really very interested in the experience that we're having and how we can provide feedback around our particular use cases and understanding like what are the types of, what are the types of things that would make our stuff more successful. So because we work with a combination of health and life insurance products, things like HIPAA eligibility for services are a big deal for us and when you look at how the ecosystem is all tied together with Connect, that has really kind of, we've got a lot of attention and help from Amazon with regards to dealing with like HIPAA incompliance issues associated with how we put the solutions together and it's been really helpful for us. >> I want to talk about the role of empathy in this kind of technology, because as we know, we are dealing with really difficult times in peoples' lives. That they are in need of these kinds of products and services. So how do you make sure that the technology is taking that into account? >> Yeah, that's an excellent point. So we tend to think of financial services products as kind of sort of emotionally neutral or cold even, right? But when you're dealing with insurance, and a lot of times you're dealing with people who are calling and they're in a very emotional sort of situation. The, one of the things that is really good for that, that we hope to leverage much more in the future is being able to get the transcripts of the conversations out, so we can understand as part using that data that's coming from the interactions with the Lex bots and understanding that data as the customer works through the call flows to be able to look at how do we continue to improve these around how that customers responding to it, so that we can get to better customer experiences. Like, in often times, it's a very highly emotional situation. If you're dealing with like a life claims contact center, you're dealing with someone who's just recently experienced a loss of a loved one and as a result, peoples' patience is really low, they're really stressed, they're facing -- You know, our demographic is selling final expense policies and that means that people are facing a lot of financial uncertainty in addition to emotional distress. >> Right. >> Being able to take that information and use that to continually tune things for delightful customer outcomes is really important to us. >> So, what's next for Mutual of Omaha? >> So really, what's next for us is we're in the process of major migration of our contact center agents onto it. Once that is completed, that allows us to kind of get rid of some existing technology debt with our on premise telephony solution. And then we really start to get into kind of the good stuff. Right, so that's like integration with our customer portal, taking more advantage of what we want to do from a machine learning and AI perspective with regards to what we can get from the call data and the customer, the customer interaction. And really starting to kind of like make a huge jump in terms of what that customer experience can be. >> Great, I look forward to hearing more about it at next years Executive Summit. (laughing) >> Yeah, it would be great to be back. >> Great. >> Jim, Roy, Brian. Thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> Thanks for having us. >> I'm Rebecca Knight. We will have more from the AWS Executive Summit and theCUBE's live coverage coming up in just a little bit. (upbeat music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit. and what you do. So we service customers with a wide variety of needs, So it was really just this idea of let's think the end to end customer experience and how do we make Okay, so we typically start at the top, you know, And then, you know, when we really looked at it, So the interesting thing with Amazon Connect So what are the kinds of. and how do you manage that adoption. I mean, what would you say, what is sort of your advice and then with Amazon Connect, you know, likes thing to do because you know, everybody tends to that actually clarifies a lot what your internal Accenture, AWS and Mutual of Omaha. So that's my job is to make sure that foundation is there and help from Amazon with regards to dealing with like So how do you make sure that the technology is so that we can get to better customer experiences. delightful customer outcomes is really important to us. of some existing technology debt with our Great, I look forward to hearing more about it Thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. and theCUBE's live coverage coming up
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Chris Wegmann, Accenture AWS Business Group & Brian Bohan, AWS | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE, covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. (echoing percussive music) >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit, here at the Venetian in Las Vegas, I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have two guests this segment, we have Brian Bohan, the AABG global business lead at AWS, and Chris Wegmann, welcome back to theCUBE, managing director Accenture AWS Business Group. Thank you so much for coming on the show. >> Thank you for having us. >> Thanks for having us, yeah. >> So I want to start with you, Chris. It's been three years since Accenture and AWS announced this relationship, bring us up to speed on what's happened in those three years. >> Yeah, it's been a fast-paced three years. We've seen AWS continue to mature the platform, grow their number of services, we've seen our customers go from looking at just lift and shifting workloads at AWS, to now doing full cloud native services, machine learning, containerization, all the really cool stuff they can do on the platform. So for the business group, we've gone through that journey and that maturity as well. We started very focused on things like lift and shift migrations, and cloud management, and investing in assets and capabilities, now to really focus on innovation, and helping our customers drive the innovation on top of that platform. >> I want to get into that, but you've also recently said you're going to continue to expand this partnership, Brian-- >> Mhmm. >> And so what does this mean? >> Yeah, I mean just kind of keying off some of the things Chris talked about, right, is that, and I think we've talked about innovation specifically, really where we're going to focus, and we're also going to talk about vertical and industry solutions, which I think we'll talk about a little bit later. But, even if we looked at where we've had a lot of success in the mass migrations, moving enterprise applications like SAP to AWS, what we're seeing now, customers are in their maturity curve, where they're there in the cloud, and now they're asking what can I do? Right, so I have SAP, I have my core systems in the cloud, and so we're investing heavily, as Chris mentioned, in some of the modern technologies, so application modernization, cloud native development. Andy in his keynote today talked a lot about database freedom, so now that you're in the cloud, how can we start looking at your database portfolios, start using some RDS or Aurora, some other native AWS services. So, these are way that we can innovate with our customers that you maybe typically don't think about, but are critically important, and I would say on the other side, and what Chris mentioned as well, is the investments we're making in machine learning, and in AI, and in analytics, and edge computing. And then really at the core of that is data, right. And what we find, with these kinds of projects, is you need to move very, very quickly, and you also need to prove out the concepts. So these are two important things, and so what we're doing is a big investment in the partnership, is investing something we call Launchpad. So this a mechanism in Amazon parlance, we can think about it as two pizza teams, so several nodes of two pizza teams around the world, and these folks are 100% focused on driving innovation, and driving POCs, and pilots, and prototyping, and asset development, in the innovation areas around AWS machine learning, analytics, connect, so new modern customers care capabilities. So that's really important, and then, kind of related to that, very closely, is our innovation studios. So these team will be located across the world, some of them in or around liquid studios that Accenture has. So the innovation studio is a place where we can bring clients to get together, and we can execute on working backward, and ideation, and design thinking sections, so we can take it from an idea to actually a concrete, implementable set of requirements, and then use that Launchpad team to execute very quickly. So this is something we're really excited about. >> So interested, you bring clients into the studio. Now, why is that so important, to get everyone in the room together? >> Now I think what we've seen is it gets them out of their day-to-day environment, right? And in an innovative environment, where they can go through that innovation process, come up with those ideas, and then very quickly see them in reality, versus sitting and writing a bunch of requirements down and things like that. So the whole design thinking process and going through that, we find works very well, in a very innovative studio type format. >> So how does it work, I mean a client comes-- >> Yep. >> You're together, Accenture, AWS, together, with the clients-- >> Yep. >> saying what are your problems, and so how do you help them learn to think expansively about what their biggest challenges are? >> So we start with some design thinking workshops. So thinking about what they're trying to achieve, not the technology, right, we get the technology, but what they're trying to do, how they want to think about the problem differently, and we do the working backwards. So, idea is, where do you want to end up, either press release, or something like that, that documents where they want to be. Then we work backwards, at leverage the design thinking, and then going to the idea-zation phase, look at what will work, what might not work, and then how technology, we can use the AWS technology. So the technologists are there, they say, "Oh if we can go use these three services "off the platform, we can actually deliver this," and take advantage of this data that you may not have had before to help to answer that problem. >> And the technologists are also saying, "If we can leverage these three existing technologies, "we can also build some more stuff." >> Yeah, and I think Andy was again hitting home, the right tool for the right job, and as Chris mentioned, we don't start with the technology, we really start with the problem. And what's really cool about this is that Accenture's gotten very mature and developed and deep capabilities through their digital practice, around design thinking, working backward. And when folks come visit Amazon, one of our most popular EBC or executive briefing sessions, is around Amazon culture, and how does Amazon innovate. So we programatize that, as well, into our working backward methodology, that we work with clients, and what we've done is we've married these two things together. So, we're able now to bring the best of both worlds, and help our customers through that journey, getting from idea to actual realization. And then, as you saw, we now have I don't know how many services, 130 plus services, there's plenty of things in the bag that our technologists can then start working together with the clients to solve those problems. So it's really exciting. >> How do we innovate, that's sort of the question of the hour, the question of the era. At a company like Amazon that is now so big, but still is famous for it's start up mentality, and it's ability to innovate and deliver products that customers don't know they need, until they until they (Rebecca laughs) have them in their little hands, how do you do it? I mean, what is the secret sauce? >> So, I mean, there's a few things, and I don't have time to talk about all of them, but I think culture, we've talked about it a little bit, is hugely important, and you just can't graft on or import culture. You saw Guardian's CIO talk today how important it was. They didn't start with technology to cloud, they started with actually redesigning their work spaces and how their teams work together, that's super important. So at Amazon, we work in what we call two pizza teams. So every team is fairly autonomic, fairly small. They interact with other teams, but they can make decisions autonomously, and move fast. And then the other thing that we reward moving fast, is if you're going to move fast, you're also going to make some mistakes, you're going to take risks, you're going to experiment, and you're going to fail. So Jeff Bezos always likes to say, if you're not failing, then you're really not innovating. Right, so we want to controlled failures, and we want to make sure that when we are failing, it's what we call a two-way door, meaning that if we fail, we can come back through the door, and do it again. We haven't committed ourselves down a path that we can't retreat. So, you know, again, small teams, our culture, a culture that also rewards risk-taking, controlled risk-taking and failure, and that's also I think why getting us in the cloud is so important because now we have a platform where you can spin up nodes to run your analytics and your machine learning. If it's wrong, it doesn't work, you just tear it down, and that's it, you start over. So, it's a great platform for that as well. >> Chris, what have been some of the most exciting new business ideas, models, approaches, that you've come up with; we're having a number of really fascinating guests theCUBE, what personally excites you most? >> Yeah, I think one of the things is the research life science cloud and then some of the work we've done with AWS and marketed around that. To bring the research all together to make the researchers jobs much easier, bring all that data together and get the value out of the data. I was amazed when I first got involved in that and didn't realize how much time was spent just duplicating data across different systems during the research process, and I thought that's a lot of waste of time by very, very smart people, just coding data, and by us being able to do that, it just opens up the possibilities of what research can do. And it's all about saying how can we help lives to be better, and that's something that's really doing it. Other thing is just, customer interaction. So, one of the things I've talked about and have been very excited over the last couple of years, was you know Amazon Connect, future next generation call center capabilities, again, like Brian said, as a service, you can step up it up very quickly. You don't have to go and buy PBXs and install them and go through that whole, and the the 360 relationship that you can build with those services, that customers are demanding and asking for, right? You can go into organizations that have not been known for great customer care, and now within a few days, and do 360 type customer and omni-channel, and pass off chats, and stuff like that. You know, all the things that Amazon themselves, as dot com business, are famous for, right? And they can, they can get there. So you know, those things just excite me, and I see the clients get really excited when we go and sit down and talk about that stuff. >> And how are they measuring the ROI because I mean, as you said, at a company like Merck that is doing life-saving medicine every day, it's kind of obvious, but at a company that maybe is not good with customers, and then to suddenly have this more customer-centric call center, it really can change things. So how are they measuring what they're getting out of this? >> So they're measuring the sentiment of the customers, right, which Amazon can help you do too, right? You know, so really understanding how satisfied the customers are, they can tell by the way they're talking to the reps, and listening to the recordings, and stuff like that. And see how angry they get, and how much that reduces over time, and really get there, right. They're looking at customer satisfaction, of course. >> Yeah. >> Right, and almost every call center finishes up with some type of survey, right? So looking to see how those surveys have improved. They look at call volumes, they look at how many they're able to answer via chatbot, or via text, and things like that, and how many of those a customer care rep can do at the same time. When you're on the phone, usually you can only talk to one person, but a customer care rep might be able to take four or five calls at the same time, via chat, and be able to help customers which reduces the time waiting on the phone, and the less time you wait on the phone, the happier the customer is. >> Brian, last word, what do you think we're going to be talking about at AWS 2019. >> So I think if you look at the trend that we're seeing, so as we move more into the innovation services, what also is true is that we're getting increasingly focused on industry problems, right, and Chris already mentioned one with life sciences and the research life science cloud because it's sort of a migration across industries, with some variances, but when you're talking about deep applied learning and analytics, it's going to be very specific. So I think what we're going to see next year, is a lot more things like the research life science cloud across industries, right, so we're diving deep in financial services and capital markets, and banking around things like money-laundering, and anti-fraud platforms, right? We're working across over into PNC, and insurance, on kind of completely new ways to have customers think about how they engage with their PNC insurance companies. So, as we dive deeper into this, and as we apply a lot of these up the stack innovation services, I think we're going to see a lot more really compelling, exciting business solutions specific to industry problems, and I'm just super excited about that. >> Great, well we're looking forward to seeing you >> Yeah, yeah. (Rebecca laughs) >> here again. >> I'm sure we will. >> I'm looking forward to it. (Chris laughs) >> We'll be here. >> Chris, Brian, thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. >> Thank you. >> Thanks for having us. >> Appreciate it. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more of theCUBE's live coverage at the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit. (bouncy percussive music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit, here at the Venetian and AWS announced this relationship, bring us up to speed So for the business group, we've gone and asset development, in the innovation areas So interested, you bring clients into the studio. and going through that, we find works very well, and then how technology, we can use the AWS technology. And the technologists are also saying, and as Chris mentioned, we don't start and it's ability to innovate and deliver products and we want to make sure that when we are failing, and I see the clients get really excited and then to suddenly have this more and listening to the recordings, and stuff like that. So looking to see how those surveys have improved. Brian, last word, what do you think and as we apply a lot of these up the stack Yeah, yeah. I'm looking forward to it. I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more
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Chris Milkosky, ETS & Michael Liebow, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live, from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE. Covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back, everyone, to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas, Nevada. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have two guests for this segment. We have Michael Liebow. He is the Global Managing Director Accenture Cloud platform, and Chris Milkosky, Enterprise Architect at ETS. Thank you both for coming on theCube. >> Great to be here, thank you. >> Thanks, great to be here. >> So, Chris, I'm going to start with you. ETS, the world's largest non-profit education testing service. Give our viewers a little history. >> Sure, we're the guerrilla in the test assessment industry. So, ETS, Educational Testing Services, been around since the 1940s. We do... our mission is to advance the quality and equity in education through test assessments, through research, and related services. Big thing of what we do is just try to find out more about the state of education in the world, in the United States, and then do what we can to improve that. ETS has grown up with-- to relate this to Accenture and everything-- ETS has grown up with IT. We've been around since the 40s and so we've used traditional IT for quite a long time. Over time, we realized obviously that there's constraints and stuff like that on some of the traditional IT. We understood that we needed to figure out ways to become more competitive, to stay a leader in the industry, to innovate, innovate faster. That's how we ended up engaging Accenture, and working on an effort to migrate to the Cloud, and give ourselves capabilities to become more innovative. >> So, you're talking about this need to innovate, this need to stay competitive and ahead of the crowd. So why, so tell me, you announced a big partnership with Accenture this morning. A large transformation project. Do you want, tell us a little bit more about that. >> Yeah, no, absolutely, this has been the-- Chris has been the principal architect, driving that whole agenda for some time, so why, why Accenture, why look to the outside in order to partner with somebody in order to realize that innovation? >> Yeah, so, I'll give you a little bit of history on that. Back in we've been for years actually messing around with things in the Cloud, trying out Amazon and everything. We quickly realized after doing some POCs and pilots that there's a lot to this. It's not just going to be a trend and it's not just a fad that's out there and everything. It's hard, it's tough. What we needed is we needed somebody who had the capabilities, the experience, the knowledge, the history of doing this already before. In around 2017, we engaged Accenture already early on. They helped give us some foundational understanding about movement to the Cloud. Then over time we decided, yeah, you know what, we really need a lot more help with this. We need a managed service provider in the mix. We need capabilities to migrate to the Cloud. We need help with security, that kind of thing. Ultimately though, the big goal here is to be more agile, to be more innovative and we have to do it fast and we have to do it at scale. Yeah, so we did our due diligence. We looked around and after talking to Accenture, it was clear to us that they had that capability. >> So that's why Accenture. Tell me a little bit about what Accenture-- what does partnership entail? >> What do we bring into it. >> Exactly, what are you bringing to the >> It's a great question. >> Table in helping ETS achieve it's goals? >> Yeah, oh no, absolutely. We've been partnered for a while, as Chris indicates, and what you realize is there's a journey. You know where, since 1940, right, you have this IT organization, you're delivering whatever set of value and capability to the business, but the business is hungry, right? The leadership wants to innovate, they want to do new things, but they can't. They realize that and if you move on your own, you move slowly, and if speed is of the essence, which for most organizations it is, then what do you need? Well, you need the tools, the capabilities, the skills. You have to trust somebody to enable that vision. And it's kind of like if you're a surgeon, right, you know, do surgery. We'll do everything else in order to enable you to spend time innovating. What we bring is the whole strategy, the business case development as part of the journey. We show what we can do, kind of where you are today, and where you will be quickly. We can migrate and transform the workload. When we talk about this relationship, it's the whole end to end but it doesn't stop there. It's not just what we should build, how we should build it, the architecture, it's not just moving the workload into the Cloud, it's then running it securely, as Chris pointed out and to optimize it, so that it's not just this whole notion of devops and agility, those terms are tied together. We want to enable the agility, but we want them to be able to then leverage it. Don't go direct to Amazon, go direct to any other provider. Enjoy the innovation that we're hearing about this week and leverage all that. This is the key thing. This partnership creates the ETS Cloud platform. It's their basis, their foundation to now innovate and enable their broader business, so they can bring new capabilities to education. I'm so excited. This is such a great partnership, and the outcome is going to be so important, I think, to ourselves, to our communities. It's great stuff. The last thing though is we want to de-risk this. The point here is how do package all that? We have something Accenture Prime. Not to offend my friends. (laughs) >> I've heard of another Prime. >> Right, so this is about how Accenture's priming the capacity, the services, and being on point for ETS. So, one throat to choke, kind of, right? You can, you know, that's my throat. I'm here to make sure he's successful. And the organization is successful. That's really the point. Everything from the tooling of the Cloud management capabilities, to set the policies, the security, cross manage the Cloud management services, the cost in Cloud optimization and the contracting is all through Accenture. One stop shop. That's what we're here for. >> That's really important to us because ETS, our goal isn't to be out there and be the best at creating the Cloud, building a Cloud environment, migrating to the Cloud, managing the service of the Cloud, and secure. We want to do what our core competencies are in furthering education and advancing the quality of it. Accenture allows us to do that. They are the enabler. We can now, we don't have to worry about that part. >> I love this that Accenture is really allowing you to do surgery, or really to actually focus on the testing. With Accenture taking care of you, enabling you, how are you now innovating? What are the goals and aspirations on the table now that Accenture, because they're in the background helping you. >> Sure, so yeah, we're going to be able to do more in the mobile space. We're going to work in furthering our capabilities in doing data analytics. We want to, oh my goodness, the conference it's all about artificial intelligence. There's a whole lot of stuff on that. We need to figure out, how are we going to do that? And how are we going to use that to get better information to, again, accomplish that mission, to further quality of and equity in education. The capabilities and the speed at which we're going to be able to things is just very exciting. What's really cool is that you see it in people, they see the change in ETS already, and they know what's coming. It's already fostered this new and renewed feeling of creativity and it's becoming pervasive, and so you feel it. Everybody's coming up with new ideas and we're trying out new things. With the help of Accenture, we're going to be able to do that a lot faster and in volume and another thing I didn't mention is, and I think you might have said this earlier, what's really nice, too, is we know that in the Cloud you can do cost optimization. Cost optimization, it takes a lot of paying attention to, and a lot of attention. The folks at Accenture, they explained to us what they would do. It's great how your service provider is telling you how to save money. I just love that, you know. (laughing) It's awesome. You know that, right? >> You can do that for everyone, right? >> But it's great, you know, there's so much you can do in the Cloud and to be able to leverage that, so, again, we can focus on our core competencies. It's just an excellent story. It's a good thing. >> Excellent, excellent. And Michael, is that really what you're always bringing to the table? You focus on your core competencies, we can take care of the rest. >> Yeah, you think about a managed service and how do you allow you to do what you do, but also do you de-risk the whole value prop? Because a lot of organizations honestly struggle with how to move to the Cloud. One of the things that Accenture's done, I'm not sure if you know, is we've moved our entire business to the public Cloud. We're 95% in the public Cloud today, and so I've made a lot of mistakes, all right. But we've taken all those lessons learned, and we've built that into our platform, our skills, our competencies. Now we can apply that so Chris doesn't have to make the same mistakes. >> You were your own guinea pig. >> Right, we ate our own dog food, right? Because we figured early on a number of years ago, that you can't really sell this stuff if you don't use this stuff. That was an aha moment, I would say, at one of the Reinvents four years ago. We really have to go all in. We have to move our business so that we can learn how to help others do it. It's thrilling, it really is, because you see that with organizations that are just starting today. They really don't know what they don't know. All right, call me. We will help you understand that and we've structured this under this notion of joining the Cloud where you can apply that to your business and you want to get there in a year, two years, we've done this with various organizations. Let's just move, let's get there. Stop the analysis paralysis and let's go. That's the message. >> What will we be talking about at next year's Accenture, AWS Executive Summit? When you think about ETS and the things that you're going to be able to accomplish faster this year and in the years to come, what's most exciting to you about this? >> Well I know from my side, I'm hoping that you guys are going to be saying, "Oh my goodness, ETS has become "a lean, mean, innovation machine." >> All right. (laughs) Okay, yeah. >> That's what I want. That's what I want to see. I think with Accenture's help we're going to be there, so that's what I think you'll see. We're going to be one to watch along with Accenture. Absolutely. >> Yeah. No, that's great. We love the fact that ETS wanted to come out at this event and say, "This is what we're doing. "We're going to climb that mountain, we're going." I love that. And to help others realize, yes, you can. Let's go do this. Here's an organization, 70 odd years old, right, saying, no, we wa-- this guy sounds like a startup guy from the Valley. >> That's what we want. We want to become like a startup again. We got to have that attitude again. >> Enthusiasm. >> Yeah, no, it's true. >> The energy. >> Right, right. >> That's what we want to do. >> And he was talking about the cultural differences. Everyone's feeling more creative and get the juices flowing and sharing ideas and insights. >> And the ability to fail. >> A hundred percent, yes. You need to be able to fail faster and be okay with that. It's a whole cultural change, too, you know. There was a lot in the traditional IT, everything back then, it's like, oh no, you know, failure is failure, it's bad. But no, we're going to learn from it and everything, but we need to be able to do that faster and learn from it. Startup mentality, lean, being lean, being more innovative, yeah. >> I want to go work there. (laughs) >> Yeah, right? It's an exciting time. >> This is great. >> Well, Chris and Michael, thank you so much for coming on theCube, a really fun conversation. >> Well, good, good. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> Good to be here. >> These are great questions, appreciate it. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more from theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas coming up in just a little bit.
