Sumo Logic secures $110 million in series G round to focus on DevSecOps use cases

Sumo Logic, a California-based big data and analytics platform provider, has announced an $110 million (£84.5m) funding round – and secured a more than $1 billion valuation in the process.

The funding round, which was led by Battery Ventures and also featured contributions from Tiger Global Management and Franklin Templeton, will aim to in the company’s own words continue to keep its position ‘as the SaaS machine data analytics leader of choice for the cloud era.’

“Sumo Logic’s growth is driven by the shift to digital business and cloud adoption across all industries and companies of all sizes,” said Ramin Sayar, president and CEO at Sumo Logic. “We have proven that we are the platform of choice for not only cloud-native companies, but also enterprise companies and their cloud migration initiatives.

“It’s great to have such a powerful set of leading investors and ecosystem partners as we accelerate our category leadership,” added Sayar.

While Sumo Logic’s log management and analytics toolset has a variety of use cases, one of its primary focuses right now is as an enabler for DevSecOps which, as the name suggests, introduces security at an early stage of the application development and deployment process. Writing for this publication last April, Aruna Ravichandran, vice president of DevOps marketing at CA Technologies, explored how leading businesses were seeing significant uplift by not architecting in security flaws.

“The business case for DevSecOps couldn’t be clearer,” wrote Ravichandran. “It drives business performance because security cannot be an afterthought.”

The funding round, a series G which takes Sumo Logic’s total funding to $325m, comes off the back of a stellar year for the company. The past 12 months have seen more than $100m raised in revenue according to the firm, with more than 2,000 customers and 100,000 users globally leveraging its service.

https://www.cybersecuritycloudexpo.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cyber-security-world-series-1.pngInterested in hearing industry leaders discuss subjects like this and sharing their experiences and use-cases? Attend the Cyber Security & Cloud Expo World Series with upcoming events in Silicon Valley, London and Amsterdam to learn more.

AWS helps Ministry of Justice pursue legal aid for all


Bobby Hellard

8 May, 2019

It’s a sad fact of life that people only interact with the justice systems when something has gone really, badly wrong in their lives. They’ve been the victim of a crime, they’ve been accused of one, or something more complex, such as seeking legal help when you are on the verge of homelessness after being illegally evicted.

These are some of the most fundamental parts of many peoples life, users of the website for the Ministry of Justices (MoJ), so it’s of high importance that those users can engage with a service that runs efficiently and without outages or delays.

The MoJ runs 500 courts and tribunals across England and Wales. It has around 70,000 employees operating in 800 plus buildings. It also looks after 83,000 people in its prison service – around 121 prisons – so it has quite a considerable scale. But, most importantly, it also supports millions of citizens who access online legal services, such as the Legal Aid Agency, every day.

The Legal Aid Agency is effectively there to make sure that justice is available for everyone in society, not just those who can afford it. It runs systems for around 30,000 legal firms and has around 1,300 legal staff who make the decisions around who should get legal aid and who shouldn’t.

«Despite the importance of legal aid service, a few years ago we were in a bad state from a technology perspective,» says Tom Read, the chief digital and information office for the MoJ. «We had an old on-premise data centre that was fairly aged, we had a mixed Oracle estate, a full stack Oracle application and we had frequent outages.

«And, crucially, we could only deploy a few times a year – some services monthly, some quarterly – and that meant it was very difficult to make our services more easily accessible as more people started to access service through their mobile phone rather than going to a physical building.»

Read gave an example of the kind of problems the MoJ deals with. Lucy lives with her three children, she’s in her mid-twenties and she’s lived in the same flat for ten years – since her parents kicked her out for getting pregnant. Her boyfriend is long gone and she tries to work but it’s difficult to juggle three children and work at the same time; it’s a situation many people in the UK are going through.

But, in the ten years that Lucy has lived in her flat, the area around her has transformed, going from run down to a vibrant hub of trendy shops and cafes. It’s suddenly in-demand.

At the end of last year, her landlord decided to get more money and decided to evict her. So, Lucy who has no money, no savings and plenty of debts had three weeks to get out of her house and the most likely outcome in that situation is that she would be homeless and her children would be taken into care as a result.

«Now, somebody in that situation, they probably don’t know about legal aid and the Legal Aid Agency, all they know is that they need help,» Read explains. «These are our users, so we don’t innovate for competitive advantage, we’re a monopoly service, people have to use us.

«These people that access these services are at a sensitive point in their lives, we can’t just have days of delays while our caseworkers can’t access their applications.»

Before it moved to AWS, the MoJ used its own databases and data centre through other suppliers, which meant it didn’t have the ability to change things rapidly. There was also no expertise within the government to designs these datacentres for their specific needs.

Around 2013, the MoJ created the Ministry of Justice Digital aiming to implement agile methods and cloud technologies into the service.

