As we've done for the past couple of years, we are starting off the new year of CBR with another installment of our yearly series on trends and technologies for the coming year. This is the third yearly issue of CBR where we ask our contributors to look forward to the coming year and see what technologies and IT trends we can expect to endure, which ones are emerging, and which ones seem to be losing steam. Our ability to do trending and year-over-year comparisons is strengthening with every survey and the cumulating of results. We have been very careful in keeping some of the questions consistent so that we can comment on changes over time. Our contributors offer some interesting food for thought and insight based on the data.
January 2008
In this issue:- Starting Off the New Year by Looking Back
- Technology Trends: Numbers and Nimbleness
- Technology Trends: Separating the Wheat from the Chaff
- Preparing for 2008: There Is Room for Cautious Optimism
- IT Trends for 2008 Survey Data
- Starting Off the New Year by Looking Back: Latin America
- Looking into the Future: IT Trends in Latin America
- Analysis of IT Trends for 2008
- Trends for Latin America
- Outsourcing and the IT Organization
- IT Architecture in Latin America
- Trends for 2008
- Latin America Trends: So Far, So Close
- IT Global Trends for 2008 vs. IT Trends in Latin America
- Comments on Cutter's 2007-2008 Survey for Latin America
- IT Trends for 2008 Latin America Survey Data
December 2007
This issue of CBR continues our series on innovation and the role of IT in enabling it.
December 2007
"For me, Enterprise 2.0 is best thought of as a set of technologies, not as a business philosophy. In fact, I am of the mind that if you approach Enterprise 2.0 as a business philosophy — or even worse, as a new philosophy — most likely you will be led astray."
-- Vince Kellen, Guest Editor
In this issue:- Enterprise 2.0: Will Corporations Embrace the Social Media Revolution?
- Enterprise 2.0 and Sustained Competitive Advantage
- The "Alien Logic" of Enterprise 2.0
- Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0: How They Are the Same, How They Are Different, and How They Will Impact the Enterprise
- Frontiers of Collaboration in Enterprise 2.0
- Attributes of the Next-Generation Enterprise
November 2007
Is IT innovation important for your organization? If so, the time has come to find a way to create enough slack resources in your IT shop to buy time and brain-cycles for your employees to have the best chance to succeed at it. Sure enough, IT innovation is again a hot topic in corporate boardrooms and IT shops, and we are working hard to do our part to help you navigate it. While this issue of CBR focuses on dynamic IT capabilities, our next issue will be on the emerging topic of open innovation. In short, open innovation is the orchestration of knowledge inflows and outflows designed to speed up and improve a firm's innovation cycle (but, be patient for now, a lot more next issue.)
In this issue:- Dynamic IT Capabilities: Becoming Nimble Through IT Agility
- A Look at the Drivers of Dynamic IT Capabilities
- A Management Practice Roadmap for Improving IT’s Capability for Flexibility and Innovation
- Dynamic and Improvisational IT Capabilities: The New Frontier of Competitive Advantage
- Dynamic IT Capabilities Survey Data
November 2007
"Whereas some of the more historical BPM initiatives were focused on automation, monitoring, and optimization of business processes, the modern BPM approach stresses flexibility; that is, the ability to quickly change processes as the business changes."
-- Bartosz Kiepuszewski, Guest Editor
In this issue:- BPM: A Broken Promise or the Building Blocks of Modern Enterprise Architecture?
- Enterprise Architecture: BPM, SOA, and MDSD
- Adaptive Process Management Architecture: Enabling Enterprise Innovation by Marrying SOA to Business Rules
- Are BPM Suites Ready for Prime Time? Lessons from a Proof-of-Concept
- BPM: Defining the Basics for Success
- All That Glitters Is Not Gold: Selecting the Right Tool for Your BPM Needs