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas, Nevada. Great to be here, So, Chris, I'm going to start with you. in the industry, to innovate, innovate faster. this need to stay competitive and ahead of the crowd. to be more innovative and we have to do it fast Tell me a little bit about what Accenture-- and the outcome is going to be so the Cloud management capabilities, to set the policies, and be the best at creating the Cloud, or really to actually focus on the testing. We need to figure out, how are we going to do that? do in the Cloud and to be able to leverage that, And Michael, is that really what and how do you allow you to do what you do, the Cloud where you can apply that to your business you guys are going to be saying, All right. We're going to be one to watch along with Accenture. And to help others realize, yes, you can. We got to have that attitude again. Everyone's feeling more creative and get the juices flowing You need to be able to fail faster and be okay with that. I want to go work there. It's an exciting time. Well, Chris and Michael, thank you so much I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more
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Martin Berdych, Moneta Money Bank & Martin Trcka, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live, from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE, covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back, everyone, to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas at the Venetian. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We are joined by folks from MONETA Money Bank. We have Martin Berdych, who is the senior manager IT infrastructure, and Martin Trcka, Cloud Technical Architect Manager at Accenture. Thank you so much for coming on the show. >> Thank you. >> Thank you for having us. >> So, we're talking today about MONETA Money Bank's journey to the cloud, but first I want to start with you, Martin, talk a little bit, tell our viewers a little bit about MONETA Money Bank. >> So, MONETA Money Bank, it's the fourth largest bank in Czech Republic, which is not big, because basically the country's small, but the bank is far big. We are serving something around one million customers, and we're providing all the services that you can imagine, so, bank accounts, loans, mortgages, credit cards, whatever you find out, and there's one special thing I'd like to point out, we have a brilliant mobile application, which is consistently getting the awards every year for the best mobile banking app on the market, so this is MONETA. >> So, you're already a pioneer in technology, really on the vanguard, and recently made the decision to move twelve of your, or two dozen of your existing apps, to the public cloud. What was the impetus for that decision? >> I think there's a wider strategy, which is around being digital, being agile, all those buzz words you hear around everywhere, you know. >> No, actually go into that a little bit. >> It's an automation, all the other stuff, I think one of the big ones, as well, was the legacy infrastructure, because the banks got a huge legacy staff, which is causing a lot of issues, if you want to go fast on the market, you want to be quick, you want to respond to your customers, this is slowing us down. So, I think apart from all the other strategy, or at least in my area, the infrastructure part, definitely the big one was the legacy asset we are actually trying to remove by moving to cloud, which is, that's the thing. >> So, they needed a partner to help them move to the public cloud, in this case, AWS, of course, and, so, when Accenture comes into this, first of all, is this a standard client sort of someone who is a company that is already technologically minded, and trying to do this, would you say that this is the kind of organization that gravitates? >> So, MONETA, as a pioneer, in terms of federal public cloud on the checking market, for them, it was a huge step to adopt public cloud, so we are very happy that they ask us for help, the first thing that we did, is we helped them design their IT strategy, what the steps should be in terms of adopting public cloud, actually, we helped them also to define that cloud production would be one of the pillars of their future growth along with other initiatives. So, we helped them with the IT strategy, and then we basically went through that whole journey together with one of the infrastructure teams, one of the security teams, and with our team who helped the client to migrate, eventually, those two dozens workloads into the cloud. >> So, is it a co-creative process, in the sense of are you together, figuring out, the steps on the journey, or is it Accenture in the background, and- >> I think, one of my goal was to make my team part of that as much as possible, so, obviously, Accenture help is appreciated, and they were needed, because the knowledge of public cloud, not only the company, I think, even on the market itself, is very limited, the experience with that is very limited, so Accenture played a strong role in that, but what I make sure from the beginning, or I was trying to make sure from the beginning, is that the team will be part of that from, really, end to end. So they, whatever Accenture was helping, the team was contributing, and they were able to actually do it together, so the knowledge has been increased in the wider theme, so now, we are definitely much more capable than we have been before, and when we started. >> So, how did you help? As you said, figuring out the business challenges, and then actually finding solutions. >> So, it all started with what we call preparation for forging into cloud. This means that we helped the client to assess their risk, because we are speaking about their banks, there's a regulation, which needs to be met, those requirements are regulatory. So, we help the client to assess the risk associated with going to cloud, we help them design their exit strategy when they need to actually exit the cloud, and after we complete those, let's say, preparation tasks, we focus on what we call blueprints. This is basically designing concept of how the target environment will look like in terms of the architecture, in terms of security, in terms of government, so we have, jointly, you know, with Mark Markstein, designed those blueprints, and after that, it was basically ready to take the journey to cloud, actually, itself. >> You mentioned governments, you mentioned security, privacy, GDPR was recently enforced in Europe, did you come up on any challenges with- >> There have been many, obviously, the regulation itself, if it's GDPR, if it's the banking regulation, all the other elements have to be considered, and I think this is a constant task, it's not over, because obviously as we are opening on the market we are learning, and we are showing the other competitors that this is actually possible, and what needs to be done to make it possible, so, obviously, the regulator Czech National Bank had a lot of steps, they gave us a lot of next steps we have to fulfill, so we can actually proceed, and this is an ongoing journey and we have to, kind of, work on this, still work on it, it's not over, there have been a significant risk analysis done, obviously, so do I think it's more than hundred risk has been identified, around the cloud. Now, this has been much reduced, and, obviously, there are still next steps we need to fulfill to get this done. >> So, you have fully migrated to the public cloud? >> Those twenty applications. >> The twenty applications, yes, exactly. What have you seen so far, both from your clients and both from your colleagues? Have you seen changes? >> I think a couple of things. One of things is that the team, not only IT team, but internal people in the bank see that it's actually working, there have been some skepticism in the beginning, obviously, people are looking for reasons why we shouldn't be doing it, because of this and that, I think this is now a bit clearer, and people are kind of getting the feeling that this is actually working. So, this is one of the outcome of the thing. Obviously, the other walls that we've quickly find out and essentially help them that we need to optimize. So, we move it as it is, we lift and shift, and then we find out we're actually wasting resources, therefore we're wasting a lot of money, so we had to start looking, so by moving it, it didn't stop, it's not over, we have to now work on that and we need to find out how do we actually optimize the whole workload and what we can do to actually make it better, apart from the fact we are looking at the other phases of the project and we want to move more, we have to work on the older beta as well, so we need to make sure we get the most from the cloud. >> And what other learnings throughout this process did you come up with, sort of best practices that have emerged, as you said, you are showing your competitors that it is possible, the other top three banks in the Czech Republic, are, sort of, learning from MONETA Money Bank's experience, what would you say are the best practices? >> So, it really depends, you know, from which perspective you look on those lessons learned, from the regulation perspective, the answer is yes, it's possible to edit public cloud, even with, in higher FS Market, however, you need to meet money requirements. From the technology perspective, I believe that MONETA was really surprised how easy it was to adopt the technology itself. The migration happened, basically, in just four and a half months, so this is something you normally are not able to accomplish in traditional, like I said, data center and data center environment. So, this is from a technology perspective. As you said, journey to cloud is how you migrate to cloud, but then journey in cloud begins. So, another lesson learned is once you are in the cloud, you need to change your operating model, you need to start optimizing not only your span, but also, I would say, optical performance, so basically, the job is not done when you migrate to cloud, it just begins. >> So, you're now at the beginning of this journey, now that you're there, what is the future work? What does the future look like? >> Obviously, we have big plans. I think our aim is to migrate 50% of the workload until the end of 2019. It's a challenging task, because, I mean, we obviously created the base line because we have the environment, we have some obligations, so now we just build on top of that and we still have to work on it, but it's a challenging task, and this is what we're looking at in the future. >> And, do clients feel it, would a banking customer sense any difference, this is the thing, you win awards for your mobile apps, so you're- >> Absolutely, absolutely. I think, the plans for the 2019 will be really, that's going to be the shift for the clients, we have clients to move that are really, like, a strong production workloads, which are affecting the clients, on the end of the day, and I think that's going to be the visible element for them, when we do that. >> And finally, what's your word of advice for other banks that are considering, pondering, this move to the public cloud, what would you say, what is, sort of, the strategy, the strategic advice. >> So, when we are speaking to clients about public cloud adoption, they usually think about public cloud adoption, in terms of technology, like, that you are basically pricing data center technologies, on premise technologies, with some other technology in the cloud. This is not the case. That part of the whole journey, is just a small part, it's about changing how the organization works, it changes the operating model, it touches almost every function in the organization, you know, the business, HR, finance, security, risk things, all those things and functions are affected by cloud adoption. So, my recommendation would be think of cloud adoption from that perspective, it's not just a technology change, you're not just changing a platform for another platform. >> I would have one recommendation, and that is, don't be afraid. >> Don't be afraid, I like it, it's a good word of advice to end on. Martin and Martin, thank you so much for coming on theCUBE, it was a really great conversation. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, that wraps up day one of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit, we will be back here tomorrow with more. Signing off, thank you so much for joining us. (funky outro music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit here in Las Vegas journey to the cloud, but first I want to start with you, So, MONETA Money Bank, it's the fourth largest bank really on the vanguard, and recently made the decision being agile, all those buzz words you hear definitely the big one was the legacy asset So, we helped them with the IT strategy, is that the team will be part of that from, really, So, how did you help? exit the cloud, and after we complete those, and this is an ongoing journey and we have to, What have you seen so far, both from your clients apart from the fact we are looking at the other phases so basically, the job is not done when you migrate to cloud, and we still have to work on it, we have clients to move that are really, like, what would you say, what is, sort of, the strategy, This is not the case. I would have one recommendation, and that is, Martin and Martin, thank you so much of the AWS Executive Summit,
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Gene Reznik, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas. It's theCUBE covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back the theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian in Las Vegas. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We are joined by Gene Reznik, the Chief Strategy Officer at Accenture. Thanks so much for coming on theCUBE, Gene. >> My pleasure, Rebecca. >> So, Accenture is calling this period of time that we are all living through a period of epic disruption. Define what that means for us. >> Sure, sure. So, well, I think we're living in a very disruptive age right now. But again, I think we believe over the next 10 years it's going to become even more epic. And I think what's driving that, some things are geopolitical in nature. Alright, uh. Sort of, everything between U.S. and China relations, what's happening in Europe, all of that. Of course, there's technological. Dynamics around artificial intelligence. Of course, there's data, there's privacy, there's security. And all that really compounding on each other. We believe it's creating an environment where it's just going to be very challenging for people, but also for companies to navigate. And I think leadership and big organizations and their teams have to be very thoughtful of how they navigate this time. And I think there's going to be some big winners and I think there's going to be some big losers. And I think we see companies today that have been around for hundreds of years challenged to really adapt, adjust, and transform to really be prepared for this next wave of change. >> So, as you said, it's a very restive time politically, technologically, business wise. How are companies approaching this? I mean, as you said, you have to be very thoughtful. You have to have a real strategy in terms of how you're going to approach this, an approach innovation. How would you say companies are doing? Give them a report card right now in terms of how industry is responding. >> Yeah, well I think the first thing we would sort of say, and we've done quite a bit of analysis, and study through Accenture research, and as you'd expect, different industries are under different amounts of pressure and disruption. Some, like music industry and book publishing and currently retail, are under tremendous pressure. And, many have not responded well. They were too slow. They saw the digital natives just really take away their businesses. Others are better protected. So we have really gone through and analyzed industry by industry how they are prepared for today and really what they need to do going forward. And I guess our assessment is it's very, very difficult, as you would expect, to take a big organization and transform it. And the issue is again, while a lot of it is technology, the people side, the culture side, the organizational side, the incumbency dimension, the shareholders, all those things that make change very difficult are at the core of the transformation agenda. >> And innovation is really sort of the answer to it all because once you're move innovative, then you are going to ride this wave of epic disruption. So, first of all, how would you, so many companies are saying we want to be more innovative. What's the answer to that? I mean, what does that mean to be more innovative? >> Yeah, it's a good point. So we have, Accenture has looked at this. We sort of codified something that we call the wise pivot. Which is how should an organization really pivot to transform their business. And it's got elements, we believe strongly that you have to transform the core. Innovation can't be on the edge. At some point, you have to transform the core which usually gets at cost reduction, using automation to transform the business, transform the core economics. Then you have to grow the core and that's really I think the hard part, which is gaining market share in the core business we believe, whether it's in automotive business, whether it's in healthcare, whether it's in even retail, you have to grow the core, cause ultimately that gives you the investment capacity to scale the new. So, how to orchestrate that journey in a methodical way, again, keeping in mind the organization and what it delivers today and not leaving different parts of the organization behind is what we work with our clients on. >> And, what separates the winners from the losers? So the companies that are doing this well, how are they focusing on their core? And the core competencies? >> Right. We believe investing is a very big thing. Right, so the hardest part of all of this, in terms of economically, I mean there's a lot of difficult dimensions, but economically, as the pressure mounts, the ability to invest diminishes for most companies. And they don't have the room to invest in the business that their future depends on. And really freeing up that room and making the difficult decisions, you may have seen there were some announcements of mass lay offs, even today right? It's some of the biggest companies in the world. They're trying to create the room to invest in their next generation business that will take them into the future. And I think that's really the hardest part. How do you ultimately create the capacity to invest? And how do you make those investments? Again, cause there's also a lot of other examples of companies that have invested in the wrong way or in the wrong thing, that ultimately didn't lead them to the future So those two elements, creating the room to invest, then investing it in the right things and the right ways is what we find is key. >> So you're talking of course about GM which announced today that it was laying off about 15 thousand white collar and blue collar jobs. And the reason they're doing this is because they're saying there's no longer any room for six passenger cars in this market. We want to focus on self-driving vehicles. Is that a good move? I mean, I know you're not a GM analyst here but at the same time, it sounds as though that is smart, as you said. It's making room for investing in the future. >> Yeah, and I think that GM is clearly seeing autonomous cars coming, sort of form factors, everything that they're doing. And again, I don't think particular it's that in GM's case but again you read it that way. You'll look at General Electric. They're restructuring their entire company to better compete in the new. You'll look at IBM. IBM is acquiring Red Hat to have the kind of assets to compete in the new. So I think the biggest companies in the world are really trying to sort of say what the next ten years, what is their business going to to be? And then how to they take what got them here which for many of them have been 50 to 100 year journeys. And really figure out how to restructure that, to give them the room to invest into building a new business. And really, that takes tremendous leadership by the entire, you know, by the CEO, the board, the entire executive team and the people. The people have to commit to go along for that ride, and endure some of the pain for the greater good. >> So it's really a change management issue here, but in terms of, you talked about leadership, it also takes the foresight to actually know what your business is in the future. So GM is saying autonomous vehicles, which an average layman can say, yeah, that looks as though that's where the car industry is going. But how does a company even begin to imagine it's future at this time where there are new technologies being invented everyday, which are disruptive as we started talking about in the earlier conversation. >> Yeah, I think that's a very good question. Cause also if you look at where's the money going. The money is going to the disrupters. Right, if you look at the top five, the Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple, let's put Microsoft in there. Combined last year they invested over 70 billion dollars, and that's about 15 percent of all of the fortune of the global one thousand. So the capital, as measured by what companies are expending, what the start-up, the VCs are at an all time high. 155 billion dollars invested last year, double what it was in 2001. The IPO market is at an all time high. Right, then you have these things like division fund, which is a whole other investment vehicle to fuel technology. So the reality is, there's never been more money going in to create the next wave of disruption, which is why we believe many of the existing companies really need to create those partnerships where they benefit from that. They can't compete with it. They can't outguess it, right? They need to be making equal systems that ultimately enable them to leverage those investments, to really help power their next generation business. >> So as an ecosystem driven world, where is Accenture doing this kind of work? >> Yeah, so the good news for Accenture is we built our business, built services in an ecosystem kind of model. Initially with SAP, with Oracle, with Salesforce and now it's with companies like Amazon and the AWS. And I think our view, and what we try to work with our clients on, is really to create the construct. And by the way, a lot of these constructs are just now being formed. What does partnering with an AWS to create your next generation digital business, what does that look like? And there's some models emerging in terms of co-innovation. And I would tell you what Amazon has done, what Berkshire Hathaway and J.P. Morgan Chase is an example of partnering to transform healthcare. Interesting way to do that. You look at something, another Seattle company Starbucks partnering with Alibaba to basically power their entire business in China. So you're starting to see different constructs where big companies are really coming together in different ways. And then again, those partnership constructs, incentives, business models around that, I think that's really where the innovation is going to take place. How do you do that? How do you align your incentives? And how do you jointly benefit from that partnership? >> So you announced something today with your Applied Intelligence Center of Excellence in Seattle, Washington. Tell our viewers a bit little more about that. >> Well, first of all we look at AWS and we say, clearly this is a company that is really important. >> It's doing something right. >> It's doing a lot of things right, it's doing a lot of things right. And I think a lot of our clients are looking at them, are leveraging them. So, it's our responsibility then as a services organization to build up capabilities and skills, and make their, and enable our clients to really tap in to this tremendous innovation. So, yeah, we did announce at Applied Intelligence Center of Excellence in Seattle. It'll be one of many centers across the United States and globally with a simple premise of building skills, building proof of concepts, building use cases, building MVPs to really around different industries and different solutions sets so again, reimagine business processes, catalyze transformation, and really make it something that our clients can tap into. >> You are the Chief Strategy Officer, what is your piece of advice for companies out there, at AWS, at reInvent here, what's sort of your one piece of strategy advice in this period of epic disruption and this cloud world. >> Yeah, I would say that unburdening ourselves from the day to day, and really immersing ourselves in this amazing environment. Learning, really understanding what makes one of these, one of the greatest companies in the world tick. Understanding how they do things. Not only, and as you know, there's more to Amazon than just technology. Right? There's a very strong culture. There's a very strong customer centricity. And really sort of understanding that, and really trying to apply it to our respective businesses. And seeing how it could really be, make the pivot to the digital more effective. And that's what I would sort of say. Come with an open mind. Learn a lot, and take it forward. >> Great, well Gene Reznik thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. >> This is a lot of fun. >> My pleasure. Thank you, thank you. >> I'm Rebecca Knight. We will have more of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit in just a little bit. (techno music)
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Mike Moore & Chris Wegmann, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE, covering the AWS Accenture executive summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS executive summit, I'm Rebecca Knight, your host, we're here at the Venetian in Las Vegas. We have two guests for this segment, we have Mike Moore, Senior Principal Accenture Research, and Chris Wegmann, Managing Director Accenture AWS business group, thank both you so much for coming on theCUBE, and you for returning to theCUBE. >> Thanks for having me back, it's good to be back. >> So Mike I want to start with you and talk about your recent research which is entitled Discover Where the Value's Hiding: How to Unlock the Value of Your Innovation Investments. I like it, 'cause it just makes me think that innovation's just hiding somewhere in the corner, maybe underneath this desk. So talk a little bit about why companies can't find the innovation, and how they're failing at this. We'll get to the rays of hope later, but talk a little bit about what the problem is as you see it. >> Well, it certainly seems to be hiding for a lot of companies. Based on the research that we did, we found that over the course of the past five years large income companies like our own, and then also start-ups, have spent a combined 3.2 trillion dollars on innovation, which is obviously a huge sum. But when we looked at the rate of return on that investment, incumbent companies, we found it was actually declining by 27% over the course of that five year period. So there's a clear disconnect there in terms of what companies are doing. >> So, why are companies, why are so many companies not good at this? >> Well, we asked 840 executives from around the world exactly that question. And what we found is that for the vast majority of them who have been increasing their investments in innovation, they weren't seeing a great return, and what we found is that many of them were focused on incremental innovation, just small tweaks and adjustments to their products and services. But that's really not enough to get new customers in this day and age. But there was some reason for optimism, around about 14% of our respondents said that actually they were translating their investments in innovation into accelerated growth, they were outperforming their peers in terms of profitability, in terms of their market growth and they actually expected to continue to do that over the course of the next four to five years. >> So, I want to talk about that 14%, that rarefied group, but I want to bring you into the conversation Chris and just talk a little bit about the relationship between Accenture and AWS, and how you approach innovation, and how you help clients think about their innovation and driving ingenuity and creativity in their businesses. >> So Accenture and AWS have been partners for over twelve years, even before the first AWS service hit the market, Accenture was starting to use it in our labs at that point, and looking at how we could leverage S3 to really innovate on, and we've carried that tradition on for a while now. A couple years ago we sat down and really looked at what our enterprise customers were struggling with as they moved to the Cloud, and at that point innovation wasn't quite the topic yet, it was really how do we use Cloud to get better returns on our investment, better TCOs, things like that, and now we've seen that turn, as AWS has created more and more capabilities and solutions and offerings, our customers are really wanting to figure out how they innovate. They go and ask AWS "How do you innovate?" And that's their number one, one of their biggest EBCs is how do they innovate. So, we looked at it and said, that's great, how do we take that to the next level? How do we fix these failures that're happening and what we've seen is most customers are in this stop and go innovation traffic, I like to call it. There's people that're whizzing by them, the 14% are whizzing by them in the fast lane, so the question is how do you get them out of that stop and go traffic, into that fast lane, and, There's no lack of ideas, they have tons of ideas on how they can innovate, how they can use drones, how they can use all this. The ideas are out there, but taking those and turning those into operationalized assets that're continuously working, continuously growing, continuously maturing is where they struggle. >> And the question, when companies would ask you how do you innovate, I mean it is this question, but as you're implying it sounds as though it's a very, you have to have some discipline around it, there has to be real processes around the innovation, it's not just throw a bunch of creative people in a room together. >> No, that's great, you can do the creative people and they come up with the great ideas and there's no lack of those, but then you've got to operationalize those and go through the disciplining to take those, pick which ones are going to drive value, invest in those, operationalize those, and take them from a proof of concept or a pilot or whatever you want to call it and actually turn it into something that gets used every day, and what we've been focusing on with AWS is how do you get out of that, take what's out of that ideation stage, operationalize it using the full set of AWS services, and then how do you continue to run that and prove it going forward. >> So Mike, the 14%, what are they doing? What makes them different? >> Well I think there's lots of things that stand out, but there are really three things that came of the research, so firstly that group of companies is outcome led, as you were just saying, they're not just relying on the method, the genius in the garage tinkering away, but they're putting a real set of processes around the innovation activities that they're pursuing. Then they're linking those activities to clear operational and financial metrics. And then secondly they're disruption minded, so unlike the other companies that aren't performing well, they're really focused on investing in disruptive technologies that have the potential to create entirely new markets. And then finally, they're change orientated, so they're not just using innovation to develop new products and services, but they're also using it to drive more fundamental change across their organizations. And one of the principle changes that they're making is that they're becoming what we call network powered, so they're not just relying on their own internal innovation but they're drawing on a wide ecosystem of partners, like AWS, to really supercharge the rate at which they innovate. >> So those are the characteristics, what are you seeing on their ground, can you give us some specific examples of how they're taking those characteristics and what they're actually doing? >> I think you see companies set up and grow these innovation pods, so what we see customers doing is expanding those beyond just one pod. So, not just focusing on one part of their organization to do this, bringing that into a central location, creating a hub of pods and capabilities using everything, AWS services, using DevOps, doing all the cool stuff that's out there, but operationalizing that and getting to that center of excellence where they're actually seeing it end to end and they're not just jumping from one problem to then next. And once that graduates out, they have an organization waiting to take that on and continuing that journey while the next set comes in. So it's this process, it's this ongoing kind of chain of different problems coming in, being solved, and graduating out the other end. >> Is this a technology issue or is it a culture issue? >> The technology is there, I don't see it as a technology issue, I see it as a cultural issue, a change issue, a organizational issue, a resource issue, you got to find the talent that does that, you got to have the operational discipline to lead this stuff, and you have to go through that change. And we're seeing I think a lot of our customers struggle with that, and they want to learn how Accenture's done it, they want to learn how AWS has done it because obviously they've been very successful at it. >> And in terms of the cultural, the change management challenges that you're talking about, those are harder to overcome. So, do you have any best practices from your own experiences with it? >> We've obviously, Accenture's been in this game for a long time, whether it's innovation or whether we called it solution integration, whatever we called it, change was always a big part of that. So, a lot of those same change principles that we've used for twenty, thirty years still apply here. We see, you need very top down ownership and sponsorship, so from the very top down, whether that's the CEO, the CDO, the CIO, whoever it is they have to be 100% behind this, and have to be the cheerleaders. They have to be the people that're going to go get on stage, at re:Invent or other conferences and be that, this is how we're going, so you need that lead, and then you need very strong leadership underneath it that have gone through the journey before, this isn't the first time they've done it, they know where the potholes are in that road, they know what the signs are when they're going down the wrong way and how to get out of that. So you got to have those two key levels of experience. >> And to bring the others on-board. >> Absolutely, and they have to be the visionaries, they have to be the people guiding them through that, and you know, if you've got those people, if they're very strong-willed, very luminaries, those people will follow, and they'll follow them through that journey. And then they also got to go sell that to the rest of the organization, 'cause it's a change for the rest of the organization, the business is now much more engaged in that process, they're not just sending the requirements over the fence, they're very much engaged, they've got to understand and go through that agile transformation and understand when they're getting capabilities, what those capabilities are, so they need to go through that new operational paradigm that we're running in. >> So, finally, we're talking about innovation and then in particular AWS and Accenture, almost as the use cases here, how would you describe the innovation engine at AWS, Accenture in terms of the report that you've just published? It's obviously, I mean AWS is the biggest part of Amazon, I mean the high-growth engine of Amazon, and obviously a huge growth engine for Accenture too, so how would you characterize it Mike? >> Well, I think if we look at the three factors I was talking about before, being outcome led, being disruption minded, and being change orientated, then the relationship between Accenture and AWS really exhibits all of those three things, so in terms of being outcome led, Accenture has always been an organization that's laser focused on delivering results, delivering high performance, delivering value for our clients, and so is AWS. In terms of being disruption minded, we're innovating on the Cloud, using AWS to bring genuinely new and groundbreaking products and services to our clients. One of my favorite ones of those that we worked on in the UK, is our partnership with AWS and Age UK, which is a charity that helps the elderly and we're developing products and services for the elderly that helps them feel more connected to their family, and that's really opening up a brand new market. And then finally in terms of being change orientated, well, it's a relationship that really personifies being network powered and bringing the power there to multiple organizations that we can develop great products and services for our clients. >> Great, well Mike, Chris, thank you both so much for coming on theCUBE, it was a really fun conversation. >> Thanks for having us. >> Thanks. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS executive summit coming up in just a little bit.