At a very early stage, it looked to bring in software developers who had not previously worked within government, along with ensuring the tools that those engineers wanted to use were the most modern tools available at the time. One of those tools was AWS.

The AWS services the MoJ is now using include Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3), and Amazon Route 53. With these, the MOJ has been able to turn technology into an enabler for more fair and effective justice. And the public cloud model has also come with financial benefits.

«We’ve made major savings on hosting,» adds Read. «It’s been really good for our fragile public sector budgets.»

AWS aims to get more girls into tech with ‘Get IT’


Bobby Hellard

8 May, 2019

Amazon Web Services has revealed an initiative designed to encourage more girls into the technology industry.

‘AWS Get IT’, which was introduced during the cloud giant’s London Summit on Wednesday, is a programme to attract 12-13-year-olds, specifically female students, to consider careers in cloud computing and digital roles.

The programme has been developed together with non-profit organisation Future Foundations and will educate students on cloud computing technology and then invite them to create an application to solve a real-world issue faced by their school or community.

Darren Mowry, the business development director at AWS, made the announcement during his keynote speech at the start of the event at London’s ExCel saying that AWS was “completely convicted” that it needed more diverse, skilled and motivated people.

“The way that we’re going to do that is not to just attract those people from all around the world, we’re gonna go build this workforce,” he said. “And the way that we’re doing that is by capitalising on a programme that we’ve already piloted in the UK, that’s focused on inspiring, training and developing year eight young ladies, in UK schools to come and consider technology jobs.

“We’re doing that by actually forming partnerships with schools, providing some AWS specialists from the business and technology, to come and spend some time with these groups of young people, to help them understand the opportunity they have ahead.”

AWS will shortlist ten teams to present to an expert panel of judges at the AWS Summit London 2020, where a winning team will be selected. The most innovative application idea will be developed and maintained for the school by AWS.

The Get IT programme is explained as a sort of digital skills boot camp, where students can learn about the different stages of developing software, such as how to identify a target audience for their application. Each attendee will learn about problem-solving, brainstorming, research techniques, prototyping and test and development methods.

What’s more, students will spend time at AWS’s offices learning about Amazon’s approach to innovation and receive guidance from the company and industry experts about application development.

For further inspirations, the students will also be introduced to female leaders within AWS and other organisations to show them the different types of career paths available in technology and learn about the positive impact that women are having on the industry.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 launches with simplified multicloud tools


Dale Walker

7 May, 2019

Open source giant Red Hat has made the latest generation of its Enterprise Linux operating system generally available, bringing with it a host of new features that it hopes will support the growing adoption of hybrid and multicloud deployments.

By upgrading to the new Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8, customers will be able to benefit from a more streamlined process for updating developer tools and frameworks, better security support, compatibility with some of Red Hat’s newest services out of the box, and a more user-friendly GUI that aims to reduce the barrier to entry for Linux beginners.

Red Hat is hoping to capitalise on a growing multicloud industry that’s seen adoption across 70% of customers, according to recent IDC data. What’s more, 64% of applications from an average company’s IT portfolio are based in either public or private cloud.

With Linux poised to play a part in around $10 trillion in global business revenue this year, Red Hat believes that the software layer should be keeping pace in the multicloud era, particularly when companies are also adopting other disruptive strategies, like AI and DevOps.

Speaking at Red Hat Summit this week, Stefanie Chiras, vice president and general manager of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, explained that the company wants to serve as a «junction» between innovative products and applying these to a business ecosystem.

«Innovation and Linux are inseparable – from building the Internet’s backbone to forming the first neurons of AI, Linux drives IT’s present and future,» said Chiras. «We want to redefine the value of an operating system in this new era of IT. We want to really show to the industry that Red Hat is an enterprise software portfolio company, not a product company.»

As an example, she highlighted the addition of Insights into RHEL 8 by default, effectively a support service that allows customers to access expertise on their Linux deployments. This will monitor a business’ deployment and flag any security vulnerabilities or stability issues, and flag these automatically to admins. Red Hat was keen to state that this was more of a «coaching» approach to support, as customers become more familiar with the platform, and effectively replaces the idea of support tickets.

«We’ve pulled Insights directly into the RHEL subscription – that allows customers to use a software-as-a-service offering, [and] leverage all the tools that we offer,» Chiras explained.

Another major addition is Application Streams feature, a tool that aims to improve the platform’s process of updating languages and frameworks, something that has traditionally been difficult to do without creating instability. With Application Streams, these languages and frameworks will be updated far more frequently without straining core resources.

It’s clear that making things easier is the theme of the iteration, something that’s certainly resonated with Red Hat’s customers. Today, RHEL enjoys over 50,000 deployments, and recorded 8,000 downloads for its beta phase of version 8 – compared to just 400 for RHEL 7.

