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Tag Archives: bigger

“We Belong to a Bigger Community” Hispanic Heritage Month Q&A

October 14, 2020   TIBCO Spotfire
TIBCO BrunaWells e1602518781425 696x561 “We Belong to a Bigger Community” Hispanic Heritage Month Q&A
Bruna with her mother and grandmother in Dichato, Chile

Reading Time: 3 minutes

As a part of TIBCO’s Diversity & Inclusion initiative for Hispanic Heritage Month, we are spotlighting employees who are of Hispanic heritage, asking them what makes them proud of their heritage and what they plan to do to embrace their identity in the future.  

TIBCO: Tell us about yourself

Bruna Wells: My name is Bruna Wells and I’ve been at TIBCO for one year and five months as a Partner Account Manager in the LATAM region, based in São Paulo, Brazil. I’m from a big family—a sister of seven brothers. I’ve been with my boyfriend-now-husband Billy for 21 years. I am the mother of Caio (14) and Luana (2). At TIBCO, I participate in the BLAAC and Women of TIBCO employee resource groups (ERGs).

TIBCO: This year’s Hispanic Heritage Month theme is “Be proud Of Your Past, Embrace The Future.” What is your Hispanic heritage? 

BW: My mother is Chilean, but I was born and raised in Brazil. I spent all my adult life traveling to different Latin American countries absorbing the different cultures, way of life, and people’s histories, which have shaped my personality. So I consider myself a Latin American citizen. 

TIBCO: What about your heritage’s past are you most proud of? 

BW: The Latin American resilience. We have faced a lot of barriers to building our own identity and independence. I cannot be more proud and thankful for all our ancestors who always persevere and succeed in light of the regional, political, climate, and economic challenges we face.    

TIBCO: What ways will you “embrace your future” during Hispanic Heritage Month and beyond? 

BW: Most of the countries in Latin America celebrate Independence Day in September so this is an opportunity to talk with our families and friends about our expectations for this uncertain future that we face together. When thinking about my colleagues in TIBCO, I’m a part of the leadership team of the BLAAC ERG where we are planning several activities to make our community feel embraced and represented. 

TIBCO: In what ways do you feel the Hispanic communities have helped shape the world? 

BW: Our high energy is incomparable. We are known worldwide for our charisma, our hospitality, our parties, and our optimism, always showering others with lots of good food and drinks. In any country that you visit in Latin America, I can guarantee you will return home feeling fulfilled and loved.

TIBCO: What does being a part of the Hispanic community mean to you? 

BW: It’s diverse but in a unique way. Everyone in Latin America has a particular history, but we belong to a bigger community from different countries that understands ourselves, our culture, and our past. The identity and genuine curiosity of each person’s personal history is priceless.

TIBCO: What are the benefits of celebrating our shared history and cultures throughout TIBCO? 

BW: Working at TIBCO means that what you are and where you come from matters. I love hearing my colleague’s personal histories and feel inspired to share mine. When I know a person’s background I start to admire them and feel more connected to them. And by contributing, I expect people to feel more connected to me too.   

TIBCO: What is a Hispanic tradition that you wish to pass down, that your parents have passed down to you? 

BW: Our faith. My parents raised me to believe in God and be grateful for the small things like our food and our bed, in addition to  praying to sustain and fill our spirit. In a country where 90% of the population considers themselves religious, this is a tradition that I am already passing to my children. It represents a lot to me since my mother and father instilled it in me. 

TIBCO: Any other thoughts you would like to share related to being part of the Hispanic community within TIBCO? 

BW: Unfortunately my grandmother that lived in Chile passed away during this pandemic, and it was really hard to say goodbye to her and be there for my mother virtually. In the past several months, we had to solve a lot of challenges together and through that, a lot of our Hispanic heritage came alive again. This will always be present in our lifestyle as well as her. During this process, I could count on my team at TIBCO to support me and understand the situation.

Working at TIBCO means that what you are and where you come from matters. I love hearing my colleague’s personal histories and feel inspired to share mine. Click To Tweet

During the month of October, join us in celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month. Are you a TIBCO team member? To get involved and join an ERG today, visit TIBCO Connect for more details!

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Sisense Hackathon 2020 Recap: Dreaming Big, Building Bigger with AWS

February 12, 2020   Sisense

At Sisense, we are builders. Create This is your firsthand look at what that means to us. Read on for Hackathon stories, new product developments, moonshot ideas, and more.

We’re always working on something new at Sisense. Innovating and experimenting with new ideas are core parts of our DNA; our R&D and AI teams never stop building the future of data. With all that creativity in the air, it’s no wonder that our annual Hackathon takes the energy to a new level. This year, the entire effort was built from the ground up, allowing the organizers to better manage the event and encourage more participation. 