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Brought to you by Accenture. and you for returning to theCUBE. can't find the innovation, and how they're failing at this. Based on the research that we did, and they actually expected to continue to do that and just talk a little bit about the relationship so the question is how do you get them out of that And the question, when companies would ask you and then how do you continue to run that disruptive technologies that have the potential to and they're not just jumping from one problem to then next. to lead this stuff, and you have to go through that change. And in terms of the cultural, the change management and then you need very strong leadership underneath it And to bring the others and they have to be the visionaries, for the elderly that helps them feel more connected Great, well Mike, Chris, thank you both so much live coverage of the AWS executive summit
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Adam Burden & Chris Scott, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian in Las Vegas, Nevada. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have two guests for this segment, we have Adam Burden, Chief Software Engineer at Accenture and Chris Scott, AWS North America Lead. Thank you both so much for coming back on theCUBE for returning. >> Sure, thanks for having us. >> Awesome, thanks. >> So we're talking today about future systems. So, in the past, when Accenture has talked about this, it's talked about the future of applications, future applications, now it's future systems. What are we talking about first of all? >> Sure. >> And why the switch? >> Look, it's actually a key question for us, and I think that we aspire to be to our clients thought leaders about where we believe that the technology landscape of tomorrow is heading. To help give them guidance about the path that they should chart their own systems on today. And we wrote kind of a seminal paper several years ago, called The Future of Applications, and it laid out different strategies that our clients, we recommended to our clients that they follow in order to build the technology systems of tomorrow. And in it, we have three characteristics, liquid, intelligent, and connected. And the outcome from that was great. It was an inspiration for many of them to build their future technology landscape and that language of liquid, intelligent, connected from a white paper was written five years ago has really entered the lexicon of many of our clients in industry. Now, however, they've seen the success, but they want to be able to do that truly at scale. They want to be able to take advantage of applications and the way that they're built and designed for tomorrow, but do that at an enterprise wide scale. And we felt like it was a time for us to go back and reflect upon what we had wrote about as the future of applications, and said, let's think about how systems, three years on, four years on, are going to be built for tomorrow. And that's exactly what we did in future systems. So future systems, you can look at it as a compass for how they'll continue to chart their path to be able to scale the new and close something that we call the innovation achievement gap. And this innovation achievement gap is really kind of the diagnosis that we put on there of where, they've seen success in pockets of innovation across their enterprise, but they want to be able to have that occurring across all of their businesses simultaneously. And we believe that following some of the prescriptive advice that we provide in future systems, that clients, our clients, would be able to do exactly that. >> So I want to dig into that research a little bit and you said, liquid, intelligent, connected. Those really became part of the vernacular. This year, it's three new-- >> Three new ones that's right! >> Three new ones, boundaryless, adaptable, and radically human. These are the characteristics that you say are the secret sauce for a successful system. >> That's right. >> So, let's get into these a little bit, let's start with boundaryless. >> Sure, boundaryless is great to talk here about, reinvent, because it really is all about cloud and how you use cloud. But before I get ahead of myself, and really define about what boundaryless is. Naturally, it's about breaking down barriers between systems, between businesses, and between humans and machines. And the successful companies that do this can really quickly respond to the market 'cause their systems are very agile and can react. There are really two really important elements to boundaryless, first is cloud. Being able to leverage cloud not just as a data center, but as an innovation platform to be able to do more, leveraging the great services from AWS, like Lambda and API Gateway and across the entire stack of AWS services and leveraging automation and really getting beyond infrastructure, to treating it infrastructure as code with an environment is an important component of that. The second is decoupling. It's decoupling applications and data. For years, we designed systems and the data that's part of that system would remain within that system. But you didn't get the value out of it by linking that across various parts of the organization. So it's important to decouple that data and application and give that access to other parts of the organization. The other important part is decoupling applications from legacy infrastructure. I talked a little bit about infrastructure as code. That's an important component of it. And lastly, it's decoupling integrated systems into loosely coupled applications and systems. And that's important because you develop components that you can share across the organization. You do really well for one system, you want to share that component across other systems in the organization. So Adam and I were talking a little bit about boundaryless and different examples that we've seen in working with our clients. Adam had a really good one that he was talking about before. >> Yeah, so this, I think this characteristic kind of sets the foundation for how future systems are going to be constructed and when you think about the restrictions that you perhaps even falsely place on applications today by sort of limiting how they can actually expand or grow or scale over time, you're limiting the potential growth of your business, and that's why we think it's so important that as you're designing and building systems of tomorrow and we're working with a client right now who is rethinking their loyalty program, it's Cathay Pacific, a big airline. >> We're going to be speaking with them later on theCUBE. >> Yeah, and it's a remarkable story and you're going to get a lot of details of this later, but what I really love about this is they've embraced this concept of boundaryless by introducing blockchain technologies in cloud into how their loyalty points program is going to work in the future. So whether they have 10 partners, 1,000 partners, or 10,000 partners in there, the way that they've constructed their system is it is going to elastically scale to be able to support all that, and it's going to make it faster and better with higher quality than ever before for them to onboard new partners and even more importantly, serve their mile point program customers better. So great example of boundaryless and how the systems of tomorrow are going to be built. >> And particularly because you said that that was a big challenge, that it's not only not communicating with your partners, but it's also not communicating within the business, the different units not talking to each other. >> Exactly. >> So let's move onto adaptable, and adapt, you think every system's got to be adaptable, duh! But what do we need, let's break it down. >> It's actually, you know, this is a really interesting challenge for us and you're starting to see the early stages now of systems and technologies that can embrace these characteristics. Basically what we mean by adaptable is that these are systems that autonomously change. They anticipate, for example, new loads or performance expectations or they anticipate certain changes in user patterns or behavior and actually reorganize themselves without you telling them to do it. So they're taking advantage of trusted data and artificial intelligence and other elements so that they can perform better and that you can focus more attention on the business value that's delivered on top of them. A great analogy that I've used for this is imagine you've got kind of two gears that are turning towards each other, right? And one gear has like a really big tooth on it and you can kind of see it coming and it's going to wreck the other gear when it gets there. Well, imagine that gear sort of sees that coming and adapts, and says, oh, okay, I can make this area wider, and that tooth will fit right in there. That's what adaptable is all about, is it's looking at what's happening around it and it's adjusting itself so it can perform better in the enterprise instead of falling over. And that makes your systems more reliable, it makes your customer experiences better and allows you to have systems that will make you one of these high performers of tomorrow. >> Anticipating and adapting? >> Anticipating and adapting, exactly right. >> Finally, the final characteristic, radically human, I love this. Define what it is, and then I want to talk about the kinds of companies that you've seen do this best. >> Yeah, radically human, I love the term too. I think it's great, and it's really about creating systems that are simple, they're elegant, but they're also immersive to our customers. Natural language processing, computer vision, machine learning are all important components and it's really about how these systems listen, they see, they can adapt, they understand what's going on just like people do. And it's interesting that technology's become so invasive in our lives, but it's also become invisible and it's woven into the fabric of what we do, with digital assistants and all the things that are out there today. It's such an important part of what we do. So it's important to create systems that are aligned to the users, and this is created an interesting inversion. We would design systems in the past that would gather requirements and then eventually, when the system went live, you'd have to train all of the users how to use that system and you would have to adapt the user to the system. Now what we're talking about is developing systems that can adapt, to the adaptable point that Adam mentioned, but really change to work better for the users. We were talking a little bit before as well about Amazon Connect, and a great example of this is leveraging Connect and omnichannel capabilities to allow customers to interact with customer service and businesses the way they want to interact. Whether that's via phone or through online or text message, find the right medium to get them the right answers as fast as possible. A great example of this is a client we're working with, Mutual of Omaha, who's going to be here on theCUBE and we've done a breakout session with them. They've been through this whole journey and they've really gotten much better customer engagement through this. >> So it's not necessarily feeling that your technology is mimicking a human, it's really just the technology is what you, the human, want it to be, in whatever format, I mean, is that right? >> That's a really interesting way of putting it. It's about so many times, and there's examples all around us, where people have kind of adapted to technology rather than us adapting to, or rather than that, technology adapting to us. I mean, even the keyboard, I have right here, right, the keyboard? This keyboard and the layout was invented in 1870, okay? And it was invented in a way to actually slow down typists so that the arms wouldn't get stuck on it. I mean, why are we still suffering with a keyboard that limits how fast we can type this many years later. And that's the point we're trying to make with radically human, is that we should be thinking about how technology is designed around people rather than the other way around. >> So that's a real cultural shift that has to take place within companies, so what are some of the best practices that sort of how companies can become more radically human and their systems become more radically human? >> Well, look, there's human-centered design, is a really important aspect of it, and then a lot of great emerging thought in that space. We think that design thinking contributes a lot to kind of really thinking from the very beginning about how do we build applications or technology systems in the future that are going to work with people so it's human plus machine, not human versus machine. And we think the outcomes that you get from embracing some of those approaches allow you to build solutions and design them that are much more radically human in the future. And this is really important. You're going to be more productive, more effective, your workforce is going to be happier, your customers are going to be happier, and they're going to be more engaged. And there's a paradox here too. Is it the more we do this, actually the less you'll see of the technology, because it'll become embedded in the things around us. So maybe, I've actually written some things in the past that says AI is the new UI, and the end of screens, right? So maybe it doesn't really mean the end of screens, but we're going to see a lot less screens because it's easier for people to hear information, sometimes, than it is to actually see it. >> Right, this is really fascinating stuff. Thank you both so much for coming back on theCUBE for these great conversation. >> Oh, we're happy to, thank you, Rebecca. >> Adam and Chris, thank you. >> Thank you. >> I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit. (techno music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian it's talked about the future of applications, and it laid out different strategies that our clients, and you said, liquid, intelligent, connected. These are the characteristics that you say a little bit, let's start with boundaryless. and across the entire stack of AWS services and when you think about the restrictions and it's going to make it faster and better with higher quality that it's not only not communicating with your partners, you think every system's got to be adaptable, duh! and that you can focus more attention the kinds of companies that you've seen do this best. and businesses the way they want to interact. so that the arms wouldn't get stuck on it. in the future that are going to work with people Thank you both so much for coming back on theCUBE I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more
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Massimo Morin, Peter Yen, Lawrence Fong | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back, everyone, to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit, here at The Venetian. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We have three guests for this segment. We have Lawrence Fong, general manager, information technology at Cathay Pacific; Peter Yen, managing director, Hong Kong Accenture; and Massimo Morin, head world wide business development travel at AWS. Thank you so much, gentlemen, for coming on theCUBE. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> So we're going to be talking about applying blockchain to a travel rewards program at Cathay Pacific, but I want to start with you, Lawrence. Let's describe the business problem that you were trying to solve. The Asia Miles program is already, sort of a world-class program, very competitive. But it still had it's kinks. So, what were you trying to do to make it better? >> Okay, first of all, Asia Miles is a lifestyle, you know, frequent flyer loyalty program, and almost every year they're running over 460 marketing campaign a year. So, you can imagine how much work they have to do. So, from the customer point of view, they have a pin point of whatever activities of redemption or for award, all these kind of thing. It's going to take a long time for them to get their miles. So, from the customer point of view, this is not really ideal. And on the other hand, at the back office, because we're running so many marketing campaign. So, there's a lot of back office operation and lot of, where people work and all this kind of thing. So, it's also not, I think, a very good operation efficiency. So, from the customer point of view, from the back office point of view, so that's the key pinpoint we want to be solved. >> Right. So, it was tedious to operate for both the customer and for the business itself. So, why was blockchain the technology? That could solve it? >> Well, we study one of the key features, or component of blockchain, it's called 'smart contract'. And we could see the smart contract would be able to help bringing our customer and Asia Miles, and also our merchant together. So, by using blockchain, the miles, the redemption, all this will happen almost in a second. >> So, how did this work, Lawrence? I mean, in terms of getting, working together with Cathay Pacific, how did you work together to create this new program? >> Okay. Effectively, it's a very co-create process. It started with a conversation with Lawrence. We had the idea, so Lawrence was courageous enough to let us try. We did a very short, quick pilot. We proved the concept. Then we went into a very rapid development cycle, as well. And then, within weeks, we get the product done, and then we launch and go to the market. >> So, Peter, is that generally the way it goes, in terms of this co-creative process? I mean, we're hearing so much, that Accenture and AWS have these solutions that they can bring to clients, and then, is it sort of happening in the background or are you on the ground together, sort of dreaming up ways to make this better and make the technology work? >> Well, we used to call this the new way of doing things, but I think now this is the way of doing things, right? Because it is the perfect combination. The client has perfect knowledge about the business, we understand the technology, and we have enablement partners like Amazon. So, we just work together and make it happen. >> So, from Amazon, so we hear blockchain you automatically think Bitcoin. You just do. But this is actually a very different kind of use case for blockchain, and it's one that really is so pertinent. Can you talk a little, Massimo, about other uses cases that you're seeing? >> So, indeed that you are right. Blockchain has been very nebulous, and always associated to Bitcoins, but there are actually some uses cases that are much more relevant, especially in the travel industry where you complex transaction, multi-party, where you are actually going to do transparency and data integrity. For example, we had a proof of concept to to read IATA about a one ID project that allows a travel agency to register themselves with this authority and get the key, and then seamlessly doing transaction with travel providers by identifying themselves through blockchain. That allows them to actually be recognized, and you have a seamless process with the new NDC, new distribution capabilities coming along. That is going to be extremely important. This is one type. Another type is when you wanted the immutability of the data. For example, when you have planes an you want to see you getting leases, on and off lease, and you want to see all the maintenance that occur there, and you want that that doesn't change. You want to use a trusted system that is transparent, and that is not changeable. And that provide a lot of value. And the third use case that I personally like, is automatic contract. So, when, for example, you have corporate buyers, that buy travel products from a travel provider, like Cathay Pacific, and you wanted that, you buy the ticket. But when is the airline going to get the money? That reconciliation is like, with the frequent flyer miles, you want to be done as soon as possible. Other cases is, is the passengers flying around? If it doesn't fly, well, what happened to the taxes? Taxes should be actually returning back to the customer. So, with automatic contracts, you would be able actually to reconcile that behind the scene. These are use cases that are very valuable in travel industry. >> So, does this immediate reconciliation and this trust, I mean , trust is such an important, thick concept right now. What are you hearing? From both the clients' side and the provider's side. I mean, where are we? >> Yeah, that's true. I think trust is one of the key elements of, you know, doing reconciliation. So, what we are doing now is still within our legal system. So, we trust each other. But, looking forward, I think one of the key areas that blockchain will help a lot, is the entire supply chain. But, when we talk about the supply chain, there's so many stakeholder. So, building a trust, of course, of domestic holder will be a challenge. I think that's something, you know, of course the industry has to put more thought onto it. >> What are we seeing so far? So, this was implemented in April of this year. What has been the return on investments so far? >> It's phenomenal. For those marketing campaign, we're using blockchain. These new capabilities, we had a triple digit growth, in terms of our sales, and also, because we also use kind of a game to gamify the whole thing. So, we create a lot of traction in there, you know? A lot of excitement. So, the number of people and the number of customer engaged in those marketing campaigns also have more than, you know, more than double, you know, growth. >> Peter, what's most exciting to you about this process? >> The most exciting thing is that, as you heard from Lawrence, is indeed generating performance and results. And the process of co-creating a successful solution is a very rewarding experience. >> So, I mean, and then AWS is, in terms of the co-creative process, where does AWS fit into this? >> So, we are their neighbor, and I'm glad that you're able, Cathay Pacific and Accenture, as using AWS for this. So, we have standard templates, blockchain templates that actually take away all the heavy lifting of putting place to platform to found the blockchain. So, actually, the customer and the partner can focus on the business need that they have attend. And this is all open-source, so you can see how it works. And it's so transparent, that we are very glad to enable our customer to do transformative things like this. >> So, the word is out that blockchain is not just for Bitcoin anymore. So, where do we go from here? We're talking about the travel industry, but are the learnings that Cathay Pacific has had and Accenture, in terms of how applicable are they to other industries? And how are you sharing what you've learned in a collaborate, co-creative process? >> Well, all of that, in Asia Miles, now we are taking what we learned from the blockchain, we are going to apply to the cargo industry, and also apply to the airport operation. Particular, the baggage, the consideration baggage between different people, of course they're all the blockchain. >> Great. >> Actually, many clients are now talking about this Cathay Pacific case, and they have very creative ideas, how to borrow the concept and apply to their own business. So, we should see more and more application of this solution. >> And we are seeing acceleration of adoption of cloud technology throughout the travel industry, with airline, and technology providers out there. And I'm very glad that there are taught leadership, for example, from Cathay Pacific, to take this hypothetical use cases and taking the lead on showing how it is done and sharing with the industry. We are looking for those travel leaders that will help the industry to move forward. >> That's true. >> Because it's very challenging industry with very low margin, and any improvement in customer service is going to go a long way. And we are glad to be part of that. >> And is that what it is? I mean, as you said, it sort of seen, even the incremental improvement and how that can be, just, so transformational for a company's bottom line. >> Yep. >> Yes. >> Yep. Absolutely. >> Well, Massimo, Peter, Massimo, Peter, Lawrence, thank you so much for joining us on theCUBE. It's been a really fun conversation. >> Thank you. >> Thank you very much. >> I'm Rebecca Knight. We will have more of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit. (thrilling music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit, here at The Venetian. So, what were you trying to do to make it better? So, from the customer point of view, and for the business itself. And we could see the smart contract would be able to help and then we launch and go to the market. So, we just work together and make it happen. So, from Amazon, so we hear blockchain So, indeed that you are right. So, does this immediate reconciliation and this trust, of course the industry has to put more thought onto it. So, this was implemented in April of this year. So, we create a lot of traction in there, you know? And the process of co-creating a successful solution So, actually, the customer and the partner can focus So, the word is out that blockchain is the blockchain, we are going to apply to the cargo industry, So, we should see more and more application And we are seeing acceleration of adoption And we are glad to be part of that. I mean, as you said, it sort of seen, thank you so much for joining us on theCUBE. of the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit.
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Adam Burden & Tauni Crefeld, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas it's theCUBE covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit. Brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit. I'm your host Rebecca Knight. We have two guests for this segment. We have Tauni Crefeld. She is the Managing Director, communications, media and high-tech at Accenture. And Adam Burden, Chief Software Engineer at Accenture. Thanks so much for coming on theCUBE. >> Happy to be here. >> So we are talking today about the future of platforms and Adam, I'm going to start with you to just sort of give our viewers a lay of the land here. It's been a few years since platform development really hit the scene. >> Sure. So it's been an interesting space for us as well. When I talk about what's happening in this area, I like to break it up into the how, the now and the wow. And the how is really what is created or enabled by these platforms. It really is extracting away the complexity. This plumbing and difficult parts of building software bespoke and systems. And it's making that complexity sort of disappear so that the real effort is expended upon building systems and enabling business value. And when we talk about how that has changed the way that we look at systems integration and development, it's actually enabling this thing that we call the renaissance of custom to a degree. And that is really kind of the how. And in the now side of this, it's interesting. When we first started tracking this space, these platform areas, I want to say it was close to eight years ago, we actually called it the Helen of Troy effect. Right? So we had the face that launched 1,000 ships. There literally were 1,000 platforms out there floating around in the ocean and some of them had a lot of sailors on it. And a few of them were just dinghies but. Now what we're seeing happen is this consolidation of platforms and it's taken a couple of different forms. Sometimes you got something like one of these really popular open source platforms like Cloud Foundry. And it's actually becoming sort of an OEM product inside of a lot of other platforms. So you see Cloud Foundry now inside of things like SAP Cloud Platform, for example. So it's popping up in surprising places. Plus you can also use the community version. But that consolidation is now sort of channeling down the number of platform options, environments that are available to build things on top of. So that's a very interesting development that's happening right now. And the wow is what's happening, you know, tomorrow. And I tell you, I see some remarkable things on the horizon. Working with our ecosystem partners, that really will change the way that clients, business, the enterprises, especially the ones that have ambitions to be the high performers of tomorrow, how they're going to enable business applications and systems for their customers. And when you talk about things like low-code and no-code platforms, imagine a scenario where you can talk to an intelligent agent and describe the system that you want to build and the scaffolding for that is created for you. So really remarkable advances and leaps forward coming ahead in the platform space and when I think about the how and how we've gotten here. The now and the wow. It's just an exciting time to be working in this area. >> So what are some of the primary benefits? As you said, you're talking to clients who want to become the high performers of tomorrow. What kind of successes are you seeing? >> So I would really group that into probably two things, Rebecca. I think the first one is around agility. One of the things I like to say is that the pace of technology change will never be as slow again as it is today. And it's sort of a daunting thing. >> Which is mind boggling in itself. >> It is. It's kind of daunting. And being here at AWS re:Invent, we're about to be bombarded with an unprecedented number of new product and capability announcements over the next couple of days. It's hard to absorb all of these things. And hard to be able to take advantage of them and for our businesses and our clients who we work with, they are looking for agility. And that's one of the key benefits that you get out of being on one of these or a part of one of these platforms. It allows them to be more responsive to the market and they can do it in a way which is really enabling them to deliver solutions faster and better than ever before. And think about the competitive threats that they're facing, right? With cloud technologies, like AWS, we really, we've democratized a lot of compute like never before. So because of that, it's a lot easier for a start up or even a company in an adjacent industry to come in and say, I'm going to start doing things in this space. I'm going to sell roofing products and I'm a car manufacturer, for example. And when you have things like that happening and it's so easy for competitors to get in and be disruptive, it's really important to business that you can move quickly. And these platforms enable just that. So agility is clearly one of them. And then the other one is around innovation. If you think about how hard it would be for my colleague here, Tauni and I if we were going to build a new customer service system that had natural language processing and a virtual agent technology in it and we were going to try and build this in our own data center, right? Stand up the infrastructure. Set up all the services. Be able to do this. Train the models ourselves. We're talking about something that could takes months or years even, just to get to the point where we're ready to start building. Yet, today, with a lot of these platforms you don't have to do any of that. You can start tomorrow and it's all as a service. It's on tap, it's on demand. And if you're going to be one of these high performers of tomorrow, using it as an innovation platform is absolutely a key component of the success of the future for that business, no doubt. >> Tauni, I want to bring you in here a little bit to the conversation. So talk to me about a specific example of a platform that Accenture has been working on. >> So I'd like to highlight OpenAP. It's just a great example of what Adam was talking about where it was a consortium of media giants that came together to build a new platform really to disrupt the broadcast TV industry and find a way of doing targeted advertising more effectively. So broadcast TV is usually done based on gender and age demographics, that's it. They wanted to find a way of really being more specific. Targeting veterans or people who want to buy trucks or whatever. And they did this by wanting to create a cloud platform that would become the marketplace between agencies and the broadcasters. You know, but because it's a consortium, there's no infrastructure, there's no starting point. It was from thin air, from scratch and they, because of the broadcast industry timelines, they wanted to do the entire, from idea to launch, in five months. And we couldn't have done that if, to Adam's point, we had to create, you know, put in servers and all that stuff. We were able to do all of that because we were able to leverage AWS as a baseline and get started with the development almost immediately. >> So talk a little bit more about this OpenAP. So it's a consortium of media companies and sort of looking at their digital competitors, with a little bit of envy here of wow, you can slice and dice your target customers so finely and you know exactly who they are, what they want to buy, what their consumer proclivities are. And they wanted to be able to do the same. >> Right. Yeah, so there's a lot of analytics that they wanted to leverage and do it in a way that there was a standard across the different media companies cause they realized that the biggest threat was coming from digital not from each other. So they kind of got together and said, hey let's find a way of doing this more frictionless. Make it more seamless. We can have a lot of the data and analytics behind it so that you could target, like I said, you know veterans or whatever. And by doing so, they're able to create that marketplace. But to do that, we had to really make it easy to use. We had to build custom UI's. Back to exactly, the Renaissance of custom. There's nothing out there in the marketplace that would do this. They were the first ones in there to really disrupt the marketplace. So it was custom UI's. API's. The whole set of capabilities that needed to be done for the consortium. >> So Adam, in terms of these platform services, talk a little bit about what you have learned so far and sort of the best practices that have emerged. The nuggets of wisdom. >> Well, thanks Rebecca. I love it when people ask me that question because then-- (Rebecca laughs) I have two things that I think are really important to keep in mind with that. One of them is that if you're building green field applications, right? It's actually time to throw the baby out with the bathwater. And it's a bit hard sometimes cause there's a lot of inertia in enterprises about how you do things and how things have been done. And a lot of times they can be quite conservative too, about their approaches. So for example, if you're going to use a platform but what you're going to do on that platform is you're going to stay using waterfall development techniques you're going to have releases every three or six months or something. That's just not going to meet your businesses expectations anymore. It goes back to what I was saying a few minutes ago about the speed of change in technology. It's just not going to keep up with what potentially competitors are going to do. So, you have to throw of a lot of that baggage that you've carried with you for a long time. A great example I like to talk about in this space is actually site reliability engineering. This is a pattern for solving architecture problems that it really has become quite popular in the last couple of years and what it allows you to do is to release software a lot faster, but you have more circuit breakers inside of your applications that allow it to gracefully degrade if there's some sort of defect or problem that happens so that your customer's, your business partners, your employees, they don't see an outage. What they see is a slightly degraded service. They don't get something where it say's "404: site not available" they get a slightly degraded service. And if you follow those patterns well, you can deliver software a lot faster with higher degrees of quality but you have the comfort and assurance that it's going to do that. That actually helps you get over some of the cultural barriers as well. >> Well those cultural barriers, and I'm interested in your experience at OpenAP, too. What you just described is exactly right. Is that there is this inertia. There is this, enterprises, we've been doing things our way for a long time and they're not broke. So, can you talk about the challenges of having to overcome that? >> Yeah You know, with the consortium, we had a little bit of an advantage in that it was pure green field and the consortium was very specific about the first pain points they wanted to focus on and really wanted to build it as an MVP, you know minimum viable product, not trying to do everything at once and that was really key to us. So once we really knew what they wanted to do we put in all of the DevSecOps, agile practices so that we could move fast. We did automated testing and test harnesses and built in the security, the scalability, the performance from the beginning so that we weren't halfway down the road and then had to try to bolt that stuff in later. And we really all had a vision of what we needed to get to and we were able to leverage all of the modern technology practices to get there. I'm not going to say it wasn't hard. Five months was kind of crazy especially because it had to be ready to launch and go live. And in fact we had a beta day which was industry experts coming to test it hands on demo at Paramount Studies in California. Like no pressure, 4 months after we started. And it was awesome. But it was because we had the vision and then we had all the new tooling and the technologies and the ability to build in some of that stuff from the beginning. Which I think in a green field scenario really helped us. >> Adam, final word in terms of next years AWS Executive Summit, what are we going to talk about? We're already talking about the future platforms, what is going to be next years buzz? >> So the thing, next years buzz. I really think that there's going to be this momentum towards something called go native. And this is going to be, so there's a lot of enterprises that are taking advantage of clouds today but they're using it as compute storage and power and the real value for them is going to be unlocked by taking advantage of the native services that are there. And when we think about things that AWS re:Invent has announced in the last couple of years and I'm sure it's going to come up this year. Think about things like Lambda and Aurora and others. These are native cloud services that taking advantage of those and not just sort of bringing the other components of your older architecture with you. That will really unleash a new era of innovation for your company. You'll be able to do things faster and better. And you'll have even better outcomes for your clients, your customers and business partners than you would otherwise. So, go native. >> Go native, okay! You heard it here first folks. Adam, Tauni, thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. It was great talking to you. I'm Rebecca Knight, we will have more of theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit. (upbeat music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit. and Adam, I'm going to start with you And the wow is what's happening, you know, tomorrow. What kind of successes are you seeing? One of the things I like to say is And that's one of the key benefits that you get So talk to me about a specific example if, to Adam's point, we had to create, of wow, you can slice and dice your target customers that needed to be done for the consortium. and sort of the best practices that have emerged. It's just not going to keep up with what of having to overcome that? and the ability to build in some and I'm sure it's going to come up this year. live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit
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Chris Scott & J.C. Novoa, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