Specifically, it has hidden many of the more granular system tasks behind the updated RHEL GUI, which now also makes it easier to update instances from version 7 to 8. It also draws upon Ansible, Red Hat’s automation platform, to power new system roles and allows the creation of workflows for more complex management tasks. This should make it far easier for, for example, new system admins to adopt new protocols and reduce the possibility of human error.

RHEL is still Red Hat’s flagship product, and will certainly serve as a springboard for the rest of its portfolio. In fact, Red Hat also plans to introduce Enterprise Linux CoreOS, a lightweight version of RHEL 8 designed for customers using OpenShift 4.

The release marks the last iteration of RHEL released before the completion of the $33 billion acquisition by IBM, which was approved by the US Department of Justice this week.

Salesforce unveils Einstein Analytics for financial services industry


Maggie Holland

8 May, 2019

Salesforce has confirmed that Einstein Analytics for Financial Services is now generally available, in a move designed to help those in the industry make better use of data powered by artificial intelligence (AI).

The new solution, which is highly customisable, works as an add-on to Financial Services Cloud and costs $150 per user, per month, according to the cloud firm.

It is particularly suited to wealth advisors, retail bankers and managers in the sector as it allows them to quickly and easily access customised, data-driven insights about clients to deliver an enhanced and much more personalised customer experience.

This speed, ease-of-use and enhanced levels of intelligence – it will extract data from Financial Services Cloud and other data sources – and sophistication thanks to the use of AI will enable those in the industry to try and keep pace with new market entrants, such as fintech, and a fast-evolving wider sector landscape.

«AI is the modern-day gold rush of the financial services industry, and those that get in early will reap the rewards of this next wave of innovation,» said Rohit Mahna, senior vice president and general manager of Salesforce Financial Services.

Ketan Karkhanis, senior vice president and general manager of Salesforce Einstein Analytics, added: «We’re bringing intelligence to every customer interaction and building products that speak the language of the financial services industry. They’re getting a tailored approach to analytics with the agility of our powerful platform.»

Einstein Analytics for Financial Services has a number of core components including:

  • AI-powered actionable insights, which offer financial services professionals predictive guidance on a number of elements including ways in which to boost customer retention;
  • Industry dashboards as standard, which templates that a fit-for-purpose and assist with data gathering on clients’ financial goals and activities to better identify key opportunities;
  • A way to better analyse data from external sources, thereby providing a hollistic view of customer needs and requirements;
  • Industry regulation compliance by default, as all data is hosted in a trusted, secure and compliant cloud-based platform with robust auditing, privacy, reporting and security tools built-in.

A number of financial institutions, including credit union Elements Financial and Royal Bank of Canada are already making use of the analytical extension. The former is embedding Einstein Analytics in its account home pagers to provide more timely insight on members and money flow, while Royal Bank of Canada is using it to better serve its 16 million-plus clients.

«Our work with Salesforce has allowed our credit union to build a data culture where stronger and more accurate knowledge leads to serving our membership with customisation,” added Lisa Schlehuber, CEO of Elements Financial.

«We are proud of the high-tech and high-touch level of service that makes Elements unique and leads to lifelong relationships with members.»

Q&A: Andrew Cowling, Fujitsu Scanners


Cloud Pro

7 May, 2019

What does cloud mean to you and what benefits do you think it brings to businesses?

The cloud is probably the next major step in computing. It enables users to access and make use of software and services through remote access via the internet – through their desktop PC, laptop, tablet or phone. For businesses, this means that they no longer need to have super powerful computers at their premises, whilst still being able to easily access the software they need without any administration or updating headaches. It also means that they are no longer tied to a desktop in their office, but can actually access their work anywhere with an internet connection. Cloud enables greater collaboration potential across departments whether in the same building or different continents. Ultimately, decision making can be faster and enables better expectations.

Do you think the UK cloud industry has an advantage over other geographies? Are we excelling?

In the UK, we generally have very good internet access, both through the landline network and mobile networks. Our compact geographical size means that mobile coverage is excellent across most of the country. This makes cloud access pretty good wherever you may be. Users are getting used to using cloud services such as Google Docs and Dropbox, so this means they are becoming much more familiar with the concept.

What else do you think needs to be done to champion innovation in the UK cloud industry?

Businesses are already making great strides into the cloud arena. I think it’s now really just about thinking ‘outside the box’ and focusing on ways in which the cloud could benefit their clients. 

Please can you provide a bit more detail for those not familiar with your company?

Fujitsu specialises in producing high-speed, professional document scanners and software. Our scanners can quickly convert paper documents into electronic, searchable PDF documents, saving valuable office space and reducing the risk of loss or damage to the information through fire, flood or theft.

Why have you decided to get involved with the UK Cloud Awards 2019?