“The Hackathon is a very human celebration,” said Lio Fleishman, one of the organizers and a Solutions Engineer in our Partnerships and Alliances team. “We rejoice in what makes us human and what keeps pushing us forward: problem solving, imagination, and curiosity.”

The response company-wide was amazing! A grand total of 39 teams, from 6 of our offices, across 4 countries formed, collaborating on a wide array of projects. A whopping 80% of teams took advantage of the industry-leading power of Amazon Web Services (AWS)! If you read our Hackathon announcement, you know that AWS’s partnership wasn’t just cosmetic. We even had visitors from AWS pop in at our Tel Aviv, New York, and San Francisco offices to offer support (and tasty treats) as the festivities got underway.

Sisense hackathon recap social 1200X628 770x403 Sisense Hackathon 2020 Recap: Dreaming Big, Building Bigger with AWS

Amazonians on site!

Amazon and Sisense have very similar DNA, from our customer obsession and ceaseless self-improvement to our abilities to work hard and have fun at the same time. Nothing could exemplify our partnership better than a Hackathon. Here’s what our AWS visitors had to say, in their own words.

Bala and Gary from San Francisco

San Francisco Hackathon photos courtesy Chris Meier

“[It was a] great experience supporting the Sisense Hackathon. Loved the customer sentiment analysis using the data from Support teams with AWS Comprehend to understand in real-time what your customers are saying,” said Bala Keelapudi, Startup Partner Solutions Architect. “It was great to see the developers explaining the ease of getting up and running with AWS Comprehend.”

“So impressive to see the level of customer-centric innovation possible in 24 hours or (much) less, using AWS! And, using the latest AWS managed services, such as Comprehend, Lambda, API Gateway, RedShift…”

Gary Stafford, AWS Emerging Partner Solutions Architect

Jon from New York City

New York City photos courtesy Ashley Potter; Arizona photos courtesy Carmen DeCouto, Vishal Iyer

“Within my first few minutes on-site we were already troubleshooting SSH connectivity from Sisense office to an ec2 instance in us-east-1. It was really educational to work directly with the team to walk them through the network configuration and to check and verify that everything was in place for connectivity,” reported Jon Myer, Partner Solution Architect. “I really enjoyed my visit and seeing how everyone was working hard but having fun during the hackathon.”

Oren and Eran from Tel Aviv

Tel Aviv photos courtesy Moti Granovsky

“During our time in Sisense offices we witnessed several interesting initiatives that leverage AWS services and abilities,” said Oren Reuveni, a Solutions Architect at AWS SaaS Factory. “Data ingestion and analytics mechanism using Kinesis-analytics and Athena, an end-to-end serverless architecture that enables users to consume insights about their social network profile data and more.”

“I was deeply impressed seeing the culture of innovation and collaboration at Sisense Hackathon. Looking at the team translating the user interface using Amazon Translate shows truly customer-centric thinking.”

Eran Sidi, AWS Account Manager

It’s always fun to have friends pop in for a visit, but let’s get down to the serious business of talking about the ground-breaking projects our enterprising teams put together. The overall winner was the Magnificent Unicorn team with live-streaming analytics. The Kyiv office winners called themselves Wasted Potential and used machine learning and an open camera to figure out when the cafeteria lines were shortest. And, maybe most vitally, Big BIC Energy used a Raspberry Pi computer to handle the critical task of tracking how much beer is in the NYC office keg. 

Kyiv photos courtesy Anna Pokhylko

Read on to explore these amazing ideas. (Other than the world winner, they’re in no particular order!)

World winners, Magnificent Unicorn: Make faster, smarter decisions

The Sisense platform handles data of every kind, from every conceivable source, even allowing you to mashup live and cached data. The Magnificent Unicorn team took this to the next level with their streaming analytics project. For users with rapidly-changing datasets who need to see changes to their data as they happen, this is life-altering. Real-time BI is possible! And of course, AWS is a key to that possibility: pulling data into a Kinesis Stream Producer, then into Kinesis itself, a Lambda function, and finally through Socket.io into Sisense. The power of AWS undergirding Sisense is a proven winner and could change the way users understand and interact with their fast-moving data streams. No wonder they took world prize!

Wasted Potential: No more lunch lines

No matter where you are, this group created an application that removes long lunch lines. Our Kyiv winners know this, so rather than keep suffering in silence whenever they go down to the cafeteria for food, they made tech work for them. Using the publicly-available camera in the lunchroom, some AWS horsepower, and a little Machine Learning (ML) they came up with an effortless solution that lets them know exactly when it’s the best time to grab a bite. 

By teaching a computer to visually recognize where the line forms and when there are humans on it, their algorithm is able to understand approximately how long the wait might be and advise users whether they should wait, or hurry up and eat. Users access the functionality via Slack (who doesn’t love Slack?). Then the information from the camera is pulled into an AWS visual recognition neural network (who doesn’t love neural networks?) and an answer is produced. Every request (and the associated queue time) is stored in Sisense, so that users can look at historical data and patterns.

