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Andrew Wilson, Accenture - ServiceNow Knowledge 2017 - #Know17 - #theCUBE


 

>> Narrator: Brought to you by ServiceNow. >> We're back in Orlando, I'm Dave Velanto with Jeff Frick and this is theCUBE, the leader in live tech coverage. We go up to the events, we extract the signal from the noise. Andrew Wilson is here, he's the CIO of Accenture and TV personality (laughing). Good to see you again. >> Good to see you gents again. Welcome, congratulations on a great show so far coming out of the Knowledge17. >> Yeah and back to you, we were at the Accenture event last night, it was pretty good. You had a lot of really great customers there and ServiceNow was there in force, so when a company like Accenture stamps it's impremature on a community like this, excuse me, that is a testament. So, how do you feel? >> We enjoy being a major player in the ecosystem. It's an ecosystem of platforms. We consume a lot of tech for ourselves. We have 400,000 people, we're in 55 countries, 200 cities around the world. So I've got to make them feel good, I've got to create great tech, I've also got to put tech out there that our clients see, and I've really got to get there first so that they can emulate us. I want to be a sandbox. So I'm here as a consumer but also as a service provider of ServiceNow. I think it's a great event so far. >> How do you spend your time as a CIO. I mean, especially inside a company like Accenture, I would imagine, you're getting pulled in a lot of different directions. >> I think the role and the time has changed. It used to be about running big programs, doing big builds, integration testing and big programatical old fashioned data center IT. The world's changed. I'm the Chief Experience Officer now. It's around orchestrating, brokering new experiences a lot that I'm procuring in and configuring, the platforms like ServiceNow. And other big, major brands like 0365 and Salesforce, etc. I'm focused on end to end experience, employee experience. We've got 100,000 new people arriving every year, they all bring their own tech. If mine isn't good, they will just use their own. So I want to compete with that, I want to be better than that, I want to be sticky, I want it to be like YouTube, Netflix, things like that. >> I wonder if you could dig into that a little bit because that's one of the themes we see over and over and over all the shows. The consumerization of IT and people's expectations of the way enterprise IT should work based on what I do on my phone and on my consumer apps. >> Well they should just work all the time, shouldn't it? It should work all the time, it should require no training, it should be fun, it should be bite-sized and it should all be there on my mobile device and upgrade automatically. And by the way, it's all free as well. (laughing) >> Little different than an old school SAP implementation from back in the day. >> Absolutely and, I mean SAP are a good platform provider, and we still...And they've had to change. The platforms deliver big agile releases now and we have to re-present tech. But those days of setting a course, annual spending, big functional requirements and then delivering and not course changing, that's all out the window. We have to listen, feedback, course-correct, be agile ourselves. And I also think inject fun. Tech has to be fun, modern, light-hearted, light-touch. It's a part of all aspects of life now. >> And has to have loud music. (laughing) >> Thumping in the background. >> You're a consumer, you said of ServiceNow as well. What's your ServiceNow experience like? >> We've been in production on ServiceNow for over a year. I like it, I think it's a good platform, well-architected for Cloud. It allows me to create rich moments of experience for my team. I bought it initially to do IT, SM type stuff. But I've had a learning experience that it's much broader. I like the adding analytics and intelligence into the platform that we've been hearing about here in Orlando. We're using it to power HR processes, legal processes, new contract set up. In the end, I want people to be enjoying the process and experience through life at Accenture. I don't want them to be thinking about what system I am, what platform I own? That's all under the hood. Experience first, experience only. Process based. ServiceNow is really helping us do that. >> One of the things as a CIO you're looking at, you said Chief Experience Officer, what are some of the things that are exciting you? You hear a lot of AI, nobody talks about big data anymore. It's all AI and machine-learning. >> It's all cognizance. >> Deep learning, right? Is it same wine, new bottle? Is it real? What do you see as a CIO? >> It is changing. A lot of... Like the Cloud a few years ago. A lot of talk but we're not all there yet. We're 71% in Cloud. We got on with it. I think we're about to get on with AI. I think about enterprise insight, that's what gets me excited. It's not a technology service anymore. It's a data and analytics service. The things are coming of age, we can now deliver it for the enterprise. >> When