We’re really keen to promote the benefits of working in the cloud and associate ourselves with this exciting shift we are seeing in everyday workplaces. Our products are all focused on enabling businesses to be more effective, work smarter, and realise the benefits that moving from paper to digital processes can bring.

Our latest scanners can automatically route scanned documents to the right cloud service at the touch of a button. They can intuitively recognise what is being scanned and route accordingly. For example, this could be your receipts straight to expense systems, business cards to a CRM or those important documents straight to a cloud service for instant access and action.

What key trends/challenges are you seeing with your customers around cloud?

Education is probably the biggest challenge with the cloud. Customers don’t always instantly pick up the ways in which the cloud can help their business, so part of our job is getting to know the customers and suggesting ways in which they could make the most of it. The next-generation workforce will demand how they interact and engage.  Right now, though, it is about trying to shift habits and ‘but this is the way we always do thing’ mentality to help businesses realise that they have to move with the times to remain competitive and profitable.

How do you think the cloud landscape has evolved in the past five years?

Cloud access and use is getting more ubiquitous through popular software use such as Dropbox, Evernote and so on, whilst Microsoft, Google and Amazon Web Services are serving more and more software platforms. It’s also getting easier and cheaper for mobile data to be sent quickly on the go. We are also seeing more niche providers such as those who can manage expenses so perhaps we will see more evolution as we see greater adoption.

What do you think has driven this shift?

It’s a mixture of both customer demand and businesses taking advantage of the enormous, scalable computing power available through the cloud, offering new and innovative services for consumers. Customers are keen to take advantage of any new technology that will save time, money, and make their lives easier. Businesses can also take advantage through the increased resilience and security that big cloud service providers are offering.

What other trends and patterns do you see around cloud computing and related technologies?

IT departments around the world are going through a transformation. It’s becoming unnecessary for them to have their own enormous servers and computing power on site when they can outsource this business to cloud computing specialists. This will save administration time and expense, whilst they can easily pay to scale the cloud computing power to suit their needs at any given time.

What role do you see cloud playing in business life a year or five years from now?

Cloud services are already becoming indispensable for businesses. Hopefully, they will benefit our quality of life by allowing more remote and flexible working for a greater majority of employees. This should, ultimately, lead to business cost savings through remote sharing, virtual meetings and more efficient workers who spend less time on the road.

Looking further along the line, how do you see cloud shaping the way we live and work in the future?

It’s clear that this technology is developing at an incredibly fast pace and cloud services will have a huge impact on the workplace in the future. These are exciting times and I can see that the cloud will enable businesses to take advantage of increasingly useful technologies such as artificial intelligence and unthinkable amounts of computing power. I’m really looking forward to seeing Fujitsu continue to develop its ScanSnap Cloud services to make our scanners even more useful to our users in the future.

Supply chains and digital transformation: How Manutan rebuilt its systems and strategy

Executive summary: Distributing giant Manutan moved from a reactive customer engagement strategy to a proactive approach through going cloud-native. While the process had various roadblocks, the sense of engagement and community was key. Xavier Laurent, director of value added services at Manutan, has ‘lived the journey of transformation’ over the past 10 years and discusses how the company meets customer demand in the digital economy through becoming more agile in its engagements, as well as combining technological and cultural innovation

Longread We live in a time of disruption, where brand names and legacy businesses cannot rest on their laurels due to increasingly affordable technologies. The supply chain demands faster, most cost-effective processes leading to the panacea of frictionless engagement.

Transformation sounds exciting and positive – but often the barrier of change and threat of the unknown deter the necessary action, speed and commitment needed to achieve the promised land. We live in a time where technology enables what 10 years ago was either impossible or cost prohibitive for all bar the few. Cloud, IoT, AI, big data, VR, drones and more are all changing the living environment around us – and with this, the customer expectation and demand also changes.

It is time to take stock of what is achievable, the importance of starting the journey now, and to appraise the impact of doing nothing. The gain is far greater than the pain to get there; are you ready to value your future and make the first step? Distributing giant Manutan is an example of a legacy firm which has transformed to say relevant – and here they bring us the realities from the story of their journey.

The time to transform is now

Having been in the cloud sector for more than 13 years, I have watched as it has gone from infant, to child – initially crawling past those holding onto legacy approaches and fearing the cloud – through to walking, and now starting to jog. The full sprint is still ahead of us as we witness the acceleration of innovative and disruptive use cases being brought to market.

We are finally seeing more cloud advocates in the room than cloud doubters and resisters, and seeing enough momentum to view cloud and its cohorts of big data, AI and IoT push past the human barriers. Technology used to divide the market, with solutions offering ‘enterprise’ functions requiring associated costly infrastructure and complex deployment. For example, you would find an application that required numerous high-end servers or mini-computers to run it, database servers and complex installations which quickly raised the entry price bar to a level that distanced them from the average firm. The ‘have nots’ who could not afford such elite offerings were relegated to using different products often lacking key functions, or the backing of vendors large enough to deliver innovation and as many enhancement updates.