All this was made possible by Amazon EC2, Amazon Lambda, Amazon Rekognition, and the Amazon API Gateway (and Sisense, of course).

Big BIC Energy: Beer barometer

It’s no secret that after a hectic week, a lot of us here at Sisense in NYC love to unwind with a cold beer (or nonalcoholic drink), so the keg holds a treasured place in many of our hearts. Oh the wails of consternation when someone pulls that lever and receives only a gout of foam and sadness! Those days are gone now, thanks to the BBE team “Beer Mate” project (with some help from AWS and a Raspberry Pi). 

By attaching a flowmeter to the beer keg, using some handy Python code, and piping the data into a MySQL database on AWS, they’ve enabled the Sisense platform to achieve its most significant use case yet: letting everyone know how much beer is left! The system also informs our intrepid office manager, Sabrina, through Sisense Pulse Alerts when it gets low so that she can order more. Sisensers can also use Beer Mate’s integration with 

Untappd to rate the beer and leave their thoughts. This is a great demonstration of just how outside-the-box Hackathon thinking can be, and how fun and useful the results often are! 

What will you build?

We hope this brief glimpse into the Sisense 2020 Hackathon has given you a few ideas on setting up and running your own hackathon. There’s a reason why tech companies of all shapes and sizes have been holding these events for decades (and show no sign of stopping). New ideas from Hackathons end up in production all the time, including Sisense BloX to name one notable example. Whatever form your company’s hackathon takes, remember, the most important thing is to have fun, connect with your teammates, and build what matters to you!

sisense blog Embedded Trends 20191218 bl blog banner1 Sisense Hackathon 2020 Recap: Dreaming Big, Building Bigger with AWS

Jack Cieslak is a 10-year veteran of the tech world. He’s written for Amazon, CB Insights, and others, on topics ranging from ecommerce and VC investments to crazy product launches and top-secret startup projects.

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The bigger catastrophe?

February 11, 2020   Humor

Ahead of today’s primary election in New Hampshire, UMass Lowell polled Democratic voters in NH and asked them the following question:

Which of the following outcomes would you prefer occur on November 3, 2020?
– Donald Trump wins re-election
– A giant meteor strikes the earth, extinguishing all human life

You can see the question on page 11 of the poll results, which were that 62% would prefer a meteor extinguishing all human life, compared to 38% for a Trump victory.

Apparently, women are more angry at Trump, voting 68% for the meteor, versus men who are 53% for the meteor.

Likewise, voters who consider themselves moderates were more likely to vote for the meteor (69%) compared to either liberals (59%) or conservatives (28%).

Related

 If you liked this, you might also like these related posts:
  1. Everything’s Bigger in Texas
  2. Republicans for Bigger Government

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Microsoft brings back coopetition: Salesforce partnership part of bigger plan

November 19, 2019   CRM News and Info
digital agreement Microsoft brings back coopetition: Salesforce partnership part of bigger plan

Back in April 2016, I attended the very first Microsoft Envision Conference. While I had very mixed feelings about the conference itself, I was able to ascertain through a significant number of subtextual hints that Microsoft under Satya Nadella’s leadership was taking a crucial turn. Here’s how I described it then:

More Salesforce

“If I had to encapsulate what I hear Satya Nadella say and others support at Envision it is that Microsoft is not going to be a software company per se any longer but a company that is devoted to being a critical part of the infrastructure of business via Azure and businesses via thoroughly contemporary versions of Office and various Dynamics applications – and that Dynamics would become a business solutions platform and Office a unified communications platform – all with the express purpose of providing those highly personalized outcomes that lead to major gains in productivity. Microsoft becomes (if they achieve their vision) the company that is fully interwoven, enmeshed in the 21st century business infrastructure. That would be the “in-the-nutshell” (what a quaint expression) version.”

Literally all of this has not only been confirmed but as of yesterday is coming…I’d say with a vengeance but that’s not in the spirit of this thing…with Microsoft on a significant roll at a gathering-no-moss speed. 

On November 13, 2019, Microsoft and Salesforce announced that they had signed a deal with two technologically important provisions:

