Alexander Loth

Decisively Digital


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      Patrick: Respectfully decline meeting invites.

      Patrick: We often think about personas and audiences when we build products. The best advice I have received is to actively think about that for most anything we do. In the business world, it helps me tailor the message about something I am seeking approval for to the very target audience I'm speaking to. In the data world, it helps me select the right granularity of data that informs but does not overwhelm.

       Chat tools bridge the gap between emails and distractive phone calls. Once conversations turn complex, a video conversation can be a more efficient channel.

       Employees can learn at their own pace if they have access to well-crafted training through a learning management system.

       Companies have to come up with their own internal data dictionaries for delivering a consistent message.

Photograph of Edna Conway, VP, chief security and risk officer for Azure, Microsoft.

      Edna Conway, VP, chief security and risk officer for Azure, Microsoft

      Source: Edna Conway

      Alexander: You are Azure's VP, chief security and risk officer at Microsoft. What is your mission?

      Edna: It is an interesting mission because it is a role that didn't previously exist. As a result, I had the great privilege to craft its scope and mission to deliver optimum impact. My team's focus is ensuring that Azure is the most trusted cloud platform on the planet. This mission drives every aspect of what we do.

      The core of this mission is ensuring customer trust — trust in the Azure platform itself and trust in us as a partner in their success. Earning that trust requires two digital capabilities: security and resilience.

      A comprehensive approach to security fully addresses these concerns:

       Physical security

       Logical and operational security

       Behavioral security

       Information security

       Intellectual property protection

       Privacy

      An approach to risk management and resilience must focus on continuing operations in a world-class manner. For my mission that includes the following:

       Business continuity and disaster recovery

       Anti-bribery and anti-corruption protocols

       Human rights and labor rights

       Health and safety

       Environmental sustainability

       Trade and export controls

      Alexander: How should business models evolve to survive and thrive in an increasingly digital world?

      Edna: The global pandemic has accelerated the pace of the digital transformation journey that so many governments and enterprises were already on. In fact, that transformation became an immediate necessity. It also has uncovered the opportunity we have before us to rethink the efficiency and productivity of our business models.

       To thrive in the digital world, we must optimize to leverage human talent to meet the needs of customers. After all, digital capacity has a singular purpose: to serve people, not the other way around.

      Working through these fundamentals will allow you to begin to free your internal talent to address strategy, transformation, and the roadmap for the next generation of your business. To thrive in the digital world, we must optimize to