This technology hindering went on for many years until the disruptive entrance of true cloud offerings. With cloud, we started to witness application delivery, through multi-tenancy efficiencies, which flattened the market, making the commercials for a 5000- or 5-user license viable for both respective companies. The smaller firm, for the first time, was able to choose the same class offering as the large enterprise brand name, without the high upfront investment cost barriers.  Cloud has enabled new innovative firms to revitalise many areas of the software market, delivering innovation, more function, and fresher user experiences that befit our mobile, Internet-based world. Legacy vendors have therefore been forced to revitalise their offerings, re-platform and transform them to a more flexible technical and commercial model, all to the benefit of their employees, customers and business partners in the supply chain.

Supply chains have long relied on traditional manual processes, heavy lifting, and inefficient data insights into where to tune and gain competitive advantage. Proven cloud technology is here today to transform this effectively and affordably; it may seem obvious to take the first steps to making this happen, but many embroiled in the old way are hampered by legacy thoughts and perceived barriers of the journey ahead and hence take no action. With the disruption happening across industries right now, even a successfully performing company can quickly turn sour should a competitor change the game on them. Today, a breadth of companies are undertaking this transformational journey and are on their way to surprising competitors, as they come out of the gate refreshed and supercharged.

A digital transformation success story

I recently had the pleasure to gain great real-world insight with the challenges and market benefits this transformation brings through conversations with both SAP Ariba and Xavier Laurent, director of value added services at Manutan, who has lived the journey of transformation over the past 10 years.

Digital transformation is not as easy as the words and hype written about it may make it seem. It is a combination of change involving people, process and technology and needing the business gains to visibly outweigh the losses and pain to drive people to make it happen.

Deferring digitisation is easy when realisation of the work involved comes to light. No wonder so many default to the status quo, delaying projects and wading on painfully with existing systems and methods

Manutan has a 50-year legacy of B2B distance selling, from original paper catalogue through to being an innovator in the initial days of the web, through to dynamic cloud-based digitisation of the B2B supply chain. Originating in distance selling of lower priced transactional products, higher cost of sales through manual engagements were palatable in the early days where competition was less stringent, and margins were more supporting. Manutan was one of the first to identify the importance of the web, going back 15 years; its first foray into digitisation. This undoubtedly made the decision to digitise the supply chain process further an easier one than for many firms.

Noticing a pressure from customers looking for an easier, most cost-effective relationship, it was the last four to five years which took the change further as Manutan invested in an e-procurement team focused on a portfolio of customers. Combining this with a digitisation of systems and procurement has driven a very positive increase of clients 10% ahead of industry averages – the sort of outcome any business will happily accept.

To achieve the level of supply chain digitisation and client positivity was not simply a case of technology, but a combination of smart decisions, investing and resourcing in the right places. For example, Manutan has 10 people (purchase consultants) in charge of building KPIs around productivity, speed, and accuracy of customer projects. Whilst people and resources help, without the new cloud systems to empower them, the successful gains being recognised would not have been as great.

The drivers and challenges

One of the initial challenges was that spend from ‘class C’ customers typically only represented 5% of their acquisition process. Hence it was not the focal point for gains. Purchase directors seeing low value transactions in class C had not focused in this area. Despite there being a volume of orders with small value items across the business, the true value gain that could be recognised here was hidden – they could not see the wood for the trees. However, once class A and B had been optimised fully and customers had reached this maturity in their lifecycle, they quickly realised that whilst with class A, and to a degree class B, purchases there was some easy wins in simple price savings, with class C price savings were not going to be as easy to achieve, as with lower cost items there was less to play with.

The gains here are to be made from process improvements; reducing supplier breadth, management/removal of rogue purchases, lowering supplier management costs and, as much as possible, automating and digitising the process. Through adoption of effective tools – in this case SAP Ariba – it is a clear benefit to improve productivity on class C purchases and thus gain competitive advantage.

With class C purchases typically having a wider spread and less attention, the challenge is even greater in procurement to collate, structure and analyse related data in order to ratify and streamline purchasing. Reports show that up to 80% of company data is unstructured, and thus not delivering business insight in order to drive value. It is unsurprising then that only 8% of companies currently believe that they have effective class C purchase process management.

On class C products seeking to make the gains from cost reduction on unit pricing may seem obvious, but this can also be counter-productive. The impact of a lower cost supplier can be a less reliable service; costly errors and longer lead times, with knock-on effects on your supply chain and larger orders and relationships, where the class C itself is not the key but contributing to the whole for the customer’s output. Focusing on streamlining inventory, removing silos, and improving forecasting of demand, can all enable a gain across the chain.

