Remove Engineering Remove Information Management Remove Innovation Remove Technology
article thumbnail

What CEOs Need to Know About the Costs of Adopting GenAI

Harvard Business Review

CEOs must integrate the multifaceted costs into their strategic vision, acknowledging nuances such as inference cost, fine-tuning cost, prompt engineering cost, cloud expenses, talent costs, and operation costs. CEOs must not overlook the intricacies of genAI costs.

Cost 23
article thumbnail

Can the Construction Industry Be Disrupted?

Harvard Business Review

Construction is often maligned as the industry that technology left behind. Industry observers routinely deride the lack of technological sophistication in the construction industry, and have pigeon-holed it as old-fashioned and lagging behind more forward-looking and purposeful industries such as manufacturing.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Today's CIO Needs to Be the Chief Innovation Officer

Harvard Business Review

As game-changing technologies transform every business process, they also give us the ability to create new products and services that were impossible just a few years ago. Therefore, the CIO''s role must shift from protecting and defending the status quo to embracing and extending new innovative capabilities. Transformation Drivers.

CIO 8
article thumbnail

Where are you on the management scale of newbie to expert hacker?

Ask Atma

If the company management feels it is operating below this standard most of these practices can be self taught by studying them on the internet or visiting a bookstore. Informed Management [Experienced User or Management 2.0]. CRM has three principal objectives: Acquire new customers.

article thumbnail

The H-1B Visa Debate, Explained

Harvard Business Review

These must qualify as “specialty occupations,” which typically require a bachelor’s degree (or the equivalent) and are found in fields such as science, engineering, information technology, medicine, and business. In computer and information science and in engineering, U.S. born engineers.

article thumbnail

Moving from Transaction to Engagement

Harvard Business Review

Armed with the art of the possible, innovators are seeking to apply disruptive consumer technologies to enterprise class uses — call it the consumerization of IT in the enterprise. Factor in new types of information management. Engagement systems are powered by business rules and complex event processing engines.