(techno music) [Narrator]- Live from Las Vegas. It's the CUBE covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to the CUBE live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit here at the Venetian, in Las Vegas, Nevada. I am your host, Rebecca Knight. We have two guests for this segment. We have Chris Scott, Managing Director, Accenture AWS Business Group and J.C. Novoa, Senior Manager, Accenture AWS Business Group. Chris, J.C., thank you much for coming on the show. >> No problem. Thank you Rebecca for having us here. >> So we're talking today about the call center transformation. And I'm excited about it as a customer who loathes call centers. So Chris, why don't you paint the picture for us right now of what a call center looks like, the customer experience, and then also the business experience too? >> Absolutely. Thanks again for having us here. We're really excited to talk about Amazon Connect. I think it's one of the services in Amazon that everyone, as you were saying, can really identify with 'cause they've all been through that kind of customer experience before. So I think what's really interesting about contact center is that it really hasn't dramatically changed last ten or fifteen years. It's all kind of the same, kind of phone tree type conversations. So I think there's a few companies that do it a little bit better but still it hasn't really radically changed over the last ten or fifteen years. And I think Amazon's really playing in that space of disruption, in really thinking how can we do something different in the contact center. So I think there's a lot of challenges that we see with contact centers today. They're not scalable, right? And a lot of representatives spend 90% of their day handling inbound calls. And that's just not scalable. You can't train people up to address that. Also there's an issue with reporting. You don't get as much data about the customer experience. When they call you you don't understand their intent and what happened and how you improve in the process for the next round. And then, I think another big challenge they have is the solutions for contact centers are very complex. And it takes a lot of time to address and change those solutions. So you amass a lot of technical debt over the years of operating this 'cause you can't make those changes that you really want to. So I think Amazon is really playing in the space, like I said, in disruption, in really creating the better customer experience. >> Not only creating that but making it easier making it more human, to some extent Enabling customers to kind of peer behind the green veil and say you know what? This is not that difficult. You should be able to implement something like Amazon connect, which is a contact center as a service. And not have to worry about infrastructure, not have to worry about all the details and the minutiae that goes into actually making that happen and then be able to innovate immediately. Being able to introduce additional artificial intelligence to make that contact center experience more human. Again, to be able to introduce natural language processing and understanding, and then all these capabilities out of the box are able to be integrated with Amazon Connect in a way that improves that, and then additionally increase containment from their perspective of dedicating live agent interactions for things that matter. And then automating some of the activities that are more Q&A, FAQ type of things that can be addressed by a machine in a manner that makes it more understandable by the person that is calling. So that's kind of where we're going here with Amazon Connect. >> I want to dig into some of those features and capabilities because what you're describing is making me excited about the next time I need to call a contact center. So explain exactly how this will work for a customer who calls up. What will happen and then what's sort of happening behind the scenes with the technology? >> So when a customer calls, the idea will be to try to first identify the intent, as Chris was mentioning. What are they calling for? And then be able to identify who they are. Maybe there were interactions that were happening in different channels. These are some of the things that Amazon Connect provides, which is a mechanism for our clients to experience Omni channel and kind of graduate across experiences for their client. Being able to leverage that is important. >> Yeah, Omni channel. I don't think I can underscore the importance of that enough. Because it's all about interacting with a system and a business the way you want to interact with them. Some folks want to be able to call up and have a conversation with an agent, but others want more rapid response. Maybe using a chatbot, or even moving between all of those different channels within the same conversations. When we work with a client, for instance Utility, in order to pick a date to schedule service, it's a lot easier to get a text message, go to a web site, pull up the little calendar and choose your date rather than the representative giving you ten options and you're thinking which one works best for you. And then you're also feeling I've got to rush because this person needs to move on to the next customer. So this Omni channel thing really creates a much, much better experience for the user. >> And Amazon Connect kind of enables that, in a sense. It's our entry point for that Omni channel experience. >> So describe for me how Accenture works with clients implementing Amazon Connect. >> Yes, normally we want to be able to understand what the client's needs is, and understand their customer base. So we go through the process of identifying what that use case looks like. How do we then determine what are the different channels that they want to leverage initially? How do we help them graduate to the full Omni channel experience, one channel at a time? We conduct these workshops, we identify what is the current need. How do we ramp up, and how do we introduce Amazon Connect? Chris will tell us a little bit about the... >> Yeah, great example, and I believe you're speaking with them a little bit, Rebecca, is Mutual of Omaha. Great client that we've worked with, and actually doing a break out session here at re:Invent to talk about their journey out to Amazon Connect. They really started with, you know the problem statement is they wanted to improve their customer engagement. They wanted to retain customers, they wanted to establish new customers and sell new services to their existing customers. And they said the best way for us to do this is to improve our customer engagement through our contact center. So they went about in the market, looked at all the different solutions, looked at their existing solution and they said Amazon is the platform we want to use. We want to innovate on Amazon. It provides us a lot better features, that Omni channel experience. And that's let to better customer engagement, it's led to better tools for the agents, and world leading computer response and machine learning through Amazon. And an overall better experience. Because now they can also get more metrics about what's going on, and they can tailor that and continue to improve their solution and respond to customers, and improve customer engagement. >> So I'm curious though, starting with the business problem, which is Mutual of Omaha, they said we want to do better by our current customers and then also attract new ones. Retract and retain. So is that where you like, is that the starting point in terms of how you start to work with clients? >> That was their starting point. And they said "We found a solution, and that's Amazon. "Now we need to find a partner "that's going to help us with that transformation." And that's when they selected Accenture to help them with the journey. >> But starting with the question... >> Correct, absolutely. They want to understand, a couple of things; they want to be able to innovate, but they also want to be able to provide this excellent customer experience. And what has happened thus far is the current offerings that they have in place are on premise, they're not reliable. They're not scalable and they're costly. At the end of the day, a lot of this actually hits their bottom line. But the reality is that they want to be able to delight their customers. And be able to provide channels that eventually are going to grow with their customer base. Because if you think about it today, that customer is going to expect more of these interactions to follow them through their day. In the morning they might be able to talk to a device. While in the car they might want to talk to a live agent, but when they're at the office they might want to be able to chat with someone. And that kind of day in the life of a customer is what we're actually trying to help our clients solution. >> Also to your point, the folks that are interested in Connect are no longer just I.T. and AWS. It's now the business wanting to engage with AWS in really understanding this new solution. So I think this is a game changer in how Amazon interacts with businesses. 'Cause now it's the business users that are buying, not just I.T. >> And it's those decision makers who are ultimately... talk a little bit about who you go to in terms of... is it the CIO, is it the CTO, about the business decision, and what kind of ROI these folks want to see. >> I think it's a little bit of both, and there's a client that you've been working with, J.C., that's kind of been on this journey. We've started with them, they're looking to expand their business and for that new business expansion, they were looking to have a new solution for their contact center. So we started selling to I.T., because that was the main buyer. But after I.T. heard about, wow, these are all the cool things that we can do, here's how we can improve our customer engagement. We went to the head of customer service for this company, and they were blown away by the capabilities. They said wow, this is really a platform that we can innovate on. It changes. >> And the beauty about that is that those synergies actually is something that we brought together. They themselves were not talking to each other, within the company. So how they can help each other. But the reality is the customer experience relies on data and all these workloads that were helping I.T. move to the cloud actually going to power Amazon Connect and create this more human and natural experience to their customers. So that's kind of the end game here. >> So when you are bringing this new technology to these companies, how hard is it, how big of a challenge is it to get the workforce onboard. (laughter) In some ways the technology's the easy part. >> It is, but I don't think it's all that difficult because people are really excited about doing something different. As I said, this space in contact center hasn't really radically changed in ten to fifteen years, so now folks are saying wait, I can do that? And it doesn't take me three months to do it? I can have what I want next week? That's a game changer, I think that that's what's really getting people excited. And that's why the folks in the business want to work with us to implement Connect. Yes, of course there is change management, which I understand. There's folks that are going to push back, and we understand that. But the reality is at the end of the day, we have the buy in from the executive team in these companies that we're working with and they understand the value. And at the end of the day they help us drive change. Operationally is very much something that we're doing with them, together as a journey, but at the end of the day we're also working with the individual stakeholders within the company, actually to deliver. So we're taking them there. >> Final question. What is the most exciting thing that you're seeing, you're thinking about innovating on for the contact center of the future? What will it be like? >> Artificial Intelligence. >> Yeah, absolutely. If you think about how that conversation is going to happen in the future, you're not going to know whether you're talking to a human or you're talking to a machine, and if we can achieve that, then I think we are getting there. So that's what I see. >> Absolutely. It's understanding customer intent, and being able to intelligently route someone to the right place, without even knowing necessarily why they're calling, or having to tell the agent what they're trying to do. We know why they're calling. Maybe they had a billing issue in the past. So we know that ahead of time, and we can address that proactively in a conversation. >> Great. Well Chris and J.C., thank you both so much for coming on the CUBE. It was a pleasure talking to you. >> Thank you. >> Thank you very much Rebecca. I'm Rebecca Knight. We'll have more from the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit. (techno music)
SUMMARY :
brought to you by Accenture. of the AWS Executive Summit here Thank you Rebecca for having us here. So Chris, why don't you paint the picture for us right now And it takes a lot of time to address out of the box are able to be integrated with Amazon Connect about the next time I need to call a contact center. And then be able to identify who they are. and a business the way you want to interact with them. And Amazon Connect kind of enables that, in a sense. So describe for me how Accenture works that they want to leverage initially? and continue to improve their solution is that the starting point "that's going to help us with that transformation." In the morning they might be able to talk to a device. It's now the business wanting to engage with AWS is it the CIO, is it the CTO, and for that new business expansion, So that's kind of the end game here. to get the workforce onboard. And at the end of the day they help us drive change. What is the most exciting thing that you're seeing, that conversation is going to happen in the future, and being able to intelligently route someone thank you both so much for coming on the CUBE. We'll have more from the AWS Executive Summit
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Annette Rippert, Accenture | AWS Executive Summit 2018
>> Live, from Las Vegas. It's theCUBE. Covering the AWS Accenture Executive Summit brought to you by Accenture. >> Welcome back everyone to theCUBE's live coverage of the AWS Executive Summit. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight. We're joined by Annette Rippert. She is the Senior Managing Director Accenture Technology, North America. Thanks so much for coming on theCUBE. >> Well, I'm happy to be here today. >> So, let's talk a little bit about Accenture's innovation for society initiative. Give our viewers a little background on it. >> Sure. Well, you know, for quite a while we've been known as a company around innovation. But I think one thing that doesn't always come forward is the fact that you know, since our very early days we've had this very tight coupling with corporate citizenship, with philanthropy. In fact we invest 1% of our pre-taxed dollars in philanthropic related initiatives. And you know, for a number of years we've had initiatives like Tech4Good that are part of the DNA of our organization. So, when you think about the innovation side of the organization, and then you think about our philanthropic desires and couple that now with all of the digital technologies, really the possibilities are almost endless when you think about ways that, really, we strive to be able to conquer, not only business problems but societal problems with technology. >> So how do you decide where you're going to focus your energy, your time, your resources. How do you choose the biggest most pressing problems? >> Yes. Well I think one of the things that's really important is we always start with the business process or the societal issue itself as opposed to thinking about how can we use a particular technology to instantiate something we start with really, what's the social problem. And one of the ways that we do this, we have a global innovation contest. Our people get so excited to be apart of this as you could imagine. And one of the tracks is really around Tech4Good and so, teams from around the world think of ways that they can use technology to solve a particular societal issue. And it's really exciting to see the kind of innovations that come out of that. In the end the winners globally are funded to be able to take that idea and actually develop it and put it out in to use. >> So talk about some of the winners and the most exciting entrants from your perspective. >> Well, there's one that I think is maybe a good place to start and that's really around the area of home care, elder care, you know striving to keep a connection together with somebody who's in that circumstance. And being able to provide sort of a real world interaction. So, one of the teams took, with that in mind, concepts around natural language processing, around AI, and really IoT as well. Connecting in sensors in the home, whether that be to doors or to beds or to stoves which can represent safety concerns. And this innovation was built around an Amazon Echo show and around the Amazon platform. And really enables a lot of freedom and a opportunity for the person who's home bound like that to be able to interface with family, with caregivers and really better enable an independent living situation that extends that home care environment. >> So particularly, as the world's population is aging, that's something that we're experiencing here in the US, you can see how that really would help to solve a social challenge. >> Yes, pretty exciting. >> Yeah, so. Talk to me a little bit more about how this contest works in terms of teams within Accenture working together, collaborating and do the self-form the teams? Does Accenture tell them how to ... >> We announce the competition and people self-form it can be an individual, it can be a team. They do this on their own time. They spend time really thinking about how they can apply new concepts. So for us, it's a opportunity for people to learn but then they also think about wanting to address something that's another part of them, you know doing social good. So, it's also an opportunity to contribute and give back through the process of this competition. >> I know that one of the parts of the innovation for social good is the skills to succeed initiative. Can you tell our viewers a little bit more about that? >> Sure, well this is a program really that has taken off like wildfire and we've been doing it for many, many years and it's targeted with extending technology skills to individuals who come from lesser than means. It's a way of extending skills and capability and coaching to provide them the ability to really re-enter the work force. Re-enter the work force with skills and get on their feet. It's been something, it is pervasive across our business. Most of our people have participated in some way whether through coaching or other initiatives and it's been very successful. >> So you go in to these communities and coach marginalized communities? >> Yes, and then it provides an opportunity for them to be able to re-enter, whether re-enter the work force whether with us or any other organization. We look most to provide them with skills. We also provide them with other things that you don't think about when somebody is trying to re-enter the work force, whether that happens to be clothing or other capability to be able to get back on your feet. >> So let's talk about this moment in time in the technology industry. So we have this explosion of digital technologies, as you were saying, AI and machine learning and big data, data analytics and we have companies sort of coming together saying hey, there are a lot of pressing global challenge, societal challenges. We need to harness these technologies to solve them. I mean, do you think that, can you describe, since you are really on the ground, your boots on the ground in the middle of this, what it's like to be in this environment. Do you think that other companies are sort of following Accenture's lead? How would you describe what's going on? >> Well, I think that for a very long time, as I was mentioning, part of our mission statement as a company is to help the way the world works and lives. And so it's been kind of core to the way that we operate the business in our core values. But I think what's happening now is there's a lot more awareness of social good. And instead of supporting a charity or being a partner together with a charity, now we find ways we can really amplify our ability to make a difference. And that is by leveraging our capability around technology to help take that devotion of time, that interest, and really step it up in a pretty significant way. To bring that technology in a way that really's disruptive to changing the societal issue. >> But at the same time you don't want to necessarily start with the technology itself. You want to make sure you're starting with the problem. >> Well that really comes back to the way that we address business problems and the way we address the societal problems, is all of our people are taught concepts around designed thinking. Around human centered design. And so that concept of starting with what is the human problem, is a very natural course because that's the way that we solve all of our business problems. And so, I think that that's a, in thinking about how we solve those issues or collaborate in order to do that I think really drives a lot more complete answers in fact, to the kind of problems that we look to solve. And that's why starting with the societal issue and really what's at risk. What are we trying to address? And then thinking of creative ways to be disruptive around that. Some cases it's not even around the technology. It's about, you know, thinking in a new way about how to address those issues. >> And a cultural shift and getting people to, yeah exactly, collaborate differently. So I know you've just came from a hackathon and you were helping charities think different, think about a problem they wanted to solve and then think about how we could use technology to solve it. Tell our viewers a little bit more about the hackathon here. >> Sure, well you know, our interest in this area is, you can tell I'm very passionate about it. We invest a lot of time from a corporate standpoint and we're helping to sponsor this hackathon here at AWS re:Invent and we're doing that together with several organizations. For example, Girls Who Code, let me see, GameChanger, Compassion, and Goodwill are all other organizations that are participating in the hackathon. And had really interesting problems that they brought to the table. In fact, one of the problems that we talked about today, that the teams are over hacking away thinking about, is there are many organizations that sponsor very under privileged children and create, in this organization situation, they create a one to one relationship between a sponsor and a child and they were looking for ways to be able to connect those two parties by using natural language processing, they wanted to facilitate a near real time kind of dialogue across the boundaries of language in a way that ensures protection of the child and that there's nothing malicious that could happen through that direct connection. Of course we expect everyone to be well-meaning in that but part of the innovation is also protecting the children too. So the teams are over hacking away looking at this and several other kind of problems, social problems, Tech4Good type of initiatives throughout the day today. >> So at next year's, let's look in to our crystal balls here and think about what we're going to be talking about at next year's AWS Executive Summit. What is on the table for this year and what kinds of things are most exciting you that you're ... >> Well I think all the innovation, just further enables it, the way that we think about how we're using today, artificial intelligence, and you couple that together with so many other things around, whether, the example I just gave, around natural language processing and you couple that together with the societal and business problems that are here. I mean, it's really quite explosive. So you think about all of the new innovation that's being announced this week. I think the opportunity to be able to drive that even deeper into, whether it happens to business or societal problem, will be even more interesting next year. >> We'll end that, thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. It was great talking to you. >> Thank you. >> A really fun conversation. >> Enjoyed it. >> I'm Rebecca Knight. We will have more from the AWS Executive Summit coming up in just a little bit. (electronic music)
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Nick Volpe, Accenture and Kym Gully, Guardian Life | AWS Executive Summit 2021
>>And welcome back to the cubes coverage of AWS executive summit at re-invent 2021. I'm John ferry hosts of the cube. This segment is about surviving and thriving and with the digital revolution that's happening, the digital transformation that's turning into and changing businesses. We've got two great guests here with guardian life. Nick Volpi CIO of individual markets at guardian life and Kim golly CTO of life. And is at Accenture essentially, obviously doing a lot of cutting-edge work, guardian changing the game. Nick, thanks for coming on, Kevin. Thanks for coming on. >>Thanks John. Good to be here. >>So I wonder before I get into the question, I want to just set the table a little bit. The pandemic has given everyone a mandate, the good projects are exposed. The bad projects are exposed. Everyone can kind of see kind of what's happening because of the pandemic forced everyone to kind of identify what's working. What's not working what the double-down on innovation for customers is a big focus, but now with the pandemic kind of relieving and coming out of it, the world's changed. This is an opportunity for businesses, Nick, this is something that you guys are focused on. Can you take us through what guardian lives doing kind of in this post pandemic changeover as cloud goes next level? >>Yeah. Thanks John. So, you know, the immediate need in the pandemic situation was about the new business capability. So those familiar with insurance traditionally, you know, life insurance, underwriting, disability underwriting is very in-person fluids labs, uh, attending physician statements. And when March of 2020 broke that all came to an abrupt halt, right doctor's office were either closed. Testing centers were either closed or inundated with COVID testing. So we had to come up with some creative ways to digitize our new business, um, adopt the application and adopt our new medical questionnaires and also get creative on some of our underwriting standards that put us at, you know, certain limits and certain levels and how we, when we needed fluids. So we, we, we have pretty quickly, we're agile about decisions there. And we moved from about, uh, you know, 40 to 50% adoption rate of our electronic applications to, you know, north of 98% across the board. >>Um, in addition, we kind of saw some opportunities for products and more capabilities beyond new business. So after we weathered the storm, we started taking a step back. And like you said, look at what we were doing. Like kind of have a start, stop, continue conversation internally to say, you know, this digitation digitization is a new norm. How do we meet it from every angle, not just a new business, right? And that's where we started to look at our policy administration systems, moving more to the cloud and leveraging the cloud to its fullest extent versus just a lift and shift. >>Kim, I want to get your perspective at a century I'm, I've done a lot of interviews with the past, I think 18 months, lots of use cases with a central, almost in every vertical where you guys are almost like the firefighters get called in to like help out cause the cloud actually now isn't an enabler. Um, how do you see the impact of the, of the pandemic around reverbing through? I mean, obviously you guys come to the table, you guys bring in, I mean, what's your perspective on this? >>So, yeah, it's really interesting. I think the most interesting fact >>Is, you know, we talk about Nick raised the, you know, such a strong area in our business of underwriting and how can we expedite that? There's been talking on the table for a number of years. Um, but the industry has been very slow or reluctant to embrace. And the pandemic became a very informed, I became an enforcer in it to be honest. And a lot of the companies were thinking about a prior. Um, but that's, it they'll think about it. I mean, even essentially we, we launched a huge three-year investment to get clients into cloud and digital transformation, but the pandemic just expedited everything. Now the upside is clients that were in a well-advanced stage of planning, uh, that we're easily able to adopt. Uh, but clients that weren't were really left behind. Um, so we became very, very busy just supporting the clients that weren't didn't have as much forethought as the likes of guardian, et cetera. >>Nick, that brings up a good point. I want to get your reaction to see if you agree. I mean, people who didn't put their toe in the cloud, or just jump in the deep end, really got flat-footed when the pandemic hit, because they weren't prepared people who were either ingratiated in with the cloud or how many active projects were even being full deployments in there did well, what's your take on that? >>Yeah, the, the enablement we had and, and the gift we were given by starting our cloud journey, and I want to say 2016, 17 was we really started moving to the cloud. And I think we were the only insurer that moved production load to the cloud at that point. Um, most of insurers were putting their development environments, maybe even their environments, but, you know, guardian had a strategy of getting out of the data center and moving to a much more flexible, scalable environment architecture using the AWS cloud. Um, so we completed our journey into the cloud by 2018, 19, and we were at the point of really capitalizing versus moving. So we were able to move very quickly, very nimbly, uh, when, when the pandemic hit or in any digital situation, we have that, that flexibility and capacity that AWS provides us to really respond to our customers, our customer's needs. So we were one of the more fortunate insurers that were well into our cloud journey and at the point of optimization versus the point of moving. >>So let's talk about the connection with, with the sensors, life insurance and annuity platform also known as a, I think the acronym is, uh, what was that? Why was that relevant? What, what was that all about? >>Yeah. So I'll go first and then Kim, you can jump in and see if you agree with me. Um, so >>It's essentially, >>I suspect you would write John, like I said, our new business focus was the original, like the, the, the, the emergency situation when the pandemic hit. But as we went further into it and realized the mortality and morbidity and the needs and wants of our customers, which is a major focus of guardian, really being, having the client at the center of every conversation we have, we realized that there was a real opportunity for product and his product continues to change. And you had regulations like 7,702 coming out where you had to reprice the entire portfolio to be able to sell it by January 1st, 2022, we realized our current systems are for policy admin. We're not matching our digital capabilities that we had moved to the cloud. So we embarked on a very extensive RFP to Accenture and a few other vendors that would come to the table and work with us. >>And we just really got to a place where combination of our, our desire to be on the cloud, be flexible and be capable for our customers. Married really well with the, the knowledge, the industry knowledge and the capabilities that Accenture brought to the table with the Ayla platform, um, their book of business, their current infrastructure, their configuration versus development, really all aligned with our need for flexible, fast time to market. You know, we're looking to cut development times significantly. We're looking to cut tests in times niggly. And as of right now, it's all proving true between the CA the cloud capability and halo capability. We are reaping the benefits of having this new platform, uh, coming up in live very soon here before. >>Well, I get to, um, a center's perspective. I want to just ask you a quick follow-up on that. Nick, if you don't mind the, you basically talk us through, okay, I can see what's happening here. You get with Accenture take advantage of what they got going on. You get into the cloud, you start getting the efficiencies, get the cultural change. What refactoring has you have you seen? What's your vision? I should say, what's your vision around what's next? Because clearly there's a, there's a, there's a, there's a playbook you get in the cloud replatform, you get the cultural fit, you understand the personnel issues, how to tap the resources. Then you gotta look for innovation where you can start changing. What, how you do things to refactor the business model. >>Yeah. So I think that, you know, specifically to this conversation, that's around the product capability, right? So for all too long, the insurance companies have had three specific sleeves of insurance products. We've had individual life. We have an individual disability and we'd have individual annuities, right? Each of them serving a specific purpose in the customer's lives, what this platform and this cloud platform allows us to do is start to think about, can we create the concept of a single rapper? Can we bring some of these products together? Can we centralize the buying process? And with ALA behind the scenes, you don't have that. You know, I kind of equate it to building a Ferrari and attaching a, uh, a trailer to it, right? And that's what we were doing today. Our digital front ends, our new business capabilities are all being anchored down or slowed down by our traditional mainframe backends by introducing Accenture on the cloud in AWS, we now have our Ferrari fully free to run as fast as it can versus anchoring this massive, you know, trailer to it. Um, so it really was a matter of bringing our product innovation to our digital front end innovation that we've been working on for, you know, two or three years prior. >>I mean, this is the kind of the Amazon way, right? You decouple things, you decompose, you don't want to have a drag. And with containers, we're seeing companies look at existing legacy in a way that's different. Um, can you talk about how you guys look at that Nick and terminally? Because a lot of CEO's are saying, Hey, you know what? I can have the best of both worlds. I don't have to kill the old to bring in the new, but I can certainly modernize everything. What's your reaction to that? >>Yeah. And I think that's, that's our exact, that's our exact path forward, right? We don't, we don't feel like we need to boil the ocean. Right. We're going after the surgically for the things that we think are going to be most impactful to our customers, right? So legacy blocks of business that are sitting out there that are, you know, full, completely closed. They're not our concern. It's really hitching this new ALA capability to the next generation of products. The next generation of customer needs understanding data, data capture is very important. And right. So if you look at the mainframes and what we're living on now, it's all about the owner of the policy. You lose connection with the beneficiary or the insured, what these new platforms allowed us to do is really understand the household around the products that they're buying. Right. I know it sounds simple, but that data architecture, that data infrastructure on these newer platforms and in the cloud, you can turn it faster. >>You have scale to do more analysis, but you're also able to capture in a much cleaner way on the traditional systems. You're talking about what we call intimately the blob on the mainframe that has your name, your first name, your last name, your address, all in one free form field sitting in some database. It's very hard to discern on these new platforms, given our need and our desire to be deeper into the client's lives, understanding their needs, ALA coupled with em, with AWS, with our new business capabilities on the front end really puts together that true customer value chain. That's going to differentiate us. >>Okay. I'm okay. CTO of a live as he calls it, the acronym for the service you have, this is a great example. I hate to use the word on-ramp cause that sounds so old, right? But in a way in vertical markets, you're seeing the power of the cloud because the data and the AI could be freed up and you can take advantage of all the heavy lifting by providing some platform or some support with Amazon, the, your expertise. This is a great use case of that, I think. And I think, you know, this is, I think a future trend where the developments can be faster, that value can be faster and your customers don't have to build all that lower level abstractions. If you will. Can you describe the essential relationship to your customers as you guys? Cause this is a real great use case. >>Yeah, it is. You know, our philosophy is simple. Let's not reinvent the wheel and with cloud and native services as AWS and, uh, provide w we want to focus on the business of what the system needs to do and not all the little side bets, we can get a great service. That's fully managed that has, uh, security patches updates. We want to focus on the real deal. Like Nick wants to focus on the business and not so much what's underneath it. That's my problem. I'm focusing on that. And we will work together, uh, in a nice little gel. You've had the relatively new term, no code, low code. You know, it's strange a modern system, like a lip has been that way for a number of years. Basically it means I don't want to make code changes. I just want to be able to configure it. >>So now more people can have access to make change, and we can even get it to the point where it's the people that are sitting there, dealing with the clients that would be the ultimate, where they can innovate and come up with ideas and try things because we've got it so simple. We're not there yet, but that's the ultimate goal. So alien, the no code, no code has been around for quite some time. And maybe we should take advantage of that, but I think we're missing one thing. So as good as the platform is the cloud moving in calculating native services, using the built-in security that comes with all that, um, and extending the function and then being able to tap into, you know, the InsureTech FinTech internet of things, and quickly adapt. I think the partnership is big. Okay. Uh, it's, it's very strong part of the exercise, so you can have the product, but without the people that work well together, I think it's also a big challenge. >>You know, all programs have their idiosyncrasies and there's a lot of challenges along the way. You know, there's one really small, simple example I can use. Um, I'd say guardian is one of our industries, market leaders, when, and when they approach the security, they really do lead the way out there. They're very strict, very, um, very responsible, which is such a pleasure to say, but at the end of the day, you still need to run a business. So, you know, because we're a partnership because we all have the same challenges we want to get to success. We were able to work together quite quickly. We planned out the right approach that maximize the security, but it also progressed the business. So, and we applied that into the overall program. So I think it is the product. Definitely. I think it is, uh, everything Nick said you actually elaborated on, but I'd like to point out there's a big part of the partnership to make it a success. >>Yeah. Great, great call out there, Nick, let's get your reaction on that because I want to get into the customer side of it. This enablement platform is kind of the new platform has been around for awhile, but the notion of buying tools and having platforms are now interesting because you have to take this kind of low code, no code capability, and you still got to code. I mean, there's some coding going on, but what it means is ease of use composing and being fast, um, platforms are super important. That requires real architecture and partnership. What's your reaction. >>Yeah. So I think, you know, I'll, I'll tie it all together between AWS and ALA, right? And here's the beauty of it. So we have something called launchpad where we're able to quickly stand up in AIDAP instance for development capabilities because of our Amazon relationship. And then to Kim's point, we have been successful 85% or more of all the work we've done with Inala is configuration versus code. And I'd actually I'd venture to say 90%. So that's extremely powerful when you think about the speed to market and our need to be product innovative. Um, so if our developers and even our, our analysts that sit on the business side could come in and quickly stand up a development buyer and start to play with, um, actuarial calculations, new product features and function, and then spin that to a more higher end development environment. You now have the perfect coupling of a new policy administration system that has the flexibility and configuration with a cloud provider like Amazon and AWS that allows us to move quickly with environments. Whereas in days past you'd have to have an architecture team come in and stand up the servers. And, you know, I'm going way back, but like buy the boxes, put the boxes in place and wire them down. This combination available in AWS has really a new capability to guardian that we're really excited about. >>I love that little comparison. Let me just quickly ask you compared to the old way, give us an order of magnitude of pain and timing involved versus what you just described as standing up something very quickly and getting value and having people shift their, their intellectual capital into value activities versus undifferentiated heavy lifting. >>Yes. I'll, I'll give you real dates. Right? So we engage really engaged with Accenture on the ALA program. Right before Thanksgiving of last year, we had our environment stood up and running all of our vitamins dev set UAT up by February, March timeframe on AWS. And we are about to launch our first product configuration into the, of the platform come November. So within a year we've taken arguably decades of product innovation from our mainframes and built it onto the Ayla platform on the Amazon cloud. So I don't know that you can do that in any other type of environment or partnership. >>It's amazing. You know, that's just great example to me, uh, where cloud scale and real refactoring and business agility is kinda plays out. So congratulations. I got to ask you now on the customer side, you mentioned, um, you guys love, uh, providing value to the customers. What is the impact of the customer? Okay, now you're a customer guardian life's customer. What's the impact of them. Can you share how you see that rendering itself in the marketplace? >>Yeah, so, so clearly AWS has rendered tons of value to the customer across the value stream, right? Whether it be our new business capability, our underwriting capability, our ability to process data and use their scale. I mean, it just goes on and on about the AWS, but specifically around ad-lib, um, the new API environment that we have, the connectivity that we can now make with the new backend policy admin systems has really brought us to a new, a new level. Um, whether it be repricing, product innovation, um, responding to claims capabilities, responding to servicing capabilities that the customer may need. You know, we're able to introduce more self-service. So if you think about it from the back end policy admin, going forward to our client portal, we're able to expose more transactions to self-serve. So minimize calls to the call center, minimize frustration of hold times and allow them to come onto the portal and do more and interact more with their policies because we're on this new, more modern cloud environment and a new, more modern policy admin. So we're delivering new capabilities to the customer from beginning to end being on the cloud with, with, >>Okay, final question. What's next for guardian life's journey year with Accenture. What's your plans? What do you want to knock down for the next year? What's what's on your mind? What's next? >>Uh, so that's an easy question. We've had this roadmap plan since we first started talking to Excentra, at least I've had it in my head. Um, we, we want off all of our policy admin systems for new business come end of 2025. So we've got about four policy admin systems maintaining our different lines of business, our individual disability or life insurance, and our newest, um, four systems that are kind of weighing us down a little bit. We have a glide path and a roadmap with Accenture as a partner to get off of all of these, for new business capability, um, by end of 2024. And that's, you know, I'm being gracious to my teams when I say that I'd like to go a little bit sooner, and then we begin to migrate the, the most important blocks of business that caused the most angst and most concerned with the executive leadership team and then, you know, complete the product. >>But along the way, you know, given regulation, given new, uh, customer customer needs, you know, meeting the needs of the customers changing life, we're going to have parallel tracks, right? So I envision we continue to have this flywheel turning of moving, but then we begin another flywheel right next to it that says we're going to innovate now on the new platform as well. So ultimately John, next year, if I could have my entire whole life block, as it stands today on the new admin platform and one or two new product innovations on the platform as well, by the third quarter, fourth quarter of next year, that would be a success. As far as that. >>Awesome. You guys had all planned out. I love, and I have such a passion for how technology powers business. And this is such a great story for next gen kind of where the modernization trend is today and kind of where it's going. It's the Nick. Appreciate it, Kim. Thanks for coming out with a censure Nixon. It's an easy question for you. I have to ask you another one. Um, this is, I got you here. You know, you guys are doing a lot of great work for other CEOs out there that are going through this right now, whether whatever they are on the spectrum missed the cloud way of getting in. Now this notion of refactoring and then replatforming, and then refactoring business is a playbook we're seeing emerge. People can get the benefits of going to the cloud, certainly for efficiency, but now it opens up the aperture for different kinds of business models. With more data access with machine learning. This refactoring seems to be the new hot thing where the best minds are saying, wow, we could do more, even more. What's your vision? How would you share those folks out there, out there, or the CEOs? What should they be thinking? What's their approach? What advice would you give? >>Yeah, so a lot of the mistakes we make as CEOs, we go for the white hot core first, right? We went the other way. We went for the newer digital assets. We went for the stuff that wasn't as concerning to the business should be fall over. Should there be an outage? Should there be anything? Right? So if you avoid the white hot core, improve it with your peripherals, easier moves to the cloud portals, broker, portals, um, beneficiary portals, uh, simple, you know, AIX frames, moving to the cloud and making them cloud native new builds. Right? So we started with all those peripheral pieces of the architecture and we avoided the white hot core because that's where you start to get those very difficult conversations about, I don't know if I'm ready to move. And I don't see the obvious benefit of moving a dividend generating policy admin system to the cloud. Like why, when you prove it in the pudding and you put the other things out there and prove you can be successful the conversation and move your core and your white hot core out to the platform out to leverage the cloud and to leverage new admin platforms, it becomes a much easier conversation because you've kind of cut your teeth on something much less detrimental to the business. Should it be >>What's the other expression, put water through the pipes, get some reps in and get the team ready to bring training, whatever metaphor you. That's what you're essentially saying. There, get, get some, get some, get your sea legs, get, get practice >>Exactly. Then go for the hard stuff, right? >>It's such a valid point. John is, you know, we see a lot of different approaches across a lot of different companies and, and the biggest challenges, the core is the biggest part. And if you start with that, it can be the scariest part. And I've seen companies trip up big time and you know, it becomes such a bubble spend, which really knocks you on for years, lose confidence in your strategy and everything else. And you're only as strong as your weakest link. So whether you do the outside first or the inside first from a weakest link until it's, the journey is complete, you're never going to maximize. So it was a, it was a very, uh, different and new and great approach that they took by doing a learning curve around the easiest stuff. And then, >>Yeah. Well, that's a great point. One quick, quick followup on that is that the talk about the impact of the personnel, Kim and Nick, because you know, there's a morale issue going on too. There's a, there's a, there's a training. I won't say training, but there's not re-skilling, but there's the rigor. If you're refactoring, you are, re-skilling, you're doing new things, the impact on morale and confidence. If you're not, you get the white, you don't wanna be in the white core unconfident. >>Maybe I should get first. Cause it's Nick's stuff. So he probably might want to say a lot, but yeah. Um, what we see with a lot of insurance companies, uh, they grow through acquisition. Okay. They're very large companies grown over time, uh, buying companies with businesses and systems and bringing it in. They usually bring a ten-year staff. So getting the staff to the next generation, uh, those staff is extremely important because they know everything that you've got today, and they're not so, uh, fair with what's coming up in the future. And there is a transition and people shouldn't feel threatened, but there is change and people do need to adopt and evolve and it should be fun and interesting, but it is a challenge at that turnover point on who controlling what, and then you get the concerns and get paranoid. So it is a true HR issue that you need to manage through >>The final word here. Go for it. >>Yeah. John, I'll give you a story that I think will sum the whole thing up about the excitement versus contention. We see here at guardian. I have a 50 year veteran on my legacy platform team and this person is so excited, got themselves certified in Amazon and is now leading the charge to bring our mainframes onto a lip and is one of the most essential. And I've actually had Accenture tell me if I had a person like this on every one of my engagements who is not only knowledgeable of the legacy, but is so excited to move to the new. I don't think I'd have a failed implementation. So that's the kind of guardian, the kind of backing guardians putting behind this, right? We are absolutely focusing on rescaling. We are not going to the market. We're giving everyone the opportunity and we have an amazing take-up rate. And again, like I said, 50 year veteran who probably could have retired 10 years ago is so excited, reeducated themselves, and is now a key part of this implementation, >>Hey, who wouldn't want to drive a Ferrari when you see it come in, right? I mean Barston magnet trailer. Great story, Nick. Thank you for coming on. Great insight, Kim, great stuff for the century as always a great story here, right? At the heart of the real focus where all companies are feeling right now, we're surviving and thriving and coming out of the pandemic with a growth strategy and a business model with powered by technology. So thanks for sharing the story. Appreciate it. Thanks John. Appreciate it. Okay. So cube coverage of 80 of us executive summit at re-invent 2021. I'm John furrier, your host of the cube. Thanks for watching.