Laurent’s focus at Manutan, of reducing supply chain costs for class C transactional products and helping customers gain, is not an uncommon need. The drive was to deliver an application architecture that helped customers by digitising everything possible including product visibility, workflows, new orders, delivery, and invoicing. Through time spent understanding customer purchase processes and challenges with the manual approach to class C, Manutan has achieved a three times reduction on overall cost for its customers, both raising the relationship bar whilst embellishing customer loyalty, competitive advantage, and greater growth of revenues. Some of this has come from the attitude in the business to change and make it happen, with added empowerment from the flexibility of the Ariba platform which handles the most transactions in the Manutan group today.

The use of SAP Ariba as an enabling platform for these gains is now enabling Manutan to address new challenges from customers and deliver solutions in hours and not weeks – a ‘why would the customer go elsewhere?’ advantage. Through the automation and efficiencies gained, customers are now able to see the logic of reducing suppliers to one that can deliver better cost management across product lines and overall consolidation.

Meeting customer demands in the digital economy

Manutan is driven to being known as an expert in its field, with a reputation for reliability, speed, and maturity. To have maintained this and grown above industry averages is an accolade in itself. Xavier cites SPA Ariba combined with the attitude of its team as the gateway to adding flexibility and agility to the Manutan mantras. Transformation as market needs and trends demand is not easy and requires a ‘can do’ and ‘take action’ approach, this being the hindrance of many larger organisations.

One unforeseen benefit of going through a digital transformation project is that it often drives peripheral insights and discussions that identify and drive additional positive changes to the business

Manutan did have the advantage that it was an early adopter of the web and the basics of e-procurement, but it has had to maintain this willingness to early adopt. The company historically had taken a reactive best efforts approach to meeting customer needs, as many will recognise in their own businesses. This progressed to building a team incorporating service account managers and purchase consultants in charge of partnering with customers in the same language, and then conduiting the client’s needs internally to Manutan divisions such as IT, supply chain, and finance.

Part of the process change identified meant that Manutan, on top of the technology changes, needed to become more agile in its people engagements. This meant being able to react quickly in an opportunistic mode; no blocking of requests from customers due to corporate lethargy or systems, but embracing them with the knowledge that Manutan’s systems and culture would support this approach.

This now allows long term projects to continue and be managed effectively, but enables fast responses to short-term customer needs ahead of these projects. Manutan empowers all staff to speak directly with clients. No more misinterpretations as an account manager takes their interpretation of a customer’s needs to IT; IT directly speaks with and engages the client, delivering faster outcomes and a greater customer experience for the expertise they access. Laurent reports this has driven a greater acceptance in the business of the new technologies and systems, empowerment to staff from top down, and a great level of customer partnership.

As Laurent talks, you can feel the enthusiasm he has for what the business has achieved, and the excitement for what is yet to come. His words iterate what I have heard from many – that it is no easy task to bridge the gap between old and new, to utilise the amazing technologies available today to deliver what today’s customer gravitates towards. Deferring digitisation is easy when realisation of the work involved comes to light; mapping out processes, engaging test customers, internal workshops, sometimes changing people’s roles and responsibilities, if not their long-held processes. A large action list of challenging activities appears at the outset, and this is before technology selection and implementation even rears its head. No wonder many default to the status quo, delaying projects and wading on painfully with existing systems and methods.

However, as Manutan perfectly illustrates, once you step out over the chasm, momentum gains and you quickly find yourself progressing on the journey with people on board, supporting the destination, and embracing the steps to get there.

Facing up to the change process

The change process should still not be underestimated. Laurent explained that there were still cultural barriers to overcome before they achieved today’s market-changing delivery model. Both sides of the coin needed education and mentoring into the new world; purchase directors and decision makers were not aware of the technology approach Manutan wanted to deliver, and salespeople did not initially appreciate the opportunity the technology presented. Sales was familiar with talking to procurement about price and process, but not with the capabilities of e-procurement to change the game and relationship. Throughout the process the organisation engaged its staff. Right from the outset, employees were involved and not isolated from what was going on; they felt they were part of a solution Manutan was moving towards, and remained heavily involved from start to finish.

I asked Laurent what had been learned from the change process – what had to be overcome and, with hindsight, what would have been done differently? The unsurprising conclusion, to me at least, was that it took longer than expected to move from a project-based organisation to an agile one. The historical culture was one of working in a slower moving, process-barriered market, one where technology was the remit of IT and not something all in the business should embrace at an innovative pace. New staff entered and helped with a mindset of accepting the change journey was underway and a positive thing.