  • The Salesforce Marketing Cloud would be running on Microsoft Azure. This is significant given that the Sales and Marketing Clouds are running on AWS and in 2017 Salesforce said it would do stuff with Google Cloud though to my knowledge that is a bit meaningless at the moment. (maybe not in the future but as I write this in 2019) But Lord knows, when the cold wind blows it’ll turn your head around (Thank you James Taylor for that from Fire and Rain at 2:11 on this video) and they will actually do something with Google Cloud.  It is hard to ignore how highly business – that means the B2B world especially  –thinks of Azure, the #1 most-trusted IaaS platform. Every survey I’ve seen from 2016 to the present and there are dozens (In no particular order: here. here. here), when it comes to business Microsoft Azure wins – either as most utilized, in progress to overtake AWS or most trusted especially at the enterprise level. Now, before you complain, I’m well aware that I can find surveys that say the opposite, but the interesting thing here is that there has been enough volume and velocity of reports saying that Azure is trumping AWS in the enterprise to make that a consideration in your cloud provider strategy and assessment. I’m no fool, which is why I look at volume and velocity, not a single report. The other thing that makes this alliance particularly interesting at the level of Azure and the Marketing Cloud is that a survey from Densify and another from Kentik in 2019 both confirmed they are finding that multi-cloud deployments are increasing to the point that it’s now a real “thing.”  In fact, Densify identifies it as “multicloud deployments are becoming the new norm” something that I’m sure both Microsoft and Salesforce are aware of acutely – and each for their own reasons.
  • Salesforce also announced Sales and Service Cloud integrations with Microsoft Teams which is eating Slack for lunch these days (though I’d rather have tuna salad on soggy rye bread than Slack for lunch. Not a fan really). A lot of that is Salesforce’s recognition of the increasing adoption of Microsoft Teams and the desire to make it interoperable with Chatter. A very smart move on both parts.

However, this is not what makes this big deal a big deal. It’s Microsoft’s grand strategy, which translates into their mission and vision, that makes this is a big deal for the industry despite the limited scope of the actual arrangement.

Microsoft has the foresight to recognize that in order to become a mission-critical part of all 21st century business infrastructure, they can’t really just try to compete for the crown. That would be silly. We live in a world that, at the core, is governed by diversity – not just of color or gender but of choice.  And that dovetails with the one mission all humans have in common – in fact, the only mission that they have in common – the desire to be happy in their individual lives. Having control over those choices on their path to that happy life is paramount. Not only are their customers looking to choose what technologies they use to make their lives at work more effective and convenient, but they want control over those choices. Microsoft, rather than taking the approach of us or nothing is saying, no matter, whatever technology you use we can underlay, overlay, or embed in or integrate with so we are good with what you’ve decided, mi amore. And that we can provide, via Azure – and that’s the notable part of this – the infrastructural service you need to do so.

To that end, Microsoft has been on a tear for the last six plus months cementing alliances not only with Salesforce but with:

Microsoft-Oracle: Announced on June 5, 2019, this was a cloud interoperability partnership so that Azure Services could run on Oracle Cloud across  both. The key paragraph from the press release was this one:

“Connecting Azure and Oracle Cloud through network and identity interoperability makes lift-and-improve migrations seamless. This partnership delivers direct, fast and highly reliable network connectivity between two clouds, while continuing to provide first-class customer service and support that enterprises have come to expect from the two companies. In addition to providing interoperability for customers running Oracle software on Oracle Cloud and Microsoft software on Azure, it enables new and innovative scenarios like running Oracle E-Business Suite or Oracle JD Edwards on Azure against an Oracle Autonomous Database running on Exadata infrastructure in the Oracle Cloud.”

Defined by interoperability. At Oracle Open World, Larry Ellison in his keynote described what he literally called Oracle’s “wonderful” partner Microsoft. Aside from the fact I never heard Larry Ellison use the word “wonderful” before, in the past there was no shortage of digs at Microsoft, so this represents a significant and, to me, welcome evolution in the relationship between the two companies – and with a lot of runway for the relationship to be carried considerably further.

Microsoft-ServiceNow: The original partnership between these two companies was announced in October 2018 but was limited to the federal public sector – more of a tactical alliance. It was ServiceNow IT workflows combined with Microsoft Azure to enhance “digital transformation” at federal agencies. (Digital transformation is, of course, the catchall buzzword in every press release of every vendor for everything. Most importantly, buzzwords aside,  it was an important first step – and a tactical test – to a more strategic relationship announced in July 2019 to extend the idea of the workflows within an Azure infrastructure for “enterprise customers in highly regulated industries.” While this is still a bit restricted, with Bill McDermott coming in as the new ServiceNow chieftain, after leaving SAP, this is likely to be taken a significant amount further, since under McDermott’s tutelage, SAP and Microsoft always had a friendly, if at times competitive, relationship going back many years.  So his predisposition is to ally with Microsoft, as could be seen with the Open Data Initiative (ODI) (see below) which consists of SAP, Microsoft and Adobe and was a major cooperative venture during Bill’s tenure.  This bodes well for the broadening of this alliance even more – especially since Microsoft is thinking “ecosystems” now. That means that they see that ServiceNow plays a role in their end to end customer ecosystem which they themselves cannot play – and thus partner’s with ServiceNow accordingly.