SUMMARY :
I'm John ferry hosts of the cube. because of the pandemic forced everyone to kind of identify what's working. So those familiar with insurance traditionally, you know, life insurance, underwriting, Like kind of have a start, stop, continue conversation internally to say, you know, this digitation digitization lots of use cases with a central, almost in every vertical where you guys are almost like the firefighters get called in I think the most interesting fact And a lot of the companies were thinking about a prior. I want to get your reaction to see if you agree. but, you know, guardian had a strategy of getting out of the data center and moving to a much more flexible, Um, so And you had regulations like 7,702 coming out where you had to reprice the entire portfolio the knowledge, the industry knowledge and the capabilities that Accenture brought to the table with the I want to just ask you a quick follow-up on that. the scenes, you don't have that. I can have the best of both worlds. So legacy blocks of business that are sitting out there that are, you know, into the client's lives, understanding their needs, ALA coupled with em, with AWS, CTO of a live as he calls it, the acronym for the service you have, this is a great example. Let's not reinvent the wheel and with cloud and native services So now more people can have access to make change, and we can even get it to the point where but at the end of the day, you still need to run a business. but the notion of buying tools and having platforms are now interesting because you So that's extremely powerful when you think about the speed to market Let me just quickly ask you compared to the old way, So I don't know that you can do that in any other type of environment or partnership. I got to ask you now on the customer side, you mentioned, um, you guys love, uh, the new API environment that we have, the connectivity that we can now make with the new backend policy admin systems has What do you want to knock down for the next year? And that's, you know, I'm being gracious to my teams when I say that I'd like to go a little bit sooner, But along the way, you know, given regulation, given new, I have to ask you another one. and you put the other things out there and prove you can be successful the conversation and move your core and your white What's the other expression, put water through the pipes, get some reps in and get the team ready to bring training, Then go for the hard stuff, right? So whether you do the outside first or the inside Kim and Nick, because you know, there's a morale issue going on too. So getting the staff to the next generation, Go for it. is not only knowledgeable of the legacy, but is so excited to move to the So thanks for sharing the story.
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Nick Volpe and Kym Gully AWS Executive Summit 2021
(upbeat music) >> Hello and welcome back to theCUBE's coverage of AWS Executive Summit at re:Invent 2021. I'm John Furrier, your host of theCUBE. This segment is about surviving and thriving with the digital revolution that's happening in the digital transformation that's turning into and changing businesses. We've got two great guests here with Guardian Life, Nick Volpe, CIO of Individual Markets at Guardian Life and Kim Gully, CTO of Life and Annuities at Accenture. Accenture obviously doing a lot of cutting-edge work, Guardian changing the game. Nick, thanks for coming on. Kim, thanks for coming on. >> Thanks John, good to be here. >> So, well, before I get into the question, I want to just set the table a little bit. The pandemic has given everyone a mandate. The good projects are exposed. The bad projects are exposed. Everyone can see what's happening because the pandemic forced everyone to identify what's working, what's not working, what the double-down on. Innovation for customers is a big focus, but now with the pandemic relieving and coming out of it, the world's changed. This is an opportunity for businesses. Nick, this is something that you guys are focused on. Can you take us through what Guardian Life's doing in this post pandemic changeover as cloud goes next level? >> Yeah, thanks John. So the immediate need in the pandemic situation was about the new business capability. So those familiar with insurance, traditionally life insurance underwriting, disability underwriting is very in-person, fluids, labs, attending physician statements. And when March of 2020 broke, that all came to an abrupt halt. Doctor's office were either closed. Testing centers were either closed or inundated with COVID testing. So we had to come up with some creative ways to digitize our new business, adopt the application, and adopt our medical questionnaires, and also get creative on some of our underwriting standards that put us at certain limits and certain levels and when we needed the fluids. So we are pretty quickly, we're agile about decisions there. And we moved from about 40 to 50% adoption rate of our electronic applications to the north of 98% across the board. In addition, we saw some opportunities for products and more capabilities beyond new business. So after we weathered the storm, we started to take a step back. And like you said, look at what we were doing, that have a start, stop, continue conversation internally to say, this digitization is a new norm. How do we meet it from every angle, not just a new business. And that's where we started to look at our policy administration systems, moving more to the cloud and leveraging the cloud to its fullest extent versus just a lifted shift. >> Kim, I want to get your perspective at Accenture. I've done a lot of interviews with the past, I think 18 months. A lot of use cases with Accenture, almost in every vertical where you guys are almost like the firefighters, get called in to like help out 'cause the cloud actually now is an enabler. How do you see the impact of the pandemic reverbing through? I mean, obviously you guys come to the table, you guys bring in, I mean, what's your perspective on this? >> So, yeah, it's really interesting. I think the most interesting fact is we talk about, Nick raise such a strong area in our business of underwriting and how can we expedite that, is being talked on the table for a number of years, but the industry has been very slow or reluctant to embrace. And the pandemic became an enforcer in it to be honest. And a lot of the companies were thinking about it prior, but that's it, they'll think about it. I mean, even Accenture, we launched a huge three-year investment to get clients into cloud and digital transformation, but the pandemic just expedited everything. Now the upside is clients that were in a well-advanced stage of planning, they were easily able to adopt, but clients that weren't, were really left behind. So we became very, very busy just supporting the clients that didn't have as much forethought as likes of Guardian, et cetera. >> Nick, it brings up a good point. I want to get your reaction to see if you agree. I mean, people who didn't put their toe in the cloud or just jump in the deep end, really got flat-footed when the pandemic hit, because they weren't prepared. People who were either ingratiated in with the cloud or having active projects or even being full deployments in there did well. What's your take on that? >> Yeah, the enablement we had and the gift we were given by starting our cloud journey, in I want to say 2016, 17 was we really started moving to the cloud. And I think we were the only insurer that moved production load to the cloud. At that point, most of insurers were putting their development environments, maybe even their SIT environments, but Guardian had the strategy of getting out of the data center or moving to a much more flexible, scalable environment architecture using the AWS cloud. So we completed our journey into the cloud by 2018, 19, and we were at the point of really capitalizing versus moving. So we were able to move very quickly, very nimbly. When the pandemic hit or in any digital situation, we have that flexibility and capacity that AWS provides us to really respond to our customers, our customers need. So we were one of the more fortunate insurers that were well into our cloud journey. And at the point of optimization versus the point of moving. >> Let's talk about the connection with Accenture's life insurance and annuity platform also known ALIP, I think the acronym is. What was that? Why was that relevant? What was that all about? >> Yeah, so I'll go first and then Kim, you can jump in and see if you agree with me. >> He essentially help that, love it. (laughs) >> Yeah, you would suspect you would, right John? >> Yeah. (laughs) >> Like I said, our new business focus was the original, like the emergency situation when the pandemic hit. But as we went further into it and realized the mortality and morbidity and the needs and wants of our customers, which is a major focus of Guardian, really being, having the client at the center of every conversation we have, we realized that there was a real opportunity for product and it's product continues to change and you had regulations like 7702 coming out where you had to reprice the entire portfolio to be able to sell it by January 1, 2022. We realized our current systems are for policy admin. We're not matching our digital capabilities that we had moved to the cloud. So we embarked on a very extensive RFP to Accenture and a few other vendors that would come to the table and work with us. And we just really got to a place where combination of our desire to be on the cloud, be flexible, and be capable for our customers, married really well with the knowledge, the industry knowledge and the capabilities that Accenture brought to the table with the ALIP platform. Their book of business, their current infrastructure, their configuration versus development, really all aligned with our need for flexible, fast time to market. We're looking to cut development times significantly. We're looking to cut test in times significantly. And as of right now, it's all proving true between the cloud capability and the ALIP capability. We are reaping the benefits of having this new platform coming up in live very soon here. >> Before I get to Accenture's perspective, I want to just ask you a quick follow-up on that, Nick, if you don't mind. You basically talk us through, okay, I can see what's happening here. You get with Accenture, take advantage of what they got going on. You get into the cloud, you start getting the efficiencies, get the cultural change. What refactoring have you seen? What's your vision, I should say. What's your vision around what's next? Because clearly there's a playbook. You get in the cloud, re-platform, you get the cultural fit, you understand the personnel issues, how to tap the resources, then you've got to look for innovation where you can start changing, how you do things to refactor the business model. >> Yeah, so I think that, specifically to this conversation, that's around the product capability. So for all too long, the insurance companies have had three specific sleeves of insurance products. We've had individual life. We have an individual disability and we'd have individual annuities. Each of them serving a specific purpose in the customer's lives. What this platform and this cloud platform allows us to do is start to think about, can we create the concept of a single wrapper? Can we bring some of these products together? Can we centralize the buying process? And with ALIP behind the scenes, you don't have that, I kind of equate it to building a Ferrari and attaching a trailer to it, and that's what we were doing today. Our digital front-ends, our new business capabilities are all being anchored down or slowed down by our traditional mainframe back-ends. By introducing Accenture on the cloud in AWS, we now have our Ferrari fully free to run as fast as it can versus anchoring this massive trailer to it. So it really was a matter of bringing our product innovation to our digital front-end innovation that we've been working on for two or three years prior. >> I mean, this is the kind of the Amazon way. You decouple things, you decompose, you don't want to have a drag. And with containers, we're seeing companies look at existing legacy in a way that's different. Could you talk about how you guys look at that Nick internally because a lot of CIO's are saying, Hey, you know what? I can have the best of both worlds. I don't have to kill the old to bring in the new, but I can certainly modernize everything. What's your reaction to that? >> Yeah. And I think that's our exact path forward. We don't feel like we need to blow the ocean. We're going after this surgically for the things that we think are going to be most impactful to our customers. So legacy blocks of business that are sitting out there, that are for completely closed, they're not our concern. It's really hitching this new ALIP capability to the next generation of products, the next generation of customer needs, understanding data. Data capture is very important. So if you look at the mainframes and what we're living on now, it's all about the owner of the policy. You lose connection with the beneficiary or the insured. What these new platforms allowed us to do is really understand the household around the products that they're buying. I know it sounds simple, but that data architecture, that data infrastructure on these newer platforms and in the cloud, you can churn it faster, you have scale to do more analysis, but you're also able to capture in a much cleaner way. On the traditional systems, you're talking about what we call intimately the blob on the mainframe that has your name, your first name, your last name, your address, all in one free form field sitting in some database. It's very hard to discern. On these new platforms, given our need and our desire to be deeper into the client's lives, understanding their needs, ALIP coupled with AWS, with our new business capabilities on the front-end really puts together that true customer value chain. That's going to differentiate us. >> Kim, okay, CTO of ALIP as he calls it, the acronym for the service you have. This is a great example. I hate to use the word on-ramp cause that sounds so old. But in a way, in vertical markets, you're seeing the power of the cloud because the data and the AI could be freed up and you can take advantage of all the heavy lifting by providing some platform or some support with Amazon, your expertise. This is a great use case of that, I think. And this is I think a future trend where the developments can be faster, that value can be faster, and your customers don't have to build all the lower level abstractions, if you will. Can you describe the essential relationship to your customers as you guys? Because this is a real great use case. >> Yeah, it is. Our philosophy is simple. Let's not reinvent the wheel. And with cloud and native services that AWS provide, we want to focus on the business of what the system needs to do and not all the little side bits. We can get a great service that's fully managed, that has security patches updates. We want to focus on the real deal. Like Nick wants to focus on the business and not so much what's underneath it. That's my problem, I'm focusing on that. And we will work together in a nice little gel. You've had the relatively new term, no code/low code. It's strange. A modern system like ALIP has been that way for a number of years. Basically it means, I don't want to make code changes. I just want to be able to configure it. So now more people can have access to make change, and we can even get it to the point where it's the people that are sitting there, dealing with the clients. That would be the ultimate, where they can innovate and come up with ideas and try things because we've got it so simple. We're not there yet, let's be realistic, but that's the ultimate goal. So ALIP, the no code/low code has been around for quite some time. And maybe we should take advantage of that, but I think we're missing one thing. So as good as the platform is, the cloud moving in, calculating native services using the built-in security that comes with all that and extending the function and then be able to tap into the InsurTech, FinTech, internet of things, and quickly adapt. I think the partnership is big. Okay, it's very strong part of the exercise. So you can add the product, but without the people that work well together, I think it's also a big challenge. All programs have their idiosyncrasies and there's a lot of challenges along the way. There's one really small simple example I can use. I'd say Guardian is one of our industries market leaders when they approach the security. They really do lead the way out there. They're very strict, very responsible, which is such a pleasure to say, but at the end of the day, you still need to run a business. So, 'cause we're a partnership because we all have the same challenges, we want to get to success. We were able to work together quite quickly. We planned out the right approach that maximize the security, but it also progressed the business and we applied that into the overall program. So I think it is a product definitely. I think it is everything Nick said, you actually elaborated on, but I'd like to point out, there's a big part of the partnership to make it a success as well. >> Yeah, great, great call out there. Nick, let's get your reaction on that because I want to get it to the customer side of it. This enablement platform is the new, I mean, platform has been around for awhile, but the notion of buying tools and having platforms are now interesting 'cause you have to take this low code/no code capability. I mean, you still got a code. I mean, there's some coding going on, but what it means is ease of use composing and being fast. Platforms are super important. That requires real architecture and partnership. What's your reaction? >> Yeah, so I think I'll tie it all together between AWS and ALIP, and here's the beauty of it. So we have something called LaunchPad where we're able to quickly stand up in ALIP instance for development capabilities because of our Amazon relationship. And then to Kim's point, we have been successful with 85% or more, of all the work we've done with an ALIP is configuration versus code and I'd actually I'd venture to say 90%. So that's extremely powerful when you think about the speed to market and our need to be product innovative. So if our developers and even our analysts that sit on the business side could come in and quickly stand up a development environment, start to play with actuarial calculations, new product features and function and then spin that to a more higher-end development environment. You now have the perfect coupling of a new policy administration system that has a flexibility and configuration with a cloud provider like Amazon and AWS that allows us to move quickly with environments, whereas in days past, you'd have to have an architecture team come in and stand up the servers. And I'm going way back, but like buy the boxes, put the boxes in place and wire them down. This combination of ALIP and AWS has really brought a new capability to Guardian and we're really excited about. >> I love that little comparison. Let me just quickly ask you, compared to the old way, give us an order of magnitude of pain and timing involved versus what you just described as standing up something very quickly and getting value and having people shift their intellectual capital into value activities versus undifferentiated heavy lifting. >> Yes, I'll give you real dates. So we really engaged with Accenture on the ALIP program right before Thanksgiving of last year. We had our environment stood up and running, all of our DEV, SIT, UAT up by February, March timeframe on AWS and we are about to launch our first product configuration into the ALIP platform coming November. So within a year, we've taken arguably decades of product innovation from our mainframes and built it onto the ALIP platform on the Amazon cloud. So I don't know that you can do that in any other type of environment or partnership. >> That's amazing. That's just great example to me where cloud scale and real refactoring and business agility is plays out. So congratulations. I got to ask you now, on the customer side you mentioned, you guys love providing value to the customers. What is the impact to the customer? Okay, now you're a customer, Guardian Life's customer. What's the impact to them? Can you share how you see that rendering itself in the marketplace? >> Yeah, so clearly AWS has rendered tons of value to the customer across the value stream whether it be our new business capability, our underwriting capability, our ability to process data and use their scale. I mean, it just goes on and on about the AWS, but specifically around ALIP, the new API environment that we have, the connectivity that we can now make with the new back-end policy admin systems has really brought us to a new level, whether it be repricing, product innovation, responding to claims capabilities, responding to servicing capabilities that the customer might need. We're able to introduce more self-service. So if you think about it from the back-end policy admin going forward to our client portal, we're able to expose more transactions to self-serve. So minimize calls to the call center, minimize frustration of hold times and allow them to come onto the portal and do more and interact more with their policies because we're on this new, more modern cloud environment and a new more modern policy admin. So we're delivering new capabilities to the customer from beginning to end being on the cloud with ALIP. >> Okay, final question. What's next for Guardian Life's journey year with Accenture? What's your plans? What do you want to knock down for the next year? What's on your mind? What's next? >> So that's an easy question. We've had this roadmap plan since we first started talking to Accenture, at least I've had it in my head. We want off all of our policy admin systems for new business come end of 2025. So we've got about four policy admin systems maintaining our different lines of business, our individual disability, our life insurance, and our annuities, for systems that are weighing us down a little bit. We have a glide path and a roadmap with Accenture as a partner to get off of all of these for new business capability by end of 2024. And I'm being gracious to my teams when I say that I'd like to go a little bit sooner. And then we begin to migrate the most important blocks of business that caused the most angst and most concerned with the executive leadership team and then complete the product. But along the way, given regulation, given new customer needs, meeting the needs of the customer's changing life, we're going to have parallel tracks. So I envision we continue to have this flywheel turning of moving, but then we begin another flywheel right next to it that says we're going to innovate now on the new platform as well. So ultimately John, next year, if I could have my entire whole life block, as it stands today on the new admin platform, and one or two new product innovations on the platform as well by the 3rd quarter, 4th quarter of next year, that would be a success as far as I'm concerned. >> Awesome, you guys had all planned out. I love, and I have such a passion for how technology powers business. And this is such a great story for next gen where the modernization trend is today and where it's going. So Nick appreciate it. Kim, thanks for coming out with Accenture. Nick, so just an easy question for you. I have to ask you another one. This is I got you here. You guys are doing a lot of great work. For other CIOs out there that are going through this right now, whatever they are on the spectrum, missed the CloudWave, getting in now, this notion of refactoring and then re-platforming and then refactoring business is a playbook we're seeing emerge. People can get the benefits of going to the cloud, certainly for efficiency, but now it opens up the aperture for different kinds of business models. With more data access, with machine learning. This refactoring seems to be the new hot thing where the best minds are saying, wow, we could do more, even more. What's your vision? How would you share those folks out there of the CIOs? What should they be thinking? What's their approach? What advice would you give? >> Yeah, so a lot of the mistakes we make as CIOs, we go for the white hot core first. We went the other way. We went for the newer digital assets. We went for the stuff that wasn't as concerning to the business. Should we fall over? Should there be an outage? Should there be anything? So if you avoid the white hot core, improve it with your peripherals, easier moves to the cloud portals, broker portals, beneficiary portals, simple AIX frames, moving to the cloud and making them cloud native, new builds. So we started with all those peripheral pieces of the architecture and we avoided the white hot core because that's where you start to get those very difficult conversations about, I don't know if I'm ready to move. And I don't see the obvious benefit of moving a dividend generating policy admin system to the cloud, like why? When you prove it in the pudding and you put the other things out there and prove you can be successful, the conversation to move your core and your white hot core out to the platform out to leverage the cloud and to leverage new admin platforms, it becomes a much easier conversation because you've kind of cut your teeth on something much less detrimental to the business should it go alright. >> What's the old expression, put water through the pipes, get some reps in and get the team ready to bring training, whatever your metaphor you use, that's what you're essentially saying there. Get some, your sea legs, get practice. >> Exactly. >> Then go for the hard stuff. >> It's such a valid point, John. We see a lot of different approaches across a lot of different companies and the biggest challenges, the core is the biggest part. And if you start with that, it can be the scariest part. And I've seen companies trip up big time and it becomes such a bubble spend, which really knocks you on for years, lose confidence in your strategy and everything else. And you're only as strong as your weakest link. So whether you do the outside first or the inside first, from a weakest link until the journey is complete, you never going to maximize. So it was a very different and new and great approach that they took by doing a learning curve around the easiest stuff and then hit in the core. >> Yeah, well, that's a great point. One quick, quick followup on that is that, talk about the impact to the personnel, Kim and Nick, because there's a morale issue going on too. There's a training. I won't say training, but there's a not re-skilling, but there's the rigor, if you're refactoring, you are re-skilling, you're doing new things. The impact of morale and confidence you get certainly. you don't want to be in the white core unconfident. >> Maybe I should get first 'cause it's Nick's stuff. So he probably might want to say a lot, yeah. What we see with a lot of insurance companies, they grow through acquisition. Okay, they're very large companies, grown over time, buying companies with businesses and systems and bringing it in. They usually bring a tenure staff. So getting the staff to the next generation, that staff is extremely important because they know everything that you've got today and then not so aware with what's coming up in the future. And there is a transition and people shouldn't feel threatened, but there is change and people do need to adopt and evolve and it should be fun and interesting, but it is a challenge at that turnover point on who controlling what, and then you get the concerns and get paranoid. So it is a true HR issue that you need to manage through. >> Nick you're the final word here. Go for it. >> Yeah, John. I'll give you a story that I think will sum the whole thing up about the excitement versus contention we see here at Guardian. I have a 50-year veteran on my legacy platform team and this person is so excited, got themselves certified in Amazon and is now leading the charge to bring our mainframes onto ALIP and is one of the most essential, and I've actually had Accenture tell me, if I had a person like this on every one of my engagements who is not only knowledgeable of the legacy, but is so excited to move to the new, I don't think I'd have a failed implementation. So that's the kind of Guardian, the kind of backing Guardian's putting behind this. We are absolutely focusing on rescaling. We are not going to the market. We're giving everyone the opportunity and we have an amazing take-up rate. And again, like I said, 50-year veteran who probably could have retired 10 years ago is so excited, reeducated themselves and is now a key part of this implementation. >> And who wouldn't want to drive a Ferrari when you see it come in. I mean, back in the trailer. Great story, Nick. Thank you for coming on, great insight. Kim, great stuff for the Accenture, as always a great story here. We're here at the heart of the real focus where all companies are feeling right now. We're surviving and thriving and coming out of the pandemic with a growth strategy and a business model powered by technology. So thanks for sharing the story, appreciate it. >> Thanks John, appreciate it. >> Okay, it's CUBE coverage of AWS Executive Summit at re:Invent 2021. I'm John Furrier, your host of theCUBE. Thanks for watching. (bright music)
SUMMARY :
in the digital transformation and coming out of it, the world's changed. and leveraging the cloud 'cause the cloud actually And a lot of the companies to see if you agree. had and the gift we were given Let's talk about the connection and then Kim, you can jump in He essentially help that, love it. Yeah. and the ALIP capability. You get in the cloud, re-platform, I kind of equate it to building a Ferrari I can have the best of both worlds. and in the cloud, you can churn it faster, and the AI could be freed up but at the end of the day, you but the notion of buying of all the work we've done with an ALIP compared to the old way, and built it onto the ALIP What is the impact to the customer? and on about the AWS, down for the next year? of business that caused the most angst I have to ask you another one. the conversation to move your core get some reps in and get the and the biggest challenges, talk about the impact to the personnel, So getting the staff Go for it. and is now leading the charge and coming out of the pandemic of AWS Executive Summit
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AWS Executive Summit 2020
>>From around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent executive summit 2020, sponsored by Accenture and AWS. >>Welcome to cube three 60 fives coverage of the Accenture executive summit. Part of AWS reinvent. I'm your host Rebecca Knight. Today we are joined by a cube alum, Karthik, Lorraine. He is Accenture senior managing director and lead Accenture cloud. First, welcome back to the show Karthik. >>Thank you. Thanks for having me here. >>Always a pleasure. So I want to talk to you. You are an industry veteran, you've been in Silicon Valley for decades. Um, I want to hear from your perspective what the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has been, what are you hearing from clients? What are they struggling with? What are their challenges that they're facing day to day? >>I think, um, COVID-19 is being a eye-opener from, you know, various facets, you know, um, first and foremost, it's a, it's a hell, um, situation that everybody's facing, which is not just, uh, highest economic bearings to it. It has enterprise, um, an organization with bedding to it. And most importantly, it's very personal to people, um, because they themselves and their friends, family near and dear ones are going through this challenge, uh, from various different dimension. But putting that aside, when you come to it from an organization enterprise standpoint, it has changed everything well, the behavior of organizations coming together, working in their campuses, working with each other as friends, family, and, uh, um, near and dear colleagues, all of them are operating differently. So that's what big change to get things done in a completely different way, from how they used to get things done. >>Number two, a lot of things that were planned for normal scenarios, like their global supply chain, how they interact with their client customers, how they go innovate with their partners on how that employees contribute to the success of an organization at all changed. And there are no data models that give them a hint of something like this for them to be prepared for this. So we are seeing organizations, um, that have adapted to this reasonably okay, and are, you know, launching to innovate faster in this. And there are organizations that have started with struggling, but are continuing to struggle. And the gap between the leaders and legs are widening. So this is creating opportunities in a different way for the leaders, um, with a lot of pivot their business, but it's also creating significant challenge for the lag guides, uh, as we defined in our future systems research that we did a year ago, uh, and those organizations are struggling further. So the gap is actually widening. >>So you just talked about the widening gap. I've talked about the tremendous uncertainty that so many companies, even the ones who have adapted reasonably well, uh, in this, in this time, talk a little bit about Accenture cloud first and why, why now? >>I think it's a great question. Um, we believe that for many of our clients COVID-19 has turned, uh, cloud from an experimentation aspiration to an origin mandate. What I mean by that is everybody has been doing something on the other end cloud. There's no company that says we don't believe in cloud are, we don't want to do cloud. It was how much they did in cloud. And they were experimenting. They were doing the new things in cloud, but they were operating a lot of their core business outside the cloud or not in the cloud. Those organizations have struggled to operate in this new normal, in a remote fashion, as well as, uh, their ability to pivot to all the changes the pandemic has brought to them. But on the other hand, the organizations that had a solid foundation in cloud were able to collect faster and not actually gone into the stage of innovating faster and driving a new behavior in the market, new behavior within their organization. >>So we are seeing that spend to make is actually fast-forwarded something that we always believed was going to happen. This, uh, uh, moving to cloud over the next decade is fast forward it to happen in the next three to five years. And it's created this moment where it's a once in an era, really replatforming of businesses in the cloud that we are going to see. And we see this moment as a cloud first moment where organizations will use cloud as the, the, the canvas and the foundation with which they're going to reimagine their business after they were born in the cloud. Uh, and this requires a whole new strategy. Uh, and as Accenture, we are getting a lot in cloud, but we thought that this is the moment where we bring all of that, gave him a piece together because we need a strategy for addressing, moving to cloud are embracing cloud in a holistic fashion. And that's what Accenture cloud first brings together a holistic strategy, a team that's 70,000 plus people that's coming together with rich cloud skills, but investing to tie in all the various capabilities of cloud to Delaware, that holistic strategy to our clients. So I want you to >>Delve into a little bit more about what this strategy actually entails. I mean, it's clearly about embracing change and being willing to experiment and having capabilities to innovate. Can you tell us a little bit more about what this strategy entails? >>Yeah. The reason why we say that as a need for strategy is like I said, cloud is not new. There's almost every customer client is doing something with the cloud, but all of them have taken different approaches to cloud and different boundaries to cloud. Some organizations say, I just need to consolidate my multiple data centers to a small data center footprint and move the nest to cloud. Certain other organizations say that well, I'm going to move certain workloads to cloud. Certain other organizations said, well, I'm going to build this Greenfield application or workload in cloud. Certain other said, um, I'm going to use the power of AI ML in the cloud to analyze my data and drive insights. But a cloud first strategy is all of this tied with the corporate strategy of the organization with an industry specific cloud journey to say, if in this current industry, if I were to be reborn in the cloud, would I do it in the exact same passion that I did in the past, which means that the products and services that they offer need to be the matching, how they interact with that customers and partners need to be revisited, how they bird and operate their IP systems need to be the, imagine how they unearthed the data from all of the systems under which they attract need to be liberated so that you could drive insights of cloud. >>First strategy hands is a corporate wide strategy, and it's a C-suite responsibility. It doesn't take the ownership away from the CIO or CIO, but the CIO is, and CDI was felt that it was just their problem and they were to solve it. And everyone as being a customer, now, the center of gravity is elevated to it becoming a C-suite agenda on everybody's agenda, where probably the CDI is the instrument to execute that that's a holistic cloud-first strategy >>And it, and it's a strategy, but the way you're describing it, it sounds like it's also