Laurent’s passion for the new culture as a veteran is clear; having held multiple roles himself, he cites the difference has not only been the technology platform and the capabilities it has given, but also the validation from board down of the importance of digital and innovation to the business and its customers.

From the journey, other improvements were identified, such as the already mentioned siloing of engagement with the customer relationship manager. Laurent identified that this had gone on for too many years due to an ‘always being done that way’ outlook, and that the transformation process encouraged a look across the business at what could be improved. One unforeseen benefit of going through a digital transformation project is that it often drives peripheral insights and discussions that, indirect to the defined project, identify and drive additional positive changes to the business.

The journey’s path

Laurent was also clear to point out that along the journey there were wrong turns, bumps in the road, breakdowns, and a few accidents. Importantly, the team and business remained focused on the outcome and belief of the positive. They stayed resilient and determined throughout the process and drove the same downwards to their teams. Through this, Laurent reported the incredible team passion, excitement and agility he witnesses each day that digitisation has provided to the Manutan community.

Where businesses have already achieved a true fundamental transformation, they are usually eager to progress to the next

The outputs from the journey that Manutan as an organisation and the people, such as Laurent, have been on, is clear. Customers are better off; accuracy, speed, flexibility, effectiveness and cost reduction have all become mantras familiar to Manutan’s base, as has a ‘Manutan can do’ attitude. The business has gained market share, lowered return rates and achieved customer infusion of the phrase ‘love buying through us.’ KPIs have become more measurable and meaningful and improved both internally and externally to its customers. Manutan salespeople are gaining new clients through the ability to deliver valuable and contextual insights into the savings they can make, using customers’ real data, analysing the true cost of buying from Manutan, and providing a digital procurement illustration.

The cultural change has been an important one to support the changes the technology has enabled. A clear empowerment of staff to be responsible and the freedom to say yes or no to clients was driven across the business. This was described as the ‘007 license’ by Laurent; the license to find a solution for your client. Laurent’s voice was energised when he spoke, as a long-timer, of the ‘free’ feeling, supported by the organisation to be allowed to try and fail and challenge the status quo; to be different, to go faster, taking risks with the aim to create opportunity and be inventive. Much of this has been brought about by the underlying SAP Ariba platform that bridges Manutan more closely with its customers.

The next stage of the journey

With all the great upsides for Manutan, what is left? The focus has been on the downward supply chain, so by utilising a similar process of appraisal and alignment to the power of SAP Ariba, Manutan sees great opportunities to improve its upward supply chain, enabling greater efficiencies through even speedier delivery through approaches such as drop shipments. The delivery thus far has focused on the B2C channels, so B2B is also wide open to be transformed using a similar approach.

Manutan is now progressing on its continued journey and the strength that SAP Ariba has enabled allows the growth into other geographic regions. Laurent explained to me that the ideal is to build a ‘rinse and repeat’ model, one that will enable them to go faster as they enter new markets and drive even greater growth and competitive differentiation.

The key, however, is that the ‘better customer experience’ that SAP Ariba has enabled Manutan to deliver is continued through anything it does. While Ariba is at its foundation a technology, to Manutan it has gone far beyond this to a true business partnership for mutual gain; a transformational enabler.

There are still areas where much more could be done, Laurent explained, but from the experience and outcome already gained you can feel that Manutan does not fear entering a new process of change or innovation. I often engage with businesses and find where they have already achieved a true fundamental transformation, that they are eager to progress to the next. From Laurent’s pragmatic and transparent sharing, it is easy to see the strength that the platform has given Manutan, its team, and its customers, making business happen in the way customers want it to happen.

Manutan has aspirations to leverage AI capabilities. For example, where a client or prospect issues a large multi-thousand catalogue tender there is still a time consuming, manual and error-risk process to undertake. Being able to automate this for speedier response, with greater accuracy and reduced effort, would gain competitive advantage. There is also aspiration and plans to increase the catalogue size exponentially and this has impact on the marketplace; documentation needs, manuals, photography and support, which only becomes possible through utilisation and expansion of smart technology and increased digitisation.

Getting yourself involved

Industry’s wheel keeps on turning – and it is turning faster than ever before in history. We are seeing new goliaths seemingly born overnight, and legacy brand names failing at every turn. Sitting on your laurels and avoiding what looks like a potholed road is a dangerous option to take in lieu of doing nothing and not embarking on the journey.

If you have a supply chain where you have not optimised the procurement process and done all you can to engage with suppliers and customers, the time is now. There is no simple panacea switch to jump to the other side; how much pain you must go through will vary, but not doing anything has a far more painful outcome and risk waiting for you along the path. However an increasing number of firms, as Manutan for one has demonstrated, are showing that the only way to truly tap into effective supplier and spend management today is to adopt a cloud-native approach and leverage it to transform not only your tech, but as a conduit for positive effect on people and processes.