Microsoft-SAP: This is actually one of the longest standing partnerships. The partnerships, which have had an on again off again vibe, harken back to 2005’s Mendocino/Duet technology announcement and release (2006) and now extend to in-cloud migration allowing customers and others to migrate to SAP’s  S/4 for Hana via Azure services.  This partnership, announced October 20, 2019, once again shows the common theme for all of Microsoft’s strategic partnerships is Azure and the services that it provides.

Microsoft-Adobe – I call this longer standing superbly crafted partnership the GARP – The Get A Room Partnership because it is so close and so intimate that they almost shouldn’t be doing those things in public. I’ve written extensively on this one because it is a paradigm of how strategic partnerships that are ecosystem focused should work. To get more details on this, check out what I wrote about its strengths and limitations in 2018, this Watchlist winner post this year that provides what I thought about it from Adobe’s perspective (included in it but not an article about the partnership per se) and some more of the recent evolution of the partnership with Magento and Marketo playing a role in that, according to my dear bud and CRM Playaz partner Brent Leary and included in his take on the Salesforce-Microsoft announcement of a few days ago. To summarize, this is arguably not only the best executed and closest strategic relationship I’ve ever seen from two vendors but it should be seen as a paradigm on how to do one of these.  It involves of course, running a number of Adobe’s services (most recently managed services for Adobe Experience Manager) on Azure and tying a lot of Adobes application architecture to Azure. It also involves Microsoft using Adobe Digital Marketing as Microsoft’s primary enterprise marketing B2C offering but in conjunction with that most recently, tying Marketo Engage to both Dynamics 365 and LinkedIn even as Microsoft continues to evolve its own marketing applications.   Even at the business level, Microsoft and Adobe salespeople are compensated for the sales of specific applications of the other partner in order to encourage “bundled” apps and services from both combined. This is the best of the best of strategic partnerships and is the trigger partnership for all of the others.

Open Data Initiative (ODI) – In September 2018, Microsoft, SAP, and Adobe announced what they called the Open Data Initiative (ODI). At first it was confusing, it was announced during Dreamforce and seemed to be a dig at Salesforce, and it was unclear whether or not this was to be a new universal data standard or it was to be focused on data interoperability among the three data models of the three different companies.  It may have been a dig at Salesforce, though that was denied, but the timing remains suspicious, nonetheless. But thankfully for all of us, it was not meant to be a new universal data standard but instead the architecture for interoperability for the data of the three companies.  Whew. But once again, regardless of what the purpose was, this is a strategic pact Microsoft is driving with its new partners and one that fits their game plan exceptionally well.

While these are all germane to the tech industry and Azure and are interesting to people like me (and, I presume, you) we can’t forget all the strategic ecosystem partnerships that Microsoft forged in 2019, so briefly, here they are:

Sony – announced in May 2019, this partnership was to explore opportunities in gaming and AI – which given the competition between Xbox One and PS5, made this a significant effort – again eschewing competition for coopetition. 

AT&T – Announced in July 2019, this is a multi-year effort that follows the partnership thread around an Azure framework and services effort that involves the public cloud, 5G and many other facets. The key part of the announcement from the press release:

“As part of the agreement, AT&T will provide much of its workforce with robust cloud-based productivity and collaboration tools available with Microsoft 365, and plans to migrate non-network infrastructure applications to the Microsoft Azure cloud platform.”

Humana – In October 2019, Microsoft announced a strategic partnership with Humana to reimagine health care solutions for the 21st century aging population. Embedded in the agreement was the following: 

“Using the power of Microsoft’s Azure cloud, Azure AI, and Microsoft 365 collaboration technologies, (bold mine) as well as interoperability standards like FHIR, Humana will develop predictive solutions and intelligent automation to improve its members’ care by providing care teams with real-time access to information through a secure and trusted cloud platform.”

Once again, Azure is the centerpiece of this vertically specific partnering. Even though a very different kind of company, it follows a bit along the lines of the agreement with ServiceNow. Vertically specific, but on the Azure IaaS platform.

Allianz – Just a few days, Microsoft announced that it will be working with Allianz and their insurance tech spin-off Syncier, to develop customized insurance industry solutions based on, what else?, Azure and with an Azure marketplace for insurance solution providers to show their wares (as long as they are built with Azure in mind of course).

What does this all mean?

Microsoft is executing well on its grand strategy (not the same as a strategy) – to become a mission critical part of all business infrastructure in the 21st century. Obviously, to accomplish this they need the platform, architecture, services and framework to do that – and they have that.  Azure. They also have the confidence of the enterprise market in Azure they need to justify their case that this is something that will benefit the markets they are addressing.  If you look at the current make up, AWS and Azure are the two most dominant IaaS platforms and while AWS remains the leader, Azure is gaining ground.  But that’s not all that goes into accomplishing their objective.  Having the IaaS platform is a prerequisite to be sure, but you have to be able to prove that you can support the provision of outcomes that the business community from IT to line of business is looking for. The technology has to be put to use of the customer.