a mindset and an approach, as you were saying, this idea of being reborn in the cloud. So now how do I think about things? How do I communicate? How do I collaborate? How do I get done? What I need to get done. Talk a little bit about how this has changed, the way you support your clients and how Accenture cloud first is changing your approach to cloud services. >>Wonderful. Um, you know, I did not color one very important aspect in my previous question, but that's exactly what you just asked me now, which is to do all of this. I talked about all of the variables, uh, an organization or an enterprise is going to go through, but the good part is they have one constant. And what is that? That is their employees, uh, because you do, the employees are able to embrace this change. If they are able to, uh, change them, says, pivot them says retool and train themselves to be able to operate in this new cloud. First one, the ability to reimagine every function of the business would be happening at speed. And cloud first approach is to do all of this at speed, because innovation is deadly proposed there, do the rate of probability on experimentation. You need to experiment a lot for any kind of experimentation. >>There's a probability of success. Organizations need to have an ability and a mechanism for them to be able to innovate faster for which they need to experiment a lot, the more the experiment and the lower cost at which they experiment is going to help them experiment a lot. And they experiment demic speed, fail fast, succeed more. And hence, they're going to be able to operate this at speed. So the cloud-first mindset is all about speed. I'm helping the clients fast track that innovation journey, and this is going to happen. Like I said, across the enterprise and every function across every department, I'm the agent of this change is going to be the employees or weapon, race, this change through new skills and new grueling and new mindset that they need to adapt to. >>So Karthik what you're describing it, it sounds so exciting. And yet for a pandemic wary workforce, that's been working remotely that may be dealing with uncertainty if for their kid's school and for so many other aspects of their life, it sounds hard. So how are you helping your clients, employees get onboard with this? And because the change management is, is often the hardest part. >>Yeah, I think it's, again, a great question. A bottle has only so much capacity. Something got to come off for something else to go in. That's what you're saying is absolutely right. And that is again, the power of cloud. The reason why cloud is such a fundamental breakthrough technology and capability for us to succeed in this era, because it helps in various forms. What we talked so far is the power of innovation that can create, but cloud can also simplify the life of the employees in an enterprise. There are several activities and tasks that people do in managing that complex infrastructure, complex ID landscape. They used to do certain jobs and activities in a very difficult underground about with cloud has simplified. And democratised a lot of these activities. So that things which had to be done in the past, like managing the complexity of the infrastructure, keeping them up all the time, managing the, um, the obsolescence of the capabilities and technologies and infrastructure, all of that could be offloaded to the cloud. >>So that the time that is available for all of these employees can be used to further innovate. Every organization is going to spend almost the same amount of money, but rather than spending activities, by looking at the rear view mirror on keeping the lights on, they're going to spend more money, more time, more energy, and spend their skills on things that are going to add value to their organization. Because you, every innovation that an enterprise can give to their end customer need not come from that enterprise. The word of platform economy is about democratising innovation. And the power of cloud is to get all of these capabilities from outside the four walls of the enterprise, >>It will add value to the organization, but I would imagine also add value to that employee's life because that employee, the employee will be more engaged in his or her job and therefore bring more excitement and energy into her, his or her day-to-day activities too. >>Absolutely. Absolutely. And this is, this is a normal evolution we would have seen everybody would have seen in their lives, that they keep moving up the value chain of what activities that, uh, gets performed buying by those individuals. And this is, um, you know, no more true than how the United States, uh, as an economy has operated where, um, this is the power of a powerhouse of innovation, where the work that's done inside the country keeps moving up to value chain. And, um, us leverage is the global economy for a lot of things that is required to power the United States and that global economic, uh, phenomenon is very proof for an enterprise as well. There are things that an enterprise needs to do them soon. There are things an employee needs to do themselves. Um, but there are things that they could leverage from the external innovation and the power of innovation that is coming from technologies like cloud. >>So at Accenture, you have long, long, deep Stan, sorry, you have deep and long-standing relationships with many cloud service providers, including AWS. How does the Accenture cloud first strategy, how does it affect your relationships with those providers? >>Yeah, we have great relationships with cloud providers like AWS. And in fact, in the cloud world, it was one of the first, um, capability that we started about years ago, uh, when we started developing these capabilities. But five years ago, we hit a very important milestone where the two organizations came together and said that we are forging a pharma partnership with joint investments to build this partnership. And we named that as a Accenture, AWS business group ABG, uh, where we co-invest and brought skills together and develop solutions. And we will continue to do that. And through that investment, we've also made several acquisitions that you would have seen in the recent times, like, uh, an invoice and gecko that we made acquisitions in in Europe. But now we're taking this to the next level. What we are saying is two cloud first and the $3 billion investment that we are bringing in, uh, through cloud-first. >>We are going to make specific investment to create unique joint solution and landing zones foundation, um, cloud packs with which clients can accelerate their innovation or their journey to cloud first. And one great example is what we are doing with Takeda, uh, billable, pharmaceutical giant, um, between we've signed a five-year partnership. And it was out in the media just a month ago or so, where we are, the two organizations are coming together. We have created a partnership as a power of three partnership, where the three organizations are jointly hoarding hats and taking responsibility for the innovation and the leadership position that Takeda wants to get to with this. We are going to simplify their operating model and organization by providing and flexibility. We're going to provide a lot more insights. Tequila has a 230 year old organization. Imagine the amount of trapped data and intelligence that is there. >>How about bringing all of that together with the power of AWS and Accenture and Takeda to drive more customer insights, um, come up with breakthrough R and D uh, accelerate clinical trials and improve the patient experience using AI ML and edge technologies. So all of these things that we will do through this partnership with joined investment from Accenture cloud first, as well as partner like AWS, so that Takeda can realize their gain. And, uh, their senior actually made a statement that five years from now, every ticket an employee will have an AI assistant. That's going to make that beginner employee move up the value chain on how they contribute and add value to the future of tequila with the AI assistant, making them even more equipped and smarter than what they could be otherwise. >>So, one last question to close this out here. What is your future vision for, for Accenture cloud first? What are we going to be talking about at next year's Accenture executive summit? Yeah, the future >>Is going to be, um, evolving, but the part that is exciting to me, and this is, uh, uh, a fundamental belief that we are entering a new era of industrial revolution from industry first, second, and third industry. The third happened probably 20 years ago with the advent of Silicon and computers and all of that stuff that happened here in the Silicon Valley. I think the fourth industrial revolution is going to be in the cross section of, uh, physical, digital and biological boundaries. And there's a great article, um, in one economic forum that people, uh, your audience can Google and read about it. Uh, but the reason why this is very, very important is we are seeing a disturbing phenomenon that over the last 10 years are seeing a Blackwing of the, um, labor productivity and innovation, which has dropped to about 2.1%. When you see that kind of phenomenon over that longer period of time, there has to be breakthrough innovation that needs to happen to come out of this barrier and get to the next, you know, base camp, as I would call it to further this productivity, um, lack that we are seeing, and that is going to happen in the intersection of the physical, digital and biological boundaries. >>And I think cloud is going to be the connective tissue between all of these three, to be able to provide that where it's the edge, especially is good to come closer to the human lives. It's going to come from cloud. Yeah. Pick totally in your mind, you can think about cloud as central, either in a private cloud, in a data center or in a public cloud, you know, everywhere. But when you think about edge, it's going to be far reaching and coming close to where we live and maybe work and very, um, get entertained and so on and so forth. And there's good to be, uh, intervention in a positive way in the field of medicine, in the field of entertainment, in the field of, um, manufacturing in the field of, um, you know, mobility. When I say mobility, human mobility, people, transportation, and so on and so forth with all of this stuff, cloud is going to be the connective tissue and the vision of cloud first is going to be, uh, you know, blowing through this big change that is going to happen. And the evolution that is going to happen where, you know, the human grace of mankind, um, our person kind of being very gender neutral in today's world. Um, go first needs to be that beacon of, uh, creating the next generation vision for enterprises to take advantage of that kind of an exciting future. And that's why it, Accenture, are we saying that there'll be change as our, as our purpose? >>I genuinely believe that cloud first is going to be the forefront of that change agenda, both for Accenture as well as for the rest of the work. >>Excellent. Let there be changed. Indeed. Thank you so much for joining us Karthik. A pleasure I'm Rebecca Knight stay tuned for more of Q3 60 fives coverage of the Accenture executive summit >>From around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent executive summit 2020, sponsored by Accenture and AWS. >>Welcome everyone to the cube virtual and our coverage of the Accenture executive summit. Part of AWS reinvent 2020. I'm your host Rebecca Knight. Today, we are talking about the power of three. And what happens when you bring together the scientific, how of a global bias biopharmaceutical powerhouse in Takeda, a leading cloud services provider in AWS, and Accenture's ability to innovate, execute, and deliver innovation. Joining me to talk about these things. We have Aaron, sorry. Arjan Beatty. He is the senior managing director and chairman of Accenture's diamonds leadership council. Welcome Arjun. Thank you, Karl hick. He is the chief digital and information officer at Takeda. >>What is your bigger, thank you, Rebecca >>And Brian Beau Han global director and head of the Accenture AWS business group at Amazon web services. Thanks so much for coming on. Thank you. So, as I said, we're talking today about this relationship between, uh, your three organizations. Carl, I want to talk with you. I know you're at the beginning of your cloud journey. What was the compelling reason? Why w why, why move to the cloud and why now? >>Yeah, no, thank you for the question. So, you know, as a biopharmaceutical leader, we're committed to bringing better health and a brighter future to our patients. We're doing that by translating science into some really innovative and life transporting therapies, but throughout, you know, we believe that there's a responsible use of technology, of data and of innovation. And those three ingredients are really key to helping us deliver on that promise. And so, you know, while I think a I'll call it, this cloud journey is already always been a part of our strategy. Um, and we've made some pretty steady progress over the last years with a number of I'll call it diverse approaches to the digital and AI. We just weren't seeing the impact at scale that we wanted to see. Um, and I think that, you know, there's a, there's a need ultimately to, you know, accelerate and broaden that shift. >>And, you know, we were commenting on this earlier, but there's, you know, it's been highlighted by a number of factors. One of those has been certainly a number of the acquisitions we've made Shire, uh, being the most pressing example, uh, but also the global pandemic, both of those highlight the need for us to move faster, um, at the speed of cloud, ultimately. Uh, and so we started thinking outside of the box because it was taking us too long and we decided to leverage the strategic partner model. Uh, and it's giving us a chance to think about our challenges very differently. We call this the power of three, uh, and ultimately our focus is singularly on our patients. I mean, they're waiting for us. We need to get there faster. It can take years. And so I think that there is a focus on innovation at a rapid speed, so we can move ultimately from treating conditions to keeping people healthy. >>So as you are embarking on this journey, what are some of the insights you want to share about, about what you're seeing so far? >>Yeah, no, it's a great question. So, I mean, look, maybe right before I highlight some of the key insights, uh, I would say that, you know, with cloud now as the, as a launchpad for innovation, you know, our vision all along has been that in less than 10 years, we want every single to kid, uh, the associate or employee to be empowered by an AI assistant. And I think that, you know, that's going to help us make faster, better decisions. That'll help us, uh, fundamentally deliver transformative therapies and better experiences to, to that ecosystem, to our patients, to physicians, to payers, et cetera, much faster than we previously thought possible. Um, and I think that technologies like cloud and edge computing together with a very powerful I'll call it data fabric is going to help us to create this, this real-time, uh, I'll call it the digital ecosystem. >>The data has to flow ultimately seamlessly between our patients and providers or partners or researchers, et cetera. Uh, and so we've been thinking about this, uh, I'll call it weekly, call up sort of this pyramid, um, that helps us describe our vision. Uh, and a lot of it has to do with ultimately modernizing the foundation, modernizing and rearchitecting, the platforms that drive the company, uh, heightening our focus on data, which means that there's an accelerated shift towards, uh, enterprise data platforms and digital products. And then ultimately, uh, uh, uh, you know, really an engine for innovation sitting at the very top. Um, and so I think with that, you know, there's a few different, I'll call it insights that, you know, are quickly kind of come zooming into focus. I would say one is this need to collaborate very differently. Um, you know, not only internally, but you know, how do we define ultimately, and build a connected digital ecosystem with the right partners and technologies externally? >>I think the second component that maybe people don't think as much about, but, you know, I find critically important is for us to find ways of really transforming our culture. We have to unlock talent and shift the culture certainly as a large biopharmaceutical very differently. And then lastly, you've touched on it already, which is, you know, innovation at the speed of cloud. How do we re-imagine that? You know, how do ideas go from getting tested in months to kind of getting tested in days? You know, how do we collaborate very differently? Uh, and so I think those are three, uh, perhaps of the larger I'll call it, uh, insights that, you know, the three of us are spending a lot of time thinking about right now. >>So Arjun, I want to bring you into this conversation a little bit. Let's, let's delve into those a bit. Talk first about the collaboration, uh, that Carl was referencing there. How, how have you seen that? It is enabling, uh, colleagues and teams to communicate differently and interact in new and different ways? Uh, both internally and externally, as Carl said, >>No, thank you for that. And, um, I've got to give call a lot of credit because as we started to think about this journey, it was clear. It was a bold ambition was, uh, something that, you know, we had all to do differently. And so the concept of the power of three that Carl has constructed has become a label for us as a way to think about what are we going to do to collectively drive this journey forward. And to me, the unique ways of collaboration means three things. The first one is that, um, what is expected is that the three parties are going to come together and it's more than just the sum of our resources. And by that, I mean that we have to bring all of ourselves, all of our collective capabilities, as an example, Amazon has amazing supply chain capabilities. They're one of the best at supply chain. >>So in addition to resources, when we have supply chain innovations, uh, that's something that they're bringing in addition to just, uh, talent and assets, similarly for Accenture, right? We do a lot, uh, in the talent space. So how do we bring our thinking as to how we apply best practices for talent to this partnership? So, um, as we think about this, so that's, that's the first one, the second one is about shared success very early on in this partnership, we started to build some foundations and actually develop seven principles that all of us would look at as the basis for this success shared success model. And we continue to hold that sort of in the forefront, as we think about this collaboration. And maybe the third thing I would say is this one team mindset. So whether it's the three of our CEOs that get together every couple of months to think about, uh, this partnership, or it is the governance model that Carl has put together, which has all three parties in the governance and every level of leadership, we always think about this as a collective group so that we can keep that front and center. >>And what I think ultimately has enabled us to do is it's allowed us to move at speed, be more flexible. And ultimately all we're looking at the target the same way, the North side, the same way, >>Brian, about you, what have you observed and what are you thinking about in terms of how this is helping teams collaborate differently? Yeah, >>Absolutely. And RJ made some, some great points there. And I think if you really think about what he's talking about, it's that, that diversity of talent, diversity of skill and viewpoint and even culture, right? And so we see that in the power of three. And then I think if we drill down into what we see at Takeda and frankly Takeda was, was really, I think, pretty visionary and on their way here, right. And taking this kind of cross-functional approach and applying it to how they operate day to day. So moving from a more functional view of the world to more of a product oriented view of the world, right? So when you think about we're going to be organized around a product or a service or a capability that we're going to provide to our customers or our patients or donors in this case, it implies a different structure all to altogether and a different way of thinking, right? >>Because now you've got technical people and business experts and marketing experts all working together in this is sort of cross collaboration. And what's great about that is it's really the only way to succeed with cloud, right? Because the old ways of thinking where you've got application people and infrastructure, people in business, people is suboptimal, right? Because we can all access this tool as these capabilities and the best way to do that. Isn't across kind of a cross collaborative way. And so this is product oriented mindset. It's a keto was already on. I think it's allowed us to move faster. >>Carl, I want to go back to this idea of unlocking talent and culture. And this is something that both Brian and Arjun have talked about too. People are an essential part of their, at the heart of your organization. How will their experience of work change and how are you helping re-imagine and reinforce a strong organizational culture, particularly at this time when so many people are working remotely. >>Yeah. It's a great question. And it's something that, you know, I think we all have to think a lot about, I mean, I think, um, you know, driving this, this color, this, this digital and data kind of capability building, uh, it takes a lot of, a lot of thinking. So, I mean, there's a few different elements in terms of how we're tackling this one is we're recognizing, and it's not just for the technology organization or for those actors that, that we're innovating with, but it's really across all of the Qaeda where we're working through ways of raising what I'll call the overall digital leaders literacy of the organization, you know, what are the, you know, what are the skills that are needed almost at a baseline level, even for a global bio-pharmaceutical company and how do we deploy, I'll call it those learning resources very broadly. >>And then secondly, I think that, you know, we're, we're very clear that there's a number of areas where there are very specialized skills that are needed. Uh, my organization is one of those. And so, you know, we're fostering ways in which, you know, we're very kind of quickly kind of creating, uh, avenues excitement for, for associates in that space. So one example specifically, as we use, you know, during these, uh, very much sort of remote, uh, sort of days, we, we use what we call global it meet days, and we set a day aside every single month and this last Friday, um, you know, we, we create during that time, it's time for personal development. Um, and we provide active seminars and training on things like, you know, robotic process automation, data analytics cloud, uh, in this last month we've been doing this for months and months now, but in his last month, more than 50% of my organization participated, and there's this huge positive shift, both in terms of access and excitement about really harnessing those new skills and being able to apply them. >>Uh, and so I think that that's, you know, one, one element that can be considered. And then thirdly, um, of course every organization has to work on how do you prioritize talent, acquisition and management and competencies that you can't rescale? I mean, there are just some new capabilities that we don't have. And so there's a large focus that I have with our executive team and our CEO and thinking through those critical roles that we need to activate in order to kind of, to, to build on this, uh, this business led cloud transformation. And lastly, probably the hardest one, but the one that I'm most jazzed about is really this focus on changing the mindsets and behaviors. Um, and I think there, you know, this is where the power of three is, is really, uh, kind of coming together nicely. I mean, we're working on things like, you know, how do we create this patient obsessed curiosity, um, and really kind of unlock innovation with a real, kind of a growth mindset. >>Uh, and the level of curiosity that's needed, not to just continue to do the same things, but to really challenge the status quo. So that's one big area of focus we're having the agility to act just faster. I mean, to worry less, I guess I would say about kind of the standard chain of command, but how do you make more speedy, more courageous decisions? And this is places where we can emulate the way that a partner like AWS works, or how do we collaborate across the number of boundaries, you know, and I think, uh, Arjun spoke eloquently to a number of partnerships that we can build. So we can break down some of these barriers and use these networks, um, whether it's within our own internal ecosystem or externally to help, to create value faster. So a lot of energy around ways of working and we'll have to check back in, but I mean, we're early in on this mindset and behavioral shift, um, but a lot of good early momentum. >>Carl you've given me a good segue to talk to Brian about innovation, because you said a lot of the things that I was the customer obsession and this idea of innovating much more quickly. Obviously now the world has its eyes on drug development, and we've all learned a lot about it, uh, in the past few months and accelerating drug development is all, uh, is of great interest to all of us. Brian, how does a transformation like this help a company's ability to become more agile and more innovative and at a quicker speed to, >>Yeah, no, absolutely. And I think some of the things that Carl talked about just now are critical to that, right? I think where sometimes folks fall short is they think, you know, we're going to roll out the technology and the is going to be the silver bullet where in fact it is the culture, it is, is the talent. And it's the focus on that. That's going to be, you know, the determinant of success. And I will say, you know, in this power of three arrangement and Carl talked a little bit about the pyramid, um, talent and culture and that change, and that kind of thinking about that has been a first-class citizen since the very beginning, right. That absolutely is critical for, for being there. Um, and so that's been, that's been key. And so we think about innovation at Amazon and AWS and Chrome mentioned some of the things that, you know, a partner like AWS brings to the table is we talk a lot about builders, right? >>So we're kind of obsessive about builders. Um, and, and we meet what we mean by that is we, we, at Amazon, we hire for builders, we cultivate builders and we like to talk to our customers about it as well. And it also implies a different mindset, right? When you're a builder, you have that, that curiosity, you have that ownership, you have that stake and whatever I'm creating, I'm going to be a co-owner of this product or this service, right. Getting back to that kind of product oriented mindset. And it's not just the technical people or the it people who are builders. It is also the business people as, as Carl talked about. Right. So when we start thinking about, um, innovation again, where we see folks kind of get into a little bit of, uh, innovation, pilot paralysis, is that you can focus on the technology, but if you're not focusing on the talent and the culture and the processes and the mechanisms, you're going to be putting out technology, but you're not going to have an organization that's ready to take it and scale it and accelerate it. >>Right. And so that's, that's been absolutely critical. So just a couple of things we've been doing with, with the Qaeda and Decatur has really been leading the way is, think about a mechanism and a process. And it's really been working backward from the customer, right? In this case, again, the patient and the donor. And that was an easy one because the key value of Decatur is to be a patient focused bio-pharmaceutical right. So that was embedded in their DNA. So that working back from that, that patient, that donor was a key part of that process. And that's really deep in our DNA as well and Accentures. And so we were able to bring that together. The other one is, is, is getting used to experimenting and even perhaps failing, right. And being able to iterate and fail fast and experiment and understanding that, you know, some decisions, what we call it at Amazon are two two-way doors, meaning you can go through that door, not like what you see and turn around and go back. And cloud really helps there because the costs of experimenting and the cost of failure is so much lower than it's ever been. You can do it much faster and the implications are so much less. So just a couple of things that we've been really driving, uh, with Decatur around innovation, that's been really critical. >>Carl, where are you already seeing signs of success? Yeah, no, it's a great question. And so we chose, you know, uh, with our focus on, on innovation to try to unleash maybe the power of data digital in, uh, in focusing on what I call sort of a nave. And so we chose our, our, our plasma derived therapy business, um, and you know, the plasma-derived therapy business unit, it develops critical life-saving therapies for patients with rare and complex diseases. Um, but what we're doing is by bringing kind of our energy together, we're focusing on creating, I'll call it state of the art digitally connected donation centers. And we're really modernizing, you know, the, the, the donor experience right now, we're trying to, uh, improve also I'll call it the overall plasma collection process. And so we've, uh, selected a number of alcohol at a very high-speed pilots that we're working through right now, specifically in this, in this area. And we're seeing really great results already. Um, and so that's, that's one specific area of focus >>Arjun. I want you to close this out here. Any ideas, any best practices advice you would have for other pharmaceutical companies that are, that are at the early stage of their cloud journey for me? Yes. >>Yeah, no, I was breaking up a bit. No, I think they, um, the key is what's sort of been great for me to see is that when people think about cloud, you know, you always think about infrastructure technology. The reality is that the cloud is really the true enabler for innovation and innovating at scale. And, and if you think about that, right, in all the components that you need, that ultimately that's where the value is for the company, right? Because yes, you're going to get some cost synergies and that's great, but the true value is in how do we transform the organization in the case of the Qaeda and the life sciences clients, right. We're trying to take a 14 year process of research and development that takes billions of dollars and compress that, right. Tremendous amounts of innovation opportunity. You think about the commercial aspect, lots of innovation can come there. The plasma derived therapy is a great example of how we're going to really innovate to change the trajectory of that business. So I think innovation is at the heart of what most organizations need to do. And the formula, the cocktail that the Qaeda has constructed with this Fuji program really has all the ingredients, um, that are required for that success. >>Great. Well, thank you so much. Arjun, Brian and Carl was really an enlightening conversation. >>Yeah, it's been fun. Thanks Rebecca. >>Thank you for tuning into the cube virtuals coverage of the Accenture executive summit from around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent executive summit 2020, sponsored by Accenture and AWS. Welcome everyone to the cubes of Accenture >>Executive summit here at AWS reinvent. I'm your host Rebecca Knight for this segment? We have two guests. First. We have Helen Davis. She is the senior director of cloud platform services, assistant director for it and digital for the West Midlands police. Thanks so much for coming on the show, Helen, And we also have Matthew lb. He is Accenture health and public service associate director and West Midlands police account lead. Thanks so much for coming on the show. Matthew, thank you for having us. So we are going to be talking about delivering data-driven insights to the West Midlands police force. Helen, I want to start with you. Can you tell us a little bit about the West Midlands police force? How big is the force and also what were some of the challenges that you were grappling with prior to this initiative? >>Yes, certainly. So Westerners police is the second largest police force in the UK, outside of the metropolitan police in London. Um, we have an excessive, um, 11,000 people work at Westminster police serving communities, um, through, across the Midlands region. So geographically, we're quite a big area as well, as well as, um, being population, um, density, having that as a, at a high level. Um, so the reason we sort of embarked on the data-driven insights platform and it, which was a huge change for us was for a number of reasons. Um, namely we had a lot of disparate data, um, which was spread across a range of legacy systems that were many, many years old, um, with some duplication of, um, what was being captured and no single view for offices or, um, support staff. Um, some of the access was limited. You have to be in a, in an actual police building on a desktop computer to access it. Um, other information could only reach officers on the frontline through a telephone call back to one of our enabling services where they would do a manual checkup, um, look at the information, then call the offices back, um, and tell them what they needed to know. So it was a very long laborious process and not very efficient. Um, and we certainly weren't exploiting the data that we had in a very productive way. >>So it sounds like as you're describing and an old clunky system that needed a technological, uh, reimagination, so what was the main motivation for, for doing, for making this shift? >>It was really, um, about making us more efficient and more effective in how we do how we do business. So, um, you know, certainly as a, as an it leader and sort of my operational colleagues, we recognize the benefits, um, that data analytics could bring in, uh, in a policing environment, not something that was, um, really done in the UK at time. You know, we have a lot of data, so we're very data rich and the information that we have, but we needed to turn it into information that was actionable. So that's where we started looking for, um, technology partners and, um, suppliers to help us and sort of help us really with what's the art of the possible, you know, this hasn't been done before. So what could we do in this space that's appropriate for policing >>Helen? I love that idea. What is the art of the possible, can you tell us a little bit about why you chose AWS? >>I think really, you know, as with all things and when we're procuring a partner in the public sector that, you know, there are many rules and regulations quite rightly as you would expect that to be because we're spending public money. So we have to be very, very careful and, um, it's, it's a long process and we have to be open to public scrutiny. So, um, we sort of look to everything, everything that was available as part of that process, but we recognize the benefits that tide would provide in this space because, you know, without moving to a cloud environment, we would literally be replacing something that was legacy with something that was a bit more modern. Um, that's not what we wanted to do. Our ambition was far greater than that. So I think, um, in terms of AWS, really, it was around scalability, interoperability, you know, disaster things like the disaster recovery service, the fact that we can scale up and down quickly, we call it dialing up and dialing back. Um, you know, it's it's page go. So it just sort of ticked all the boxes for us. And then we went through the full procurement process, fortunately, um, it came out on top for us. So we were, we were able to move forward, but it just sort of had everything that we were looking for in that space. >>Matthew, I want to bring you into the conversation a little bit here. How are you working with the wet with the West Midlands police, sorry, and helping them implement this cloud first journey? >>Yeah, so I guess, um, by January the West Midlands police started, um, pay for five years ago now. So, um, we set up a partnership with the force I, and you to operate operation the way that was very different to a traditional supplier relationship. Um, secretary that the data difference insights program is, is one of many that we've been working with less neutral on, um, over the last five years. Um, as having said already, um, cloud gave a number of, uh, advantages certainly from a big data perspective and the things that that enabled us today, um, I'm from an Accenture perspective that allowed us to bring in a number of the different themes that we have say cloud themes, security teams, um, interacted from a design perspective, as well as more traditional services that people would associate with the country. >>So much of this is about embracing comprehensive change to experiment, innovate, and try different things. Matthew, how, how do you help an entity like West Midlands police think differently when they are, there are these ways of doing things that people are used to, how do you help them think about what is the art of the possible, as Helen said, >>There's a few things for that, you know, what's being critical is trying to co-create solutions together. Yeah. There's