By making the change you will benefit both your own business, through a combination of efficiencies and consistencies helping to remove ‘rogue buying’ and gaining competitive advantages, and that of your customers in reducing their operational buying costs. Engagement becomes easier – and a pleasure.

https://www.cybersecuritycloudexpo.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cyber-security-world-series-1.pngInterested in hearing industry leaders discuss subjects like this and sharing their experiences and use-cases? Attend the Cyber Security & Cloud Expo World Series with upcoming events in Silicon Valley, London and Amsterdam to learn more.

Microsoft announces Azure updates for IoT, databases and more


Connor Jones

7 May, 2019

Microsoft has kicked off its annual developer conference Build in Seattle with CEO Satya Nadella using his pre-event keynote to announce a slew of updates to its Azure services, including IoT, databases, analytics and storage.

Internet of Things (IoT)

The first update comes to Azure IoT Edge, Microsoft’s cloud-based IoT monitoring and deployment platform used by businesses to coordinate their IoT devices. After nearly two years since its release, IoT Edge will now support Kubernetes integration in preview.

Microsoft’s fully managed IoT SaaS, Azure IoT central, will now sport some enhanced features surrounding the rules it follows to process data and send it to analytics services as well as benefiting from some cosmetic upgrades to dashboards and data visualisation.

Databases

Microsoft has released an update to Azure SQL Database serverless which will appeal to those that care about being billed for unused compute. The update introduces a new compute tier for databases with intermittent usage with the goal of improving the cost-efficiency of the service. It involves scaling determined by workload and pauses compute when the database is inactive. It’s now available in preview for single databases.

Developers will also now be able to scale compute, storage, and memory resources in a new Hyperscale service tier in Azure Database for PostgreSQL. It’s now in public preview as Hyperscale (Citus) for PostgreSQL and in general availability as Azure SQL Database Hyperscale.

Storage

Azure Managed Disks will now support direct uploads at sizes from 32GB to 32TiB – an update now in public preview in all regions. Azure Managed Disks are virtual hard disks that act like a physical disk in an on-premise server.

Analytics

Azure Data Factory’s two new components announced earlier this year will enter preview this week. Mapping Data Flows allows cloud users to transform data at scale by creating data transformation jobs without requiring any knowledge of coding. Also on the codeless theme, Wrangling Data Flows allows users to ‘explore and wrangle data at scale’ – visualising data en masse and making it easier to understand. The components are in public preview and private preview respectively.

Azure Data Warehouse also gets support for semi-structured data, which is also available in preview. ADW can now analyse both structured and semi-structured data such as JSON directly inside the service which yields faster insights.


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In other news

Microsoft has treated us to many of the announcements prior to the event’s official opening. AI and blockchain preset services were announced last week as appetisers for this week’s event.

Azure Cognitive Services got smarter with Decision and Personaliser, two new components that are designed to provide users with smarter specific recommendations for better decision-making.

AI has been added to Azure Search, which will interact with Cognitive Services to unearth better insights from structured and unstructured content. Machine learning services have also been tweaked to enable codeless model creation and a new deployment service with drag and drop capabilities.

Cloud-Native and Containers | @CloudEXPO @IBMcloud @RedHat @GHaff #CloudNative #Serverless #Docker #Containers #Kubernetes #Microservices

The standardization of container runtimes and images has sparked the creation of an almost overwhelming number of new open source projects that build on and otherwise work with these specifications.

Of course, there’s Kubernetes, which orchestrates and manages collections of containers. It was one of the first and best-known examples of projects that make containers truly useful for production use. However, more recently, the container ecosystem has truly exploded. A service mesh like Istio addresses many of the challenges faced by developers and operators as monolithic applications transition towards a distributed microservice architecture. A tracing tool like Jaeger analyzes what’s happening as a transaction moves through a distributed system. Monitoring software like Prometheus captures time-series events for real-time alerting and other uses. Grafeas and Kritis provide security policy attestation and enforcement. And there are many more.

In short, there’s an entire new cloud-native ecosystem growing up around containers. Come to this talk by Red Hat technology evangelist Gordon Haff and learn all about it.

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Sandy Carter’s @CloudEXPO Silicon Valley Evite | #Cloud #AI #DevOps #DataCenter #Serverless #Docker #Kubernetes #MachineLearning #DigitalTransformation

At CloudEXPO Silicon Valley, June 24-26, 2019, Digital Transformation (DX) is a major focus with expanded DevOpsSUMMIT and FinTechEXPO programs within the DXWorldEXPO agenda. Successful transformation requires a laser focus on being data-driven and on using all the tools available that enable transformation if they plan to survive over the long term. A total of 88% of Fortune 500 companies from a generation ago are now out of business. Only 12% still survive. Similar percentages are found throughout enterprises of all sizes.

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