you think about strategy, vision, the role of the CIO, how do you see that changing? >> Well, I'm a broadcaster, like you. So I'm a Chief Communications person. I'm producing content. I'm not just running the cameras and the green-screen studios, I'm doing my own show. I'm not writing emails. We're popping up studios around the world. We're ingesting content into something which is beginning to feel a lot like a live network. And that's how people want to consume. They don't want to sit there and watch an hour long training course. And if they want to learn about security, and how we do it at Accenture, they want to watch something that looks and sounds like 24, we call it Hackerland. It's a series of dramatized episodes. That's the future of how we consume tech. >> So what are some of the topics that you're covering? First of all, what's the objective of your show and what are some of the things you're talking about? >> My show exists primarily to glue my family of eight or 9,000 IT workers around the world together so that they can stay current in a fast-moving, changing world of our own strategy. We course correct our strategy, we do hundreds of releases of different services every month. Being the CIO team that does that, I want them very aware so it's our internal, stay ahead, under the hood, stay ahead of our broader user base. By the way, practice new techniques because we're amongst friends with our CIO audience, before our CEO and the others start using the services as well. >> Have you done a show that related to service management? >> Uh not... oh well we've certainly talked about ServiceNow deployment, but the show we like to mix. So we'll have different teams and projects on. We'll have news reports, we'll have some humor. We don't do an hour of the same thing, because they'd switch off. >> You do a lot of events like this, I presume? >> I go to a lot of events like this. We don't do the show for most events. We take our show on the road. We've done the show live from India. We're about to go, two weeks time to Dublin in Ireland. And then we'll be going down Buenos Aires. So it's a global show. When I'm here, I'm typically on others' stage, like I'm here with you guys today. Talking about our work in the market and how we power all of our client work through these platforms. >> It's so different, cause I remember long time ago, at a small software company, we were trying to break in with Accenture and it was a roadshow. You guys had little shows all over the place, whether it be the Vertical Group, the Industry Group, the Horizontal Group. They'd bring the partners together and that was the way that new technologies were communicated. We'd set up a little expo, and they would all come in, we'd pitch our wares and that was it. So different than what you're talking about now in this communication, video-- >> Accenture's a global company, global brand. It's actually a series of businesses. Technologists, operators, strategists, consultants. I think we are platform practitioners and we are a major service provider. So we use ServiceNow to support hundreds of our own clients. So I'm not just using it to power Accenture, we're powering all our client work as well. It's a new Accenture. We talk about the new in our digital strategy and at least half of the work that we do for our clients is all in this brand new space of digital. That percentage is increasing rapidly every quarter. >> How much of your time is practice leads dragging you into clients? >> Quite a bit. We do hundreds of client dialogues. I come from a business, I spend more time talking to client's as CIO than I did when I was the business. >> Excellent. Andrew, thanks so much for coming on theCUBE. It was a pleasure having you. >> Great to see you guys, good luck. >> Good luck with your show, we'll be watching. >> Thank you. >> Ya, we'll be tuning in. >> Enjoy, thank you, take care. >> Alright keep it right there everybody we'll be back with our next guest right after this short break. This is theCUBE, we're live from Knowledge17. We'll be right back.

Published Date : May 10 2017

SUMMARY :

Andrew Wilson is here, he's the CIO of Accenture Good to see you gents again. Yeah and back to you, We enjoy being a major player in the ecosystem. How do you spend your time as a CIO. and configuring, the platforms like ServiceNow. of the way enterprise IT should work And by the way, it's all free as well. SAP implementation from back in the day. and not course changing, that's all out the window. And has to have loud music. You're a consumer, you said of ServiceNow as well. In the end, I want people to be One of the things as a CIO you're looking at, I think we're about to get on with AI. and the green-screen studios, before our CEO and the others We don't do an hour of the same thing, We don't do the show for most events. You guys had little shows all over the place, and at least half of the work that we do for our clients We do hundreds of client dialogues. It was a pleasure having you. everybody we'll be back with our next guest

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