no point just turning up with, um, what we think is the right answer, try and say, um, collectively work through, um, the issues that the forest are seeing the outcomes they're looking to achieve rather than simply focusing on the long list of requirements I think was critical and then being really open to working together to create the right solution. Um, rather than just, you know, trying to pick something off the shelf that maybe doesn't fit the forces requirements in the way that it should to, right. It's not always a one size fits all. Obviously, you know, today what we thought was critical is making sure that we're creating something that met the forces needs, um, in terms of the outcomes they're looking to achieve the financial envelopes that were available, um, and how we can deliver those in a, uh, iterative agile way, um, rather than spending years and years, um, working towards an outcome, um, that is going to outdate before you even get that. >>How, how are things different? What kinds of business functions and processes have been re-imagined in, in light of this change and this shift >>It's, it's actually unrecognizable now, um, in certain areas of the business as it was before. So to give you a little bit of context, when we, um, started working with essentially century AWS on the data driven insights program, it was very much around providing, um, what was called locally, a wizzy tool for our intelligence analysts to interrogate data, look at data, you know, decide whether they could do anything predictive with it. And it was very much sort of a back office function to sort of tidy things up for us and make us a bit better in that, in that area or a lot better in that area. And it was rolled out to a number of offices, a small number on the front line. Um, I'm really, it was, um, in line with a mobility strategy that we, hardware officers were getting new smartphones for the first time, um, to do sort of a lot of things on, on, um, policing apps and things like that to again, to avoid them, having to keep driving back to police stations, et cetera. >>And the pilot was so successful. Every officer now has access to this data, um, on their mobile devices. So it literally went from a handful of people in an office somewhere using it to do sort of clever whizzbang things to, um, every officer in the force, being able to access that level of data at their fingertips literally. So what they would touch we've done before is if they needed to check and address or check, uh, details of an individual, um, just as one example, they would either have to, in many cases, go back to a police station to look it up themselves on a desktop computer. Well, they would have to make a call back to, um, a centralized function and speak to an operator, relay the questions either, wait for the answer or wait for a call back with the answer when those people are doing the data interrogation manually. >>So the biggest change for us is the self-service nature of the data we now have available. So officers can do it themselves on their phone, wherever they might be. So the efficiency savings, um, from that point of view are immense. And I think just parallel to that is the quality of our data because we had a lot of data, but just because you've got a lot of data and a lot of information doesn't mean it's big data and it's valuable necessarily. Um, so again, it was having the single source of truth as we, as we call it. So you know, that when you are completing those safe searches and getting the responses back, that it is the most accurate information we hold. And also you're getting it back within minutes as opposed to, you know, half an hour, an hour or a drive back to the station. So it's making officers more efficient and it's also making them safer. The more efficient they are, the more time they have to spend, um, out with the public doing what they, you know, we all should be doing. >>And have you seen that kind of return on investment because what you were just describing with all the steps that we'd needed to be taken in prior to this to verify and address say, and those are precious seconds when someone's life is on the line in, in sort of in the course of everyday police work. >>Absolutely. Yeah, absolutely. It's difficult to put a price on it. It's difficult to quantify. Um, but all the, you know, the minutes here and that certainly add up to a significant amount of efficiency savings, and we've certainly been able to demonstrate the officers are spending less time up police stations as a result and more time out on the front line. Also they're safer because they can get information about what may or may not be and address what may or may not have occurred in an area before very, very quickly without having to wait. >>Matthew, I want to hear your observations of working so closely with this West Midlands police. Have you noticed anything about changes in its culture and its operating model in how police officers interact with one another? Have you seen any changes since this technology change, >>Um, unique about the West new misplaces, the buy-in from the top, it depend on the chief and his exact team. And Helen is the leader from an IOT perspective. Um, the entire force is bought in. So what is a significant change program? Uh, uh, not trickles three. Um, everyone in the organization, um, change is difficult. Um, and there's a lot of time effort. That's been put into bake, the technical delivery and the business change and adoption aspects around each of the projects. Um, but you can see the step change that it's making in each aspect to the organization, uh, and where that's putting West Midlands police as a leader in, um, technology I'm policing in the UK. And I think globally, >>And this is a question for both of you because Matthew, as you said, change is difficult and there is always a certain intransigence in workplaces about this is just the way we've always done things and we're used to this and don't try to get us, don't try to get us to do anything new here. It works. How do you get the buy-in that you need to, to do this kind of digital transformation? >>I think it, it would be wrong to say it was easy. Um, um, we also have to bear in mind that this was one program in a five year program. So there was a lot of change going on, um, both internally for some of our back office functions, as well as front tie, uh, frontline offices. So with DDI in particular, I think the stat change occurred when people could see what it could do for them. You know, we had lots of workshops and seminars where we all talk about, you know, big data and it's going to be great and it's data analytics and it's transformational, you know, and quite rightly people that are very busy doing a day job that not necessarily technologists in the main and, you know, are particularly interested quite rightly so in what we are not dealing with the cloud, you know? >>And it was like, yeah, okay. It's one more thing. And then when they started to see on that, on their phones and what teams could do, that's when it started to sell itself. And I think that's when we started to see, you know, to see the stack change, you know, and, and if we, if we have any issues now it's literally, you know, our help desks in meltdown. Cause everyone's like, well, we call it manage without this anymore. And I think that speaks for itself. So it doesn't happen overnight. It's sort of incremental changes and then that's a step change in attitude. And when they see it working and they see the benefits, they want to use it more. And that's how it's become fundamental to our policing by itself, really without much selling >>Matthew, Helen just made a compelling case for how to get buy in. Have you discovered any other best practices when you are trying to get everyone on board for this kind of thing? >>So we've, um, we've used a lot of the traditional techniques, things around comms and engagement. We've also used things like, um, the 30 day challenge and nudge theory around how can we gradually encourage people to use things? Um, I think there's a point where all of this around, how do we just keep it simple and keep it user centric from an end user perspective? I think DDI is a great example of where the, the technology is incredibly complex. The solution itself is, um, you know, extremely large and, um, has been very difficult to, um, get delivered. But at the heart of it is a very simple front end for the user to encourage it and take that complexity away from them. Uh, I think that's been critical through the whole piece of video. >>One final word from Helen. I want to hear, where do you go from here? What is the longterm vision? I know that this made productivity, >>Um, productivity savings equivalent to 154 full-time officers. Uh, what's next, I think really it's around, um, exploiting what we've got. Um, I use the phrase quite a lot, dialing it up, which drives my technical architects crazy, but because it's apparently not that simple, but, um, you know, we've, we've been through significant change in the last five years and we are still continuing to batch all of those changes into everyday, um, operational policing. But what we need to see now is we need to exploit and build on the investments that we've made, um, in terms of data and claims specifically, the next step really is about expanding our pool of data and our functions. Um, so that, you know, we keep getting better and better, um, at this, um, the more we do, the more data we have, the more refined we can be, the more precise we are with all of our actions. >>Um, you know, we're always being expected to, again, look after the public purse and do more for less. And I think this is certainly an and our cloud journey and cloud first by design, which is where we are now, um, is helping us to be future-proofed. So for us, it's very much an investment. And I see now that we have good at embedded in operational policing for me, this is the start of our journey, not the end. So it's really exciting to see where we can go from here. Exciting times. Indeed. Thank you so much. And Matthew for joining us, I really appreciate it. And you are watching the cube stay tuned for more of the cubes coverage of the AWS reinvent Accenture executive summit. I'm Rebecca Knight from around the globe with digital coverage, >>AWS reinvent executive summit, 2020, sponsored by Accenture and AWS. Everyone. Welcome to the cube virtual coverage of the executive summit at AWS reinvent 2020 virtual. This is the cube virtual. We can't be there in person like we are every year we have to be remote. This executive summit is with special programming supported by Accenture where the cube virtual I'm your host John for a year, we had a great panel here called uncloud first digital transformation from some experts, Stuart driver, the director of it and infrastructure and operates at lion Australia, Douglas Regan, managing director, client account lead at lion for Accenture as a deep Islam associate director application development lead for Accenture gentlemen, thanks for coming on the cube virtual that's a mouthful, all that digital, but the bottom line it's cloud transformation. This is a journey that you guys have been on together for over 10 years to be really a digital company. Now, some things have happened in the past year that kind of brings all this together. This is about the next generation organization. So I want to ask Stuart you first, if you can talk about this transformation at lion has undertaken some of the challenges and opportunities and how this year in particular has brought it together because you, you know, COVID has been the accelerant of digital transformation. Well, if you're 10 years in, I'm sure you're there. You're in the, uh, uh, on that wave right now. Take a minute to explain this transformation journey. >>Yeah, sure. So number of years back, we, we looked at kind of our infrastructure and our landscape. I'm trying to figure out where we wanted to go next. And we were very analog based, um, and stuck in the old it groove of, you know, capital refresh, um, struggling to transform, struggling to get to a digital platform and we needed to change it up so that we could, uh, become very different business to the one that we were back then. Um, obviously cloud is an accelerant to that and we had a number of initiatives that needed a platform to build on. And a cloud infrastructure was the way that we started to do that. So we went through a number of transformation programs that we didn't want to do that in the old world. We wanted to do it in a new world. So for us, it was partnering up with a, you know, great organizations that can take you on the journey and, uh, you know, start to deliver a bit by bit incremental progress, uh, to get to the, uh, I guess the promise land. >>Um, we're not, uh, not all the way there, but to where we're a long way along. And then when you get to some of the challenges like we've had this year, um, it makes all of the hard work worthwhile because you can actually change pretty quickly, um, provide capacity and, uh, and increase your environments and, you know, do the things that you need to do in a much more dynamic way than we would have been able to previously where we might've been waiting for the hardware vendors, et cetera, to deliver capacity for us this year, it's been a pretty strong year from an it perspective and delivering for the business needs, >>Forget the Douglas. I want to just real quick and redirect to you and say, you know, for all the people who said, Oh yeah, you got to jump on cloud, get in early, you know, a lot of naysayers like, well, wait till to mature a little bit. Really, if you got in early and you paying your dues, if you will taking that medicine with the cloud, you're really kind of peaking at the right time. Is that true? Is that one of the benefits that comes out of this getting in the cloud, >>John, this has been an unprecedented year, right. And, um, you know, Australia, we had to live through Bush fires and then we had covert and, and then we actually had to deliver a, um, a project I'm very know transformational product project, completely remote. And then we also had had some, some cyber challenges, which is public as well. And I don't think if we weren't moved into and enabled through the cloud would have been able to achieve that this year. It would have been much different. It would have been very difficult to do the fact that we were able to work and partner with Amazon through this year, which is unprecedented and actually come out the other end and we've delivered a brand new digital capability across the entire business. Um, it wouldn't >>Have been impossible if we could, I guess, stayed in the old world. The fact that we moved into the new Naval by the Navy allowed us to work in this unprecedented gear >>Just quick. What's your personal view on this? Because I've been saying on the Cuban reporting, necessity's the mother of all invention and the word agility has been kicked around as kind of a cliche, Oh, it'd be agile. You know, we're gonna get to Sydney. You get a minute on specifically, but from your perspective, uh, Douglas, what does that mean to you? Because there is benefits there for being agile. And >>I mean, I think as Stuart mentioned writing, and a lot of these things we try to do and, you know, typically, you know, hardware capabilities of the last to be told and, and always the only critical path to be done. You know, we really didn't have that in this case, what we were doing with our projects in our deployments, right. We were able to move quickly able to make decisions in line with the business and really get things going, right. So you, a lot of times in a traditional world, you have these inhibitors, you have these critical path, it takes weeks and months to get things done as opposed to hours and days. And it truly allowed us to, we had to VJ things, move things. And, you know, we were able to do that in this environment with AWS to support and the fact that we can kind of turn things off and on as quickly as we need it. Yeah. >>Cloud-scale is great for speed. So DECA got, Gardez get your thoughts on this cloud first mission, you know, it, you know, the dev ops worlds, they saw this early, that jumping in there, they saw the, the, the agility. Now the theme this year is modern applications with the COVID pandemic pressure, there's real business pressure to make that happen. How did you guys learn to get there fast? And what specifically did you guys do at Accenture and how did it all come together? Can you take us inside kind of how it played out? >>All right. So we started off with us and we work with lions experts and, uh, the lost knowledge that allowed reconstructive being had. Um, we then applied our journey group cloud strategy basically revolves around the seven Oz and, and, uh, you know, the deep peaking steps from our perspective, uh, assessing the current bottom, setting up the new cloud in modern. And as we go modernizing and, and migrating these applications to the cloud now, you know, one of the things that, uh, no we did not along this journey was that, you know, you can have the best plans, but bottom of that, we were dealing with, we often than not have to make changes. Uh, what a lot of agility and also work with a lot of collaboration with the, uh, Lyon team, as well as, uh, uh, AWS. I think the key thing for me was being able to really bring it all together. It's not just, uh, you know, essentially mobilize all of us. >>What were some of the learnings real quick, your journey there? >>So I think perspective the key learnings around that, you know, uh, you know, what, when we look back at, uh, the, the infrastructure that was that we were trying to migrate over to the cloud, a lot of the documentation, et cetera, was not, uh, available. We were having to, uh, figure out a lot of things on the fly. Now that really required us to have, uh, uh, people with deep expertise who could go into those environments and, and work out, uh, you know, the best ways to, to migrate the workloads to the cloud. Uh, I think, you know, the, the biggest thing for me was making Jovi had on that real SMEs across the board globally, that we could leverage across various technologies, uh, uh, and, and, and, you know, that would really work in our collaborative and agile environment would line >>Just do what I got to ask you. How did you address your approach to the cloud and what was your experience? >>Yeah, for me, it's around getting the foundations right. To start with and then building on them. Um, so, you know, you've got to have your, your process and you're going to have your, your kind of your infrastructure there and your blueprints ready. Um, AWS do a great job of that, right. Getting the foundations right. And then building upon it, and then, you know, partnering with Accenture allows you to do that very successfully. Um, I think, um, you know, the one thing that was probably surprising to us when we started down this journey and kind of, after we got a long way down, the track of looking backwards is actually how much you can just turn off. Right? So a lot of stuff that you, uh, you get left with a legacy in your environment, and when you start to work through it with the types of people that civic just mentioned, you know, the technical expertise working with the business, um, you can really rationalize your environment and, uh, um, you know, cloud is a good opportunity to do that, to drive that legacy out. >>Um, so you know, a few things there, the other thing is, um, you've got to try and figure out the benefits that you're going to get out of moving here. So there's no point just taking something that is not delivering a huge amount of value in the traditional world, moving it into the cloud, and guess what it's going to deliver the same limited amount of value. So you've got to transform it, and you've got to make sure that you build it for the future and understand exactly what you're trying to gain out of it. So again, you need a strong collaboration. You need a good partners to work with, and you need good engagement from the business as well, because the kind of, uh, you know, digital transformation, cloud transformation, isn't really an it project, I guess, fundamentally it is at the core, but it's a business project that you've got to get the whole business aligned on. You've got to make sure that your investment streams are appropriate and that you're able to understand the benefits and the value that you're going to drive back towards the business. >>Let's do it. If you don't mind me asking what was some of the obstacles encountered or learnings, um, that might've differed from the expectation we all been there, Hey, you know, we're going to change the world. Here's the sales pitch, here's the outcome. And then obviously things happen, you know, you learn legacy, okay. Let's put some containerization around that cloud native, um, all that rational. You're talking about what are, and you're going to have obstacles. That's how you learn. That's how perfection has developed. How, what obstacles did you come up with and how are they different from your expectations going in? >>Yeah, they're probably no different from other people that have gone down the same journey. If I'm totally honest, the, you know, 70 or 80% of what you do is relative music, because they're a known quantity, it's relatively modern architectures and infrastructures, and you can, you know, upgrade, migrate, move them into the cloud, whatever it is, rehost, replatform, rearchitect, whatever it is you want to do, it's the other stuff, right? It's the stuff that always gets left behind. And that's the challenge. It's, it's getting that last bit over the line and making sure that you haven't invested in the future while still carrying all of your legacy costs and complexity within your environment. So, um, to be quite honest, that's probably taken longer and, and has been more of a challenge than we thought it would be. Um, the other piece I touched on earlier on in terms of what was surprising was actually how much of your environment is actually not needed anymore. >>When you start to put a critical eye across it and understand, um, uh, ask the tough questions and start to understand exactly what, what it is you're trying to achieve. So if you ask a part of a business, do they still need this application or this service a hundred percent of the time, they'll say yes, until you start to lay out to them, okay, now I'm going to cost you this to migrate it or this, to run it in the future. And, you know, here's your ongoing costs and, you know, et cetera, et cetera. And then, uh, for a significant amount of those answers, you get a different response when you start to layer on the true value of it. So you start to flush out those hidden costs within the business, and you start to make some critical decisions as a company based on, uh, based on that. So that was a little tougher than we first thought and probably broader than we thought there was more of that than we anticipated, which actually resulted in a much cleaner environment post and post migration. Yeah. >>Well, expression, if it moves automated, you know, it's kind of a joke on government, how they want to tax everything, you know, you want to automate, that's a key thing in cloud, and you've got to discover those opportunities to create value, uh, Stuart and Siddique. Mainly if you can weigh in on this love to know the percentage of total cloud that you have now, versus when you started, because as you start to uncover whether it's by design for purpose, or you discover opportunities to innovate, like you guys have, I'm sure it kind of, you took on some territory inside Lyon, what percentage of cloud now versus >>Yeah. At the start, it was minimal, right. You know, close to zero, right. Single and single digits. Right. It was mainly SAS environments that we had, uh, sitting in cloud when we, uh, when we started, um, Doug mentioned earlier a really significant transformation project that we've undertaken recently gone live on a multi-year one. Um, you know, that's all stood up on AWS and is a significant portion of our environment, um, in terms of what we can move to cloud. Uh, we're probably at about 80 or 90% now. And the balanced bit is, um, legacy infrastructure that is just gonna retire as we go through the cycle rather than migrate to the cloud. Um, so we are significantly cloud-based and, uh, you know, we're reaping the benefits of it in a year, like 2020, and makes you glad that you did all of the hard yards in the previous years when you start business challenges, trying out as, >>So do you get any common reaction to the cloud percentage penetration? >>Sorry, I didn't, I didn't catch that, but I, all I was going to say was, I think it's like the typical 80 20 rule, right? We, we, we worked really hard in the, you know, I think 2018, 19 to get 80% off the, uh, application onto the cloud. And over the last year is the 20% that we have been migrating. And Stuart said, right. A lot of it is also, that's going to be your diet. And I think our next big step is going to be obviously, you know, the icing on the cake, which is to decommission all of these apps as well. Right. So, you know, to get the real benefits out of, uh, out of the whole conservation program from a, uh, from a reduction of CapEx, OPEX perspective, >>Douglas and Stuart, can you guys talk about the decision around the clouds because you guys have had success with AWS? Why AWS how's that decision made? Can you guys give some insight into some of those things? >>I can, I can start, start off. I think back when the decision was made and it was, it was a while back, um, you know, there was some clear advantages of moving relay, Ws, a lot of alignment with some of the significant projects and, uh, the trend, that particular one big transformation project that we've alluded to as well. Um, you know, we needed some, um, some very robust and, um, just future proof and, and proven technology. And AWS gave that to us. We needed a lot of those blueprints to help us move down the path. We didn't want to reinvent everything. So, um, you know, having a lot of that legwork done for us and AWS gives you that, right. And particularly when you partner up with, uh, with a company like Accenture as well, you get combinations of technology and the, the skills and the knowledge to, to move you forward in that direction side. Um, you know, for us, it was a, uh, uh, it was a decision based on, you know, best of breed, um, you know, looking forward and, and trying to predict the future needs and, and, and kind of the environmental that we might need. Um, and, you know, partnering up with organizations that can then take you on the journey >>Just to build on that. So obviously, you know, lines like an antivirus, but, you know, we knew it was a very good choice given the, um, >>Uh, skills and the capability that we had, as well as the assets and tools we had to get the most out of an AWS. And obviously our CEO globally just made an announcement about a huge investment that we're making in cloud. Um, but you know, we've, we've worked very well with AWS. We've done some joint workshops and joint investments, um, some joint POC. So yeah, w we have a very good working relationship, AWS, and I think, um, one incident to reflect upon whether it's cyber it's and again, where we actually jointly, you know, dove in with, um, with Amazon and some of their security experts and our experts. And we're able to actually work through that with mine quite successful. So, um, you know, really good behaviors as an organization, but also really good capabilities. >>Yeah. As you guys, your essential cloud outcomes, research shown, it's the cycle of innovation with the cloud, that's creating a lot of benefits, knowing what you guys know now, looking back certainly COVID has impacted a lot of people kind of going through the same process, knowing what you guys know now, would you advocate people to jump on this transformation journey? If so, how, and what tweaks they make, which changes, what would you advise? >>I might take that one to start with. Um, I hate to think where we would have been when, uh, COVID kicked off here in Australia and, you know, we were all sent home, literally were at work on the Friday, and then over the weekend. And then Monday, we were told not to come back into the office and all of a sudden, um, our capacity in terms of remote access and I quadrupled, or more four, five X, what we had on the Friday we needed on the Monday. And we were able to stand that up during the day Monday into Tuesday, because we were cloud-based and, uh, you know, we just spun up your instances and, uh, you know, sort of our licensing, et cetera. And, and we had all of our people working remotely, um, within, uh, you know, effectively one business day. Um, I know peers of mine in other organizations and industries that are relying on kind of a traditional wise and getting hardware, et cetera, that were weeks and months before they could get the right hardware to be able to deliver to their user base. >>So, um, you know, one example where you're able to scale and, uh, uh, get, uh, get value out of this platform beyond probably what was anticipated at the time you talk about, um, you know, less this, the, and all of these kinds of things. And you can also think of a few scenarios, but real world ones where you're getting your business back up and running in that period of time is, is just phenomenal. There's other stuff, right? There's these programs that we've rolled out, you do your sizing, um, and in the traditional world, you would just go out and buy more servers than you need. And, you know, probably never realize the full value of those, you know, the capability of those servers over the life cycle of them. Whereas, you know, in a cloud world, you put in what you think is right. And if it's not right, you pump it up a little bit when, when all of your metrics and so on telling you that you need to bump it up and conversely Scarlett down at the same rate. So for us with the types of challenges and programs and, uh, uh, and just business need, that's come at as this year, uh, we wouldn't have been able to do it without a strong cloud base, uh, to, uh, to move forward with >>Yeah, Douglas, one of the things that I talked to, a lot of people on the right side of history who have been on the right wave with cloud, with the pandemic, and they're happy, they're like, and they're humble. Like, well, we're just lucky, you know, luck is preparation meets opportunity. And this is really about you guys getting in early and being prepared and readiness. This is kind of important as people realize, then you gotta be ready. I mean, it's not just, you don't get lucky by being in the right place, the right time. And there were a lot of companies were on the wrong side of history here who might get washed away. This is a second >>I think, to echo and kind of build on what Stewart said. I think that the reason that we've had success and I guess the momentum is we, we didn't just do it in isolation within it and technology. It was actually linked to broader business changes, you know, creating basically a digital platform for the entire business, moving the business, where are they going to be able to come back stronger after COVID, when they're actually set up for growth, um, and actually allows, you know, a line new achievements, growth objectives, and also its ambitions as far as what he wants to do, uh, with growth in whatever they may do as acquiring other companies and moving into different markets and launching new product. So we've actually done it in a way that there's, you know, real and direct business benefit, uh, that actually enables line to grow >>General. I really appreciate you coming. I have one final question. If you can wrap up here, uh, Stuart and Douglas, you don't mind waiting, and what's the priorities for the future. What's next for lion and a century >>Christmas holidays, I'll start Christmas holidays. And I spent a third year and then a, and then a reset, obviously, right? So, um, you know, it's, it's figuring out, uh, transform what we've already transformed, if that makes sense. So God, a huge proportion of our services sitting in the cloud. Um, but we know we're not done even with the stuff that is in there. We need to take those next steps. We need more and more automation and orchestration. We need to, um, our environment, there's more future growth. We need to be able to work with the business and understand what's coming at them so that we can, um, you know, build that into, into our environment. So again, it's really transformation on top of transformation is the way that I'll describe it. And it's really an open book, right? Once you get it in and you've got the capabilities and the evolving tool sets that AWS continue to bring to the market base, um, you know, working with the partners to, to figure out how we unlock that value, um, you know, drive our costs down our efficiency, uh, all of those kind of, you know, standard metrics. >>Um, but you know, we're looking for the next things to transform and show value back out to our customer base, um, that, uh, that we continue to, you know, sell our products to and work with and understand how we can better meet their needs. Yeah, I think just to echo that, I think it's really leveraging this and then digital capability they have and getting the most out of that investment. And then I think it's also moving to, >>Uh, and adopting more new ways of working as far as, you know, the state of the business. Um, it's getting up the speed of the market is changing. So being able to launch and do things quickly and also, um, competitive and efficient operating costs, uh, now that they're in the cloud, right. So I think it's really leveraging the most out of a platform and then, you know, being efficient in launching things. So putting the, with the business, >>Cedric, any word from you on your priorities by UC this year and folding. >>Yeah. So, uh, just going to say like e-learning squares, right for me were around, you know, just journey. This is a journey to the cloud, right. And, uh, you know, as well dug into sort of Saturday, it's getting all, you know, different parts of the organization along the journey business to ID to your, uh, product windows, et cetera. Right. And it takes time with this stuff, but, uh, uh, you know, you gotta get started on it and, you know, once we, once we finish off, uh, it's the realization of the benefits now that, you know, I'm looking forward? I think for, from Alliance perspective, it's, it is, uh, you know, once we migrate all the workloads to the cloud, it is leveraging, uh, all stack drive. And as I think Stewart said earlier, uh, with, uh, you know, the latest and greatest stuff that AWS it's basically working to see how we can really, uh, achieve more better operational excellence, uh, from a, uh, from a cloud perspective. >>Well, Stewart, thanks for coming on with a century and sharing your environment and what's going on and your journey you're on the right wave. Did the work you were in that it's all coming together with faster, congratulations for your success, and really appreciate Douglas with Steve for coming on as well from Accenture. Thank you for coming on. Thanks, John. Okay. Just the cubes coverage of executive summit at AWS reinvent. This is where all the thought leaders share their best practices, their journeys, and of course, special programming with the center and the cube. I'm Sean ferry, your host, thanks for watching From around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent executive summit 2020, sponsored by Accenture and AWS. >>Welcome everyone to the cube virtuals coverage of the Accenture executive summit. Part of AWS reinvent 2020. I'm your host Rebecca Knight. We are talking today about reinventing the energy data platform. We have two guests joining us. First. We have Johan Krebbers. He is the GM digital emerging technologies and VP of it. Innovation at shell. Thank you so much for coming on the show. Johan you're welcome. And next we have Liz Dennett. She is the lead solution architect for O S D U on AWS. Thank you so much, Liz. You'll be. So I want to start our conversation by talking about OSD. You like so many great innovations. It started with a problem Johan. What was the problem you were trying to solve at shell? >>Yeah, the ethical back a couple of years, we started summer 2017, where we had a meeting with the deg, the gas exploration in shell, and the main problem they had. Of course, they got lots of lots of data, but are unable to find the right data. They need to work from once the day, this was scattered in is scattered my boss kind of Emirates all over the place and turned them into real, probably tried to solve is how that person working exploration could find their proper date, not just a day of loss of date. You really needed that we did probably talked about is summer 2017. We said, okay. The only way ABC is moving forward is to start pulling that data into a single data platform. And that, that was at the time that we called it as the, you, the subsurface data universe in there was about the shell name was so in, in January, 2018, we started a project with Amazon to start grating a freaking that building, that Stu environment that the, that universe, so that single data level to put all your exploration and Wells data into that single environment that was intent and every cent, um, already in March of that same year, we said, well, from Michele point of view, we will be far better off if we could make this an industry solution and not just a shelf solution, because Shelby, Shelby, if you can make this industry solution, but people are developing applications for it. >>It also is far better than for shell to say we haven't shell special solution because we