In Microsoft’s case, to their great credit, they know that. Have they justified that with these alliances? Not yet.  What they have justified with these partnerships though is:

  1. They are committed to thinking about the world via platforms and ecosystems.
  2. They understand that interoperability in a diverse world is necessary, not an evil to be overcome. We don’t live in a world that sole provider exclusivity is really that much of an option if that’s all you are providing. Don’t get me wrong. It is an option.  But Microsoft is fully cognizant of that no one really wants to dump what have been highly useful investments in IT just to be devoted to a single vendor’s offering. The likelihood of that decreases as the era continues.  So they see ecosystems interwoven with a technology matrix that ties multiple companies technologies together as the way to go.
  3. Thus, the partnerships you see above.  All of them are governed by a Azure managed container and are built to meet specific objectives.
  4. Sometimes in the case of Oracle, AT&T and SAP – its to allow workloads to be managed in Azure – in others it’s a vertically specific effort – see ServiceNow, Humana and Allianz/Syncier – while couched in the language and buzzwordry (my new term) of digital transformation, are still workflows, services, etc. in an Azure container. 
  5. Microsoft recognizes this and apparently is more than any other company I’ve seen to date, willing to run with the idea that interoperability, cooperation, ecosystems, non-exclusivity, and diversity of choice are how they are going to best effect their goal. Thus the 9 strategic efforts which, with the exception of Adobe, were all generated this year. 

Do I think they can pull this off? Possibly. Microsoft has deep pockets, a clear-cut objective, the willingness to throw out the norms of competition that we’ve seen get vicious at times in the tech world.  Have they done enough? Not yet. There are many more pieces to the completion of this puzzle that go beyond just Azure containers so to speak. Office 365 plays a big role. Other alliances. Their own partner ecosystem. Their business applications (Dynamics 365) platform (PowerBI) and citizen apps builder (PowerApps) all play a role.  So there is more to consider, but this current rather dramatic effort is worth watching and Microsoft, if they can minimally stay the course and optimally escalate without losing focus, is a company that will have to be reckoned with a great deal in 2020 – in a cooperative way of course.

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Big Files, Bigger Help

March 12, 2019   BI News and Info
 Big Files, Bigger Help

I made a large program and it’s pretty clunky, I am not great at reducing my program line count. I was wondering if there was a way to ask for help on big notebooks that are above the word count of the questions. I am working on trying to simplify the program and I would like help doing this. I have questions on the notebook itself but I am still getting used to the support here. Please let me know what I should do instead of posting it to dropbox.
Thanx

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They need bigger bodies

January 5, 2018   Humor

Posted by Krisgo

 They need bigger bodies

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About Krisgo

I’m a mom, that has worn many different hats in this life; from scout leader, camp craft teacher, parents group president, colorguard coach, member of the community band, stay-at-home-mom to full time worker, I’ve done it all– almost! I still love learning new things, especially creating and cooking. Most of all I love to laugh! Thanks for visiting – come back soon icon smile They need bigger bodies

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How mobile is amping up personalization for bigger returns (webinar)

November 9, 2015   Big Data

Missed it? Access this important webinar on-demand right here.


“I always wanted to be different. I always wanted to be first.” This quote from Miuccia Prada — Forbe’s 79th Most Powerful Woman — serves as great advice for mobile marketers. This year, over 3 million apps have been released online. That number is expected to skyrocket to 5.9 million in 2020. If you think it’s hard now to get your app recognized in today’s crowded market, it’s going to be nearly impossible five years from now, when it becomes even more bloated.

Which raises the question: How can I stand out among the millions of apps released every day? The answer is by making sure consumers know you have exactly what they want and when they need it. Personalization — the industry’s favorite buzzword — has proven to be an indispensable strategy in successfully reaching consumers. Just look at Amazon, the poster child for reaching its millions of users with the right product, at exactly the right time — or Facebook, serving up the right post based on user behavior and preferences.

And yet, despite the proven success of personalization, the majority of marketers continue to neglect the needs of their users. Not intentionally, of course, but by ignoring the perfect analytic tool available to them: mobile. After all,  what’s a more perfect way to track the essential habits of customers than through the device that’s used every day and taken everywhere? Unfortunately, most marketers are stuck in archaic ways — for example,  using email to deliver any type of personalized experience, which sometimes amounts to no more personal than spelling the recipient’s name correctly.

Meanwhile, the 87 percent of marketers who know how to take full advantage of mobile marketing automation are seeing significant lifts in their key metrics include increased revenue. Mobile marketing automation works; you just need to give it a go.

By ordering this webinar on-demand, you’ll learn how to take critical steps towards mobile marketing automation and finally start reaping its benefits.

VentureBeat’s John Koetsier and Jesse Grittner of Aimia will give you the rundown of some of the businesses that used mobile marketing automation to take their company to new heights. Stop being another face in the crowd and make your voice heard today.


