EBOOK:
Businesses are facing new challenges to meet the expectations of customers and employees. In this 14-page buyer's guide, Computer Weekly looks at the benefits of the experience economy, the customer service implications of always-on mobile users and how digital platforms can engage customers across all channels.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, after Birmingham City Council's disastrous Oracle project cost over £100m, we analyse where it all went wrong. Our new buyer's guide examines building a sustainable IT strategy. And we find out how Thomson Reuters is using AI to enhance its product offerings. Read the issue now.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we talk to the leader of ExxonMobil's data organisation, about the energy giant's strategy to establish enterprise-wide principles for the use of data. As the UK's Online Safety Act comes into force, we examine the tech sector's concerns over the laws around end-to-end encryption. Read the issue now.
EGUIDE:
Despite efforts to increase the diversity in the technology industry, little progress has been made over the past decade. As the year draws to a close, Computer Weekly looks over the top 10 diversity in tech and women in tech stories of 2019.
EGUIDE:
Auto Trader is the UK's biggest online marketplace for new and used car sales. Its head of infrastructure sets out how cloud, containers and microservices will help reinforce its market-leading position in the years to come
EZINE:
What more does a region need to be recognised as a technology leader than its very own valley, of the silicon variety? Where once only oil flowed down Saudi Arabia's economic valleys, tech has now taken a grip. Read in this issue about the country's ambitions in the tech sector.
EZINE:
In this issue of CW Europe, we look at analysis by a Dutch newspaper which discovered that government-controlled IT projects in the Netherlands go over budget by 40%, on average. We also find out how Berlin's Digital Career Institute is building web skills among refugees and the unemployed across Germany.
EZINE:
There is a lot of uncertainty in the world right now, and businesses might be forgiven for taking a cautious approach to their planning. But one thing is certain, and that is that oil-rich countries in the Middle East will continue to invest heavily in diversifying their economies.
EGUIDE:
We explore some of the minutiae of securing the remote workforce. First, infosec consultant Kevin Beaver, picks over some remote access security risks that have arisen during the pandemic. Then we explore the findings of a recent supplier report, which detailed how remote working burn-out is becoming a factor in increasing security risk.