don't make money out of how we start a day that we can make money out of, if you have access to the data, we can explore the data. So storing the data we should do as efficiently possibly can. So in March, we reached out to about eight or nine other large, uh, I gas operators, like the economics, like the totals, like the chefs of this world and say, Hey, we inshallah doing this. Do you want to join this effort? And to our surprise, they all said, yes. And then in September, 2018, we had our kickoff meeting with your open group where we said, we said, okay, if you want to work together, lots of other companies, we also need to look at, okay, how, how we organize that, or is that if you started working with lots of large companies, you need to have some legal framework around some framework around it. So that's why we went to the open group and said, okay, let's, let's form the ODU forum as we call it the time. So it's September, 2080, where I did a Galleria in Houston, but the kick off meeting for the OT four with about 10 members at the time. So there's just over two years ago, we started an exercise for me called ODU, kicked it off. Uh, and so that's really then we'll be coming from and how we got there. Also >>The origin story. Um, well, so what digging a little deeper there? What were some of the things you were trying to achieve with the OSD? >>Well, a couple of things we've tried to achieve with OSU, um, first is really separating data from applications. And what is the, what is the biggest problem we have in the subsurface space that the data and applications are all interlinked or tied together. And if you have them and a new company coming along and say, I have this new application and has access to the data that is not possible because the data often interlinked with the application. So the first thing we did is really breaking the link between the application, the data as those levels, the first thing we did, secondly, put all the data to a single data platform, take the silos out what was happening in the subsurface space. And they got all the data in what we call silos in small little islands out there. So we're trying to do is first break the link to great, great. >>They put the data in a single data bathroom, and a third part who does standard layer. On top of that, it's an API layer on top of the, a platform. So we could create an ecosystem out of companies to start developing soft applications on top of dev data platform across you might have a data platform, but you're only successful. If you have a rich ecosystem of people start developing applications on top of that. And then you can explore today, like small companies, last company, university, you name it, we're getting after create an ecosystem out here. So the three things, whereas was first break the link between application data, just break it and put data at the center and also make sure that data, this data structure would not be managed by one company. It would only be met. It will be managed the data structures by the OT forum. Secondly, then the data of single data platform certainly has an API layer on top and then create an ecosystem. Really go for people, say, please start developing applications because now you have access to the data. I've got the data no longer linked to somebody whose application was all freely available for an API layer. That was, that was all September, 2018, more or less. >>And to bring you in here a little bit, can you talk a little bit about some of the imperatives from the AWS standpoint in terms of what you were trying to achieve with this? Yeah, absolutely. And this whole thing is Johan said started with a challenge that was really brought out at shell. The challenges that geo-scientists spend up to 70% of their time looking for data, I'm a geologist I've spent more than 70% of my time trying to find data in these silos. And from there, instead of just figuring out how we could address that one problem, we worked together to really understand the root cause of these challenges and working backwards from that use case OSU and OSU on AWS has really enabled customers to create solutions that span, not just this in particular problem, but can really scale to be inclusive of the entire energy chain and deliver value from these use cases to the energy industry and beyond. Thank you, Lee, uh, Johann. So talk a little bit about Accenture's cloud first approach and how it has, uh, helped shell work faster and better with speed. >>Well, of course, access a cloud first approach only works together in an Amazon environment, AWS environment. So we really look at, at, at, at Accenture and others altogether helping shell in this space. Now the combination of the two is what we're really looking at, uh, where access of course can be, this is not a student who that environment operates, support knowledge to an environment. And of course, Amazon would be doing that to today's environment that underpinning, uh, services, et cetera. So, uh, we would expect a combination, a lot of goods when we started rolling out and put in production, the old you are three and bubble because we are anus. Then when the release feed comes to the market in Q1 next year of ODU, when he started going to Audi production inside shell, but as the first release, which is ready for prime time production across an enterprise will be released one just before Christmas, last year when he's still in may of this year. But release three is the first release we want to use for full scale production deployment inside shell, and also all the operators around the world. And there is what Amazon, sorry. Um, extensive can play a role in the ongoing, in the, in deployment building up, but also support environment. >>So one of the other things that we talk a lot about here on the cube is sustainability. And this is a big imperative at so many organizations around the world in particular energy companies. How does this move to OSD you, uh, help organizations become, how is this a greener solution for companies? >>Well, firstly make it, it's a great solution because you start making a much more efficient use of your resources, which is, which is already an important one. The second thing they're doing is also, we started with ODU in the oil and gas space with the expert development space. We've grown, uh OTU but in our strategy of growth, OSU now also do an alternative energy sociology. We'll all start supporting next year. Things like solar farms, wind farms, uh, the, the dermatomal environment hydration. So it becomes an and, and an open energy data platform, not just for the, for the, I want to get into steam that's for new industry, any type of energy industry. So our focus is to create, bring that data of all those various energy data sources together into a single data platform. You're going to use AI and other technology on top of that to exploit the data, to meet again in a single data platform. >>Liz, I want to ask you about security because security is, is, is such a big concern when it comes to how secure is the data on OSD you, um, actually, can I talk, can I do a follow up on the sustainability talking? Oh, absolutely. By all means. I mean, I want to interject though security is absolutely our top priority. I don't mean to move away from that, but with sustainability, in addition to the benefits of the OSU data platform, when a company moves from on-prem to the cloud, they're also able to leverage the benefits of scale. Now, AWS is committed to running our business in the most environmentally friendly way possible. And our scale allows us to achieve higher resource utilization and energy efficiency than a typical on-prem data center. Now, a recent study by four 51 research found that AWS is infrastructure is 3.6 times more energy efficient than the median of surveyed enterprise data centers. Two thirds of that advantage is due to higher server utilization and a more energy efficient server population. But when you factor in the carbon intensity of consumed electricity and renewable energy purchases, four 51 found that AWS performs the same task with an 88% lower carbon footprint. Now that's just another way that AWS and OSU are working to support our customers is they seek to better understand their workflows and make their legacy businesses less carbon intensive. >>That's that's those are those statistics are incredible. Do you want to talk a little bit now about security? Absolutely. And security will always be AWS is top priority. In fact, AWS has been architected to be the most flexible and secure cloud computing environment available today. Our core infrastructure is built to satisfy. There are the security requirements for the military global banks and other high sensitivity organizations. And in fact, AWS uses the same secure hardware and software to build and operate each of our regions. So that customers benefit from the only commercial cloud that's had hits service offerings and associated supply chain vetted and deemed secure enough for top secret workloads. That's backed by a deep set of cloud security tools with more than 200 security compliance and governmental service and key features as well as an ecosystem of partners like Accenture, that can really help our customers to make sure that their environments for their data meet and or exceed their security requirements. Johann, I want you to talk a little bit about how OSD you can be used today. Does it only handle subsurface data >>And today it's hundreds of servers or Wells data. We got to add to that production around the middle of next year. That means that the whole upstate business. So we've got, if you look at MC, obviously this goes from exploration all the way to production. You've been at the into to a single data platform. So production will be added the round Q3 of next year. Then it principal, we have a difficult, the elder data that single environment, and we want to extended them to other data sources or energy sources like solar farms, wheat farms, uh, hydrogen hydro at San Francisco. We want to add a whore or a list of other day. >>And he saw a student and B all the data together into a single data club. So we move from an fallen guest, a data platform to an energy data platform. That's really what our objective is because the whole industry we've looked at, I've looked at our company companies all moving in that same direction of quantity, of course are very strong at all, I guess, but also increase the, got into all the other energy sources like, like solar, like wind, like, like the hydrogen, et cetera. So we, we move exactly the same method that, that, that the whole OSU can really support at home. And as a spectrum of energy sources, of course, >>And Liz and Johan. I want you to close us out here by just giving us a look into your crystal balls and talking about the five and 10 year plan for OSD. You we'll start with you, Liz. What do you, what do you see as the future holding for this platform? Um, honestly, the incredibly cool thing about working at AWS is you never know where the innovation and the journey is going to take you. I personally am looking forward to work with our customers, wherever their OSU journeys, take them, whether it's enabling new energy solutions or continuing to expand, to support use cases throughout the energy value chain and beyond, but really looking forward to continuing to partner as we innovate to slay tomorrow's challenges. >>Yeah. First, nobody can look that far ahead, any more nowadays, especially 10 years mean now, who knows what happens in 10 years, but if you look what our whole objective is that really in the next five years owes you will become the key backbone for energy companies for storing your data. You are efficient intelligence and optimize the whole supply energy supply chain in this world out there. >>Rubbers Liz Dennett. Thank you so much for coming on the cube virtual, >>Thank you, >>Rebecca nights, stay tuned for more of our coverage of the Accenture executive summit >>Around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent executive summit 2020, sponsored by Accenture and AWS. >>Welcome everyone to the cubes coverage of the Accenture executive summit. Part of AWS reinvent. I'm your host Rebecca Knight today we're welcoming back to Kubila. We have Kishor Dirk. He is the Accenture senior managing director cloud first global services lead. Welcome back to the show >>Kishore. Thank you very much. >>Nice to meet again. And, uh, Tristin moral horse set. He is the managing director, Accenture cloud first North American growth. Welcome back to YouTube. >>Great to be back in. Great to see you again, Rebecca. >>Exactly. Even in this virtual format, it is good to see your faces. Um, today we're going to be talking about my nav and green cloud advisor >>Capability. Kishor I want to start with you. So my NAB is a platform that is really celebrating its first year in existence. Uh, November, 2019 is when Accenture introduced it. Uh, but it's, it has new relevance in light of this global pandemic that we are all enduring and suffering through. Tell us a little bit about the miner platform, what it is. >>Sure, Rebecca, you know, we lost it and now 2019 and, uh, you know, it is a cloud platform to help our clients navigate the complexity of cloud and cloud decisions and to make it faster and obviously innovate in the cloud, uh, you know, with the increased relevance and all the, especially over the last few months with the impact of COVID crisis and exhibition of digital transformation, you know, we are seeing the transformation of the acceleration to cloud much faster. This platform that you're talking about has enabled hundred and 40 clients globally across different industries. You identify the right cloud solution, navigate the complexity, provide a cloud specific solution simulate for our clients to meet the strategy business needs and the clients are loving it. >>I want to go to you now trust and tell us a little bit about how my nav works and how it helps companies make good cloud choices. >>Yeah. So Rebecca we've talked about cloud is, is more than just infrastructure and that's what mine app tries to solve for. It really looks at a variety of variables, including infrastructure operating model and fundamentally what clients business outcomes, um, uh, our clients are, are looking for and, and identify as the optimal solution for what they need. And we design this to accelerate and we mentioned the pandemic. One of the big focus now is to accelerate. And so we worked through a three-step process. The first is scanning and assessing our client's infrastructure, their data landscape, their application. Second, we use our automated artificial intelligence engine to interact with. We have a wide variety and library of, uh, collective plot expertise. And we look to recommend what is the enterprise architecture and solution. And then third, before we aligned with our clients, we look to simulate and test this scaled up model. And the simulation gives our clients a wait to see what cloud is going to look like, feel like and how it's going to transform their business before they go there. >>Tell us a little bit about that in real life. Now as a company, so many of people are working remotely having to collaborate, uh, not in real life. How is that helping them right now? >>So, um, the, the pandemic has put a tremendous strain on systems, uh, because of the demand on those systems. And so we talk about resiliency. We also now need to collaborate across data across people. Um, I think all of us are calling from a variety of different places where our last year we were all at the cube itself. Um, and, and cloud technologies such as teams, zoom that we're we're leveraging now has fundamentally accelerated and clients are looking to onboard this for their capabilities. They're trying to accelerate their journey. They realize that now the cloud is what is going to become important for them to differentiate. Once we come out of the pandemic and the ability to collaborate with their employees, their partners, and their clients through these systems is becoming a true business differentiator for our clients. >>Sure. I want to talk with you now about my NABS multiple capabilities, um, and helping clients design and navigate their cloud journeys. Tell us a little bit about the green cloud advisor capability and its significance, particularly as so many companies are thinking more deeply and thoughtfully about sustainability. >>Yes. So since the launch of my NAB, we continue to enhance capabilities for our clients. One of the significant, uh, capabilities that we have enabled is the brain trust advisor today. You know, Rebecca, a lot of the businesses are more environmentally aware and are expanding efforts to decrease power consumption, uh, and obviously carbon emissions and, uh, and run a sustainable operations across every aspect of the enterprise. Uh, as a result, you're seeing an increasing trend in adoption of energy, efficient infrastructure in the global market. And one of the things that we did, a lot of research we found out is that there's an ability to influence our client's carbon footprint through a better cloud solution. And that's what we entered by brings to us, uh, in, in terms of a lot of the client connotation that you're seeing in Europe, North America and others, lot of our clients are accelerating to a green cloud strategy to unlock beta financial, societal and environmental benefit, uh, through obviously cloud-based circular, operational and sustainable products and services. That is something that, uh, we are enhancing my now and we are having active client discussions at this point of time. >>So Tristan, tell us a little bit about how this capability helps clients make greener. >>Yeah. Um, well, let's start about the investments from the cloud providers in renewable and sustainable energy. Um, they have most of the hyperscalers today, um, have been investing significantly on data centers that are run or renewable energy, some incredibly creative constructs on the how to do that. And sustainability is therefore a key, um, key item of importance for the hyperscalers and also for our clients who now are looking for sustainable energy. And it turns out this marriage is now possible. I can, we marry the, the green capabilities of the cloud providers with a sustainability agenda of our clients. And so what we look into way the mine EF works is it looks at industry benchmarks and evaluates our current clients, um, capabilities and carpet footprint leveraging their existing data centers. We then look to model from an end-to-end perspective, how the, their journey to the cloud leveraging sustainable and, um, and data centers with renewable energy. We look at how their solution will look like and, and quantify carbon tax credits, um, improve a green index score and provide quantifiable, um, green cloud capabilities and measurable outcomes to our clients, shareholders, stakeholders, clients, and customers, um, and our green plot advisors, sustainability solutions already been implemented at three clients. And in many cases in two cases has helped them reduce the carbon footprint by up to 400% through migration from their existing data center to green club. Very, very important. Yeah, >>That is remarkable. Now tell us a little bit about the kinds of clients. Is this, is this more interesting to clients in Europe? Would you say that it's catching on in the United States where we're at? What is the breakdown that you're seeing right now? >>Sustainability is becoming such a global agenda and we're seeing our clients, um, uh, tie this and put this at board level, um, uh, agenda and requirements across the globe. Um, Europe has specific constraints around data sovereignty, right, where they need their data in country, but from a green, a sustainability agenda, we see clients across all our markets, North America, Europe, and our growth markets adopt this. And we have seen case studies in all three markets >>Kisha. I want to bring you back into the conversation. Talk a little bit about how mine up ties into Accenture's cloud first strategy, your Accenture's CEO, Julie Sweet has talked about post COVID leadership requiring every business to become a cloud first business. Tell us a little bit about how this ethos is in Accenture and how you're sort of looking outward with it too. >>So Rebecca mine is the launch pad, uh, to a cloud first transformation for our clients. Uh, Accenture, see you, uh, Julie Sweet, uh, shared the Accenture cloud first and our substantial investment demonstrate our commitment and is delivering data value for our clients when they need it the most. And with the district transformation requiring cloud at scale, you know, we're seeing that in the post COVID leadership, it requires that every business should become a cloud business. And my nap helps them get there by evaluating the cloud landscape, navigating the complexity, modeling architecting and simulating an optimal cloud solution for our clients. And as Justin was sharing a greener cloud, Tristan, talk a little >>Bit more about some of the real life use cases in terms of what are we, what are clients seeing? What are the results? >>Yes, thank you, Rebecca. I would say two key things right around my now the first is the iterative process. Clients don't want to wait, um, until they get started, they want to get started and see what their journey is going to look like. And the second is fundamental acceleration, dependent make, as we talked about, has accelerated the need to move to cloud very quickly. And my nav is there to do that. So how do we do that? First is generating the business cases. Clients need to know in many cases that they have a business case by business case, we talk about the financial benefits, as well as the business outcomes, the green green cloud impact sustainability impacts with minus we can build initial recommendations using a basic understanding of their environment and benchmarks in weeks versus months with indicative value savings in the millions of dollars arranges. >>So for example, very recently, we worked with a global oil and gas company, and in only two weeks, we're able to provide an indicative savings for $27 million over five years. This enabled the client to get started, knowing that there is a business case benefit and then iterate on it. And this iteration is, I would say the second point that is particularly important with my nav that we've seen in bank, the clients, which is, um, any journey starts with an understanding of what is the application landscape and what are we trying to do with those, these initial assessments that used to take six to eight weeks are now taking anywhere from two to four weeks. So we're seeing a 40 to 50% reduction in the initial assessment, which gets clients started in their journey. And then finally we've had discussions with all of the hyperscalers to help partner with Accenture and leverage mine after prepared their detailed business case module as they're going to clients. And as they're accelerating the client's journey, so real results, real acceleration. And is there a journey? Do I have a business case and furthermore accelerating the journey once we are by giving the ability to work in an iterative approach, >>It sounds as though that the company that clients and and employees are sort of saying, this is an amazing time savings look at what I can do here in, in so much in a condensed amount of time, but in terms of getting everyone on board, one of the things we talked about last time we met, uh, Tristin was just how much, uh, how one of the obstacles is getting people to sign on and the new technologies and new platforms. Those are often the obstacles and struggles that companies face. Have you found that at all? Or what is sort of the feedback that you're getting from? >>Yeah. Sorry. Yes. We clearly, there are always obstacles to a con journey. If there weren't obstacles, all our clients would be already fully in the cloud. What man I gives the ability is to navigate through those, to start quickly. And then as we identify obstacles, we can simulate what things are going to look like. We can continue with certain parts of the journey while we deal with that obstacle. And it's a fundamental accelerator. Whereas in the past one, obstacle would prevent a class from starting. We can now start to address the obstacles one at a time while continuing and accelerating the contrary. That is the fundamental difference. Kishor I want to give you the final word here. Tell us a little bit about what is next for Accenture might have and what we'll be discussing next year at the Accenture executive summit >>Sort of echo, we are continuously evolving with our client needs and reinventing, reinventing for the future. For my advisor, our plan is to help our clients reduce carbon footprint and again, migrate to a green cloud. Uh, and additionally, we're looking at, you know, two capabilities, uh, which include sovereign cloud advisor, uh, with clients, especially in, in Europe and others are under pressure to meet stringent data norms that Kristen was talking about. And the sovereign cloud advisor health organization to create an architecture cloud architecture that complies with the green. Uh, I would say the data sound-bitey norms that is out there. The other element is around data to cloud. We are seeing massive migration, uh, for, uh, for a lot of the data to cloud. And there's a lot of migration hurdles that come within that. Uh, we have expanded mine app to support assessment capabilities, uh, for, uh, assessing applications, infrastructure, but also covering the entire state, including data and the code level to determine the right cloud solution. So we are, we are pushing the boundaries on what might have can do with mine. And we have created the ability to take the guesswork out of cloud, navigate the complexity. We are rolling risks costs, and we are achieving clients strategy, business objectives, while building a sustainable lots with being cloud, >>Any platform that can take some of the guesswork out of the future. I'm I'm on board with. Thank you so much, Kristin and Kishore. This has been a great conversation. Thank you, Rebecca. Thank you, Rebecca. Stay tuned for more of the cubes coverage of the Accenture executive summit. I'm Rebecca Knight. >>Yeah, Yeah.
SUMMARY :
It's the cube with digital coverage Welcome to cube three 60 fives coverage of the Accenture executive summit. Thanks for having me here. impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has been, what are you hearing from clients? you know, various facets, you know, um, first and foremost, to this reasonably okay, and are, you know, launching to So you just talked about the widening gap. all the changes the pandemic has brought to them. in the cloud that we are going to see. Can you tell us a little bit more about what this strategy entails? all of the systems under which they attract need to be liberated so that you could drive now, the center of gravity is elevated to it becoming a C-suite agenda on everybody's And it, and it's a strategy, but the way you're describing it, it sounds like it's also a mindset and an approach, the employees are able to embrace this change. across every department, I'm the agent of this change is going to be the employees or weapon, And because the change management is, is often the hardest And that is again, the power of cloud. And the power of cloud is to get all of these capabilities from outside that employee, the employee will be more engaged in his or her job and therefore And this is, um, you know, no more true than how So at Accenture, you have long, long, deep Stan, sorry, And in fact, in the cloud world, it was one of the first, um, And one great example is what we are doing with Takeda, uh, billable, to drive more customer insights, um, come up with breakthrough Yeah, the future to the next, you know, base camp, as I would call it to further this productivity, And the evolution that is going to happen where, you know, the human grace of mankind, I genuinely believe that cloud first is going to be the forefront of that change Thank you so much for joining us Karthik. It's the cube with digital coverage And what happens when you bring together the scientific, And Brian Beau Han global director and head of the Accenture AWS business group at Amazon Um, and I think that, you know, there's a, there's a need ultimately to, And, you know, we were commenting on this earlier, but there's, you know, it's been highlighted by a number of factors. And I think that, you know, that's going to help us make faster, better decisions. Um, and so I think with that, you know, there's a few different, it, uh, insights that, you know, the three of us are spending a lot of time thinking about right now. So Arjun, I want to bring you into this conversation a little bit. uh, something that, you know, we had all to do differently. in the governance and every level of leadership, we always think about this as a collective the same way, the North side, the same way, And I think if you really think about what he's talking about, Because the old ways of thinking where you've got application people and infrastructure, How will their experience of work change and how are you helping re-imagine and And it's something that, you know, I think we all have to think a lot about, I mean, And then secondly, I think that, you know, we're, we're very clear that there's a number of areas where there are Uh, and so I think that that's, you know, one, one element that can be considered. or how do we collaborate across the number of boundaries, you know, and I think, uh, Arjun spoke eloquently the customer obsession and this idea of innovating much more quickly. of the things that, you know, a partner like AWS brings to the table is we talk a lot about builders, And it's not just the technical people or the it people who are you know, some decisions, what we call it at Amazon are two two-way doors, meaning you can go through that door, And so we chose, you know, uh, with our focus on, I want you to close this out here. sort of been great for me to see is that when people think about cloud, you know, Well, thank you so much. Yeah, it's been fun. It's the cube with digital coverage of How big is the force and also what were some of the challenges that you were grappling with Um, so the reason we sort of embarked um, you know, certainly as a, as an it leader and sort of my operational colleagues, What is the art of the possible, can you tell us a little bit about why you the public sector that, you know, there are many rules and regulations quite rightly as you would expect Matthew, I want to bring you into the conversation a little bit here. to bring in a number of the different themes that we have say cloud themes, security teams, um, So much of this is about embracing comprehensive change to experiment, the outcomes they're looking to achieve rather than simply focusing on the long list of requirements I think was critical So to give you a little bit of context, when we, um, started And the pilot was so successful. And I think just parallel to that is the quality of our data because we had a lot of data, And have you seen that kind of return on investment because what you were just describing with all the steps Um, but all the, you know, the minutes here and that certainly add up Have you seen any changes And Helen is the leader from an IOT perspective. And this is a question for both of you because Matthew, as you said, change is difficult and there is always a certain You know, we had lots of workshops and seminars where we all talk about, you know, see, you know, to see the stack change, you know, and, and if we, if we have any issues now it's literally, when you are trying to get everyone on board for this kind of thing? the 30 day challenge and nudge theory around how can we gradually encourage people to use things? I want to hear, where do you go from here? not that simple, but, um, you know, we've, we've been through significant change in the last And I see now that we have good at embedded in operational So I want to ask Stuart you first, if you can talk about this transformation and stuck in the old it groove of, you know, capital refresh, um, of the challenges like we've had this year, um, it makes all of the hard work worthwhile because you can actually I want to just real quick and redirect to you and say, you know, for all the people who said, Oh yeah, And, um, you know, Australia, we had to live through Bush fires by the Navy allowed us to work in this unprecedented gear Because I've been saying on the Cuban reporting, necessity's the mother of all and always the only critical path to be done. And what specifically did you guys do at Accenture and how did it all come applications to the cloud now, you know, one of the things that, uh, no we did not along uh, uh, and, and, and, you know, that would really work in our collaborative and agile environment How did you address your approach to the cloud and what was your experience? And then building upon it, and then, you know, partnering with Accenture allows because the kind of, uh, you know, digital transformation, cloud transformation, learnings, um, that might've differed from the expectation we all been there, Hey, you know, It's, it's getting that last bit over the line and making sure that you haven't invested in the future hundred percent of the time, they'll say yes, until you start to lay out to them, okay, you know, you want to automate, that's a key thing in cloud, and you've got to discover those opportunities to create value, Um, you know, that's all stood up on AWS and is a significant portion of And I think our next big step is going to be obviously, So, um, you know, having a lot of that legwork done for us and AWS gives you that, So obviously, you know, lines like an antivirus, but, you know, we knew it was a very good So, um, you know, really good behaviors as an a lot of people kind of going through the same process, knowing what you guys know now, And, and we had all of our people working remotely, um, within, uh, you know, effectively one business day. the time you talk about, um, you know, less this, the, and all of these kinds of things. And this is really about you guys getting It was actually linked to broader business changes, you know, creating basically a digital platform Stuart and Douglas, you don't mind waiting, and what's the priorities for the future. to figure out how we unlock that value, um, you know, drive our costs down our efficiency, our customer base, um, that, uh, that we continue to, you know, sell our products to and work with Uh, and adopting more new ways of working as far as, you know, the state of the business. And it takes time with this stuff, but, uh, uh, you know, Did the work you were in that it's all coming together with faster, What was the problem you were trying to solve at shell? And that, that was at the time that we called it as the, make money out of how we start a day that we can make money out of, if you have access to the data, we can explore the data. What were some of the things you were trying to achieve with the OSD? So the first thing we did is really breaking the link between the application, I've got the data no longer linked to somebody whose application was all freely available for an API layer. And to bring you in here a little bit, can you talk a little bit about some of the imperatives from the a lot of goods when we started rolling out and put in production, the old you are three and bubble because we are So one of the other things that we talk a lot about here on the cube is sustainability. of that to exploit the data, to meet again in a single data platform. purchases, four 51 found that AWS performs the same task with an So that customers benefit from the only commercial cloud that's had hits service offerings and You've been at the into to a single data platform. And he saw a student and B all the data together into a single data club. Um, honestly, the incredibly cool thing about working at AWS is you who knows what happens in 10 years, but if you look what our whole objective is that really in the next five Thank you so much for coming on the cube virtual, It's the cube with digital coverage of He is the Accenture senior managing director cloud first global services Thank you very much. He is the managing director, Great to see you again, Rebecca. Even in this virtual format, it is good to see your faces. So my NAB is a platform that is really celebrating to make it faster and obviously innovate in the cloud, uh, you know, with the increased relevance I want to go to you now trust and tell us a little bit about how my nav works and how it helps One of the big focus now is to accelerate. having to collaborate, uh, not in real life. They realize that now the cloud is what is going to become important for them to differentiate. about the green cloud advisor capability and its significance, particularly as so many companies And one of the things that we did, a lot of research we found out is that there's an ability to influence or renewable energy, some incredibly creative constructs on the how to do that. What is the breakdown that you're seeing right now? And we have seen case studies in all I want to bring you back into the conversation. And with the district transformation requiring cloud at scale, you know, we're seeing that in And the second is fundamental acceleration, dependent make, as we talked about, has accelerated the need This enabled the client to get started, knowing that there is a business is getting people to sign on and the new technologies and new platforms. What man I gives the ability is to navigate through those, to start quickly. And the sovereign cloud advisor health organization to create an Any platform that can take some of the guesswork out of the future.
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