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What you’ll learn:

  • How to use mobile devices to zero in on those tough customers
  • Get insight on VB Insight’s latest personalization research
  • Hear tips from the top experts in personalization and mobile presence

Speakers:

John Koetsier, Mobile Economist, VentureBeat

Jesse Grittner, Senior Director, Loyalty, Strategy and Analytics, Aimia

Wendy Schuchart, Moderator, VentureBeat


This post is sponsored by MoEngage.

Aimia is a data-driven marketing and loyalty analytics company. We provide our clients with the customer insights they need to make smarter business decisions and build relevant, rewarding and long-term one-to-one relationships, evolvi… read more »

MoEngage is a Marketing Automation Platform for Mobile Apps. We empower mobile apps to reach the right customer at the right time with the right message and at the right place. You can use our advanced segmentation to target the right … read more »

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How to Get a Bigger Bang from Your Press Releases

August 2, 2015   CRM News and Info

Once upon a time, press releases were events unto themselves, for the attention they commanded and masses they reached.

Consider Michael Jordan’s famous, two-word fax announcing his return to basketball in 1995, as relayed by his agent, David Falk:

Untitled1 How to Get a Bigger Bang from Your Press Releases

… President Truman’s plea for understanding after Hiroshima …

Untitled How to Get a Bigger Bang from Your Press Releases

… and, of course, any number of releases in the entertainment industry to burnish the image of a band, or a movie star.Untitled2 How to Get a Bigger Bang from Your Press Releases

Untitled2 How to Get a Bigger Bang from Your Press Releases

Press releases drew eyes. They were go-tos for information. Nowadays, though, press releases have it a bit tougher – they have a lot of competition, all vying for eyeballs in the ever-crowded digital landscape.

They’ve lost their primacy, for one thing. Given all the online channels now available to consumers, people who want attention often skip the press and go straight to the consumer. No press needed; no press release either.

For another thing, as you probably know, you used to be able to put follow-enabled links in press releases, to make it easy for people interested in your news to find out more. Google would note that traffic and take it into consideration in SEO rankings. This was abused and manipulated (surprise, surprise) and Google now may consider any follow-enabled link in a press release an unnatural link and an indication of spam.

But there’s still hope! A successful, accessible (and searchable) press release is well within your reach if you can take these tips to heart:

  • Make all your links in your press releases “no follow” links (adding a rel=”nofollow” attribute to the <a> tag). These demonstrate to Google a commitment to education, versus spamming, and can go a long way to giving your releases credibility.
  • Be sure to include keywords optimized for your website – the same ones as those you’d use in getting your site found in search. An example: if you’re an ESP, you might look to highlight “email marketing,” “deliverability,” or “sender reputation,” for starters.
  • Craft compelling, provocative headlines for your press releases – statements that tap into current events, ongoing trends, and relevant conversations.
  • Support your headlines with pithy, compelling sub-headers. These can get you eyes, give context, and bring much-needed color to your copy.
  • Always start off every release with a one-liner at the top, accounting for your company’s brand and position. Make this statement standard to all releases you issue, so that it stands apart as something unique to you and the image you’ve cultivated for the brand.

CIO Review press release How to Get a Bigger Bang from Your Press Releases

In this example, the CIO Review regularly leads with this phrase: “The CIO Review, a leading technology publication that specializes in enterprise solution assessment…” to position itself.

  • Have a hashtag you’ve coined that’s unique to your brand and social pages? Make it front and center of your press release! Include it in the boilerplate language as a CTA for readers to engage, and a way to discover more information about your product.
  • In today’s digital age, multimedia can make for a very important supplement to your press releases. Most wire services available nowadays will allow you to add pictures and video in your press release, so take advantage of this opportunity if you can. This gives you the chance to own Google Image and Video real estate for the keywords you tag, and lets you add further searchable text via descriptions for each image and video.
  • It goes without saying, but bears repeating: there’s just no discounting the power of today’s social media channels. With every release you publish, make sure you include language after the boilerplate that allows readers to follow and engage with your company’s social pages. Some examples: “Join the conversation on Twitter, circle us on Google+, friend us on Facebook and get to know the company on LinkedIn.” Check in the process that you hyperlink each and every channel you mention, to make it easy for readers to follow you.

Act On social boilerplate How to Get a Bigger Bang from Your Press Releases

At the end of the day, press releases have an important part to play in your company’s overall communications strategy, and they deserve respect and attention.

Manage your press list

Just as you market by segmenting your subscriber and customer lists, you can do the same with your press lists.

For instance: you might segment lists based on the beats that the reporters cover, or by region or by focus of publication, and so on. If you have products in different verticals, then you can develop a strategy for each product and each vertical.

You can use a system like Act-On to steward influencer relations – by sending out press releases and pitches via marketing automation. Why? Because you can track the members of the press who have opened your emails, the links they have clicked on, and the actions they go on to take after reading your announcement. You can also see which of your web pages they’ve looked at.

The engagement data that marketing automation captures will help you as a PR person gauge the interests of your influencers – are they interested in corporate happenings, your product, or your culture?

Marketing automation will help you paint the picture of the influencer and better understand what part of the business is of utmost importance to them. Act-On engagement data can help you formulate a targeted pitch or provide insight on when and how to follow up.

What if you knew one of the press members from your list was on your website right now looking at a page for your new product? What if you could be alerted to this, in real time? You could earn points with them for knowing what they care about by following up with them in real-time – armed with strategic talking points based on the actions they have taken with your content.

Find Your Influencers

social influencer paper 250x316 How to Get a Bigger Bang from Your Press ReleasesInfluencers can have a large impact on your target demographic, and provide quick routes to a trusting relationship between you and your future customers. Influencers can help you build your brand, and save you massive amounts of time while doing so. If you haven’t leveraged the power of influencers in your marketing strategy yet, now is the time to start.

If you’re interested in diving into Influencer Marketing, download our free whitepaper, Best Practices in Social Influencer Marketing. In this whitepaper,  you will learn how to attract influencers, how to incorporate them into your overall social strategy, and the four main components of influencer marketing.

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Here’s the bigger meaning of all these newfangled connected devices

January 11, 2015   Big Data

Sure, you can spend your time marveling at the latest “smart” devices announced at this week’s 2015 International CES that gather data and connect to the Internet — from the next-generation plant-hugging Parrot Pot to LG’s connected vacuum cleaner. For Shawn DuBravac, a CES veteran and consumer electronics analyst, that’s to be expected. He’s personally more interested in thinking about what’s useful.

“We’re in an environment where we’re more focused on things being technologically meaningful. We’re no longer focusing on, ‘Can we do this?’ We’re focusing on, ‘Should we do this, and what should it look like?’” said DuBravac, chief economist at the Consumer Electronics Association, the organization that puts on the CES each year.

DuBravac has as a book coming out on Monday, “Digital Destiny,” that discusses the impact of all sorts of objects becoming digitized, outfitted with sensors, and connected to the Internet. Things can get more personal, quantified, or automated. Not every device will have an enormous effect on society — indeed, some will flop, while others could meet the needs of a certain group of people. But little by little, some of these devices will develop greater capabilities, and people could start to accumulate them. That’s where things can become more interesting.

For instance, at this year’s CES, DuBravac came across a system that tells you how much you’ve got left in your propane tank, and how quickly you’re burning through it. The information could show up on your smartphone.

That sort of alert on its own could be helpful for those who do lots of propane grilling, DuBravac said. But over time, he expects devices to connect with other devices and services and, over time, start to offer predictive recommendations, not just information on events that have already happened.

For instance, movie recommendations could become better when connected devices are feeding data into a recommendation system. A Dropcam might be able to determine how many people are inhabiting a room and whether they’re sitting or standing. And data from connected lightbulbs could be brought into consideration, too. Maybe weather could play a role as well.

“They might look at you and say, ‘Hey, Shawn, we see you’re home alone, the lights are dim, it’s cold, you seem to be depressed or anxious,” DuBravac said. “‘You’re lying down. Here’s a movie you wouldn’t normally like. It deviates from your historical patterns but really fits this situation well.’”

Networks of these connected devices could also be good for your health. In his book, DuBravac sketches out the upside of a connected refrigerator and a connected scale:

The scale relays your weight trend to the fridge, which, knowing your weight loss goals, warns you that the chocolate cake you’re about to remove won’t help you reach them. I envision my fridge yelling at me with the tone of a boot camp drill instructor.

It’s funny, but it’s not that hard to imagine such a suggestion, which wouldn’t be possible without the data that these devices can generate or the calculations that can be performed automatically. That’s one kind of result of the revolution of connected devices that should play out over the next few years.

Meanwhile, with consumers’ adoption of connected devices increasing, some device and app makers are trying to ascertain what they should — or shouldn’t — do with the data they can access.

So a company behind a running app that knows you typically run 50 miles a week but suddenly stop running might conclude that either you got tired of the app or, perhaps, you were injured. The company could surface information about the best way to recover from an injury and prevent further injuries in the future. But some are hesitant now, DuBravac said, “because they don’t necessarily want to let you know that they know this.”

The market will reveal which devices and services can help people, and which ones just might go too far. And for those technologies that stick around, whole new risks can emerge.

Take for example a Volvo that DuBravac saw at CES that connected to a bicycle helmet. If a car comes close to the bicyclist, the helmet flashes. And the car can be directed to stop or go forward based on the actions of the bicyclist as well. Moral hazard could become a factor in this scenario.

“Those are all things we have to explore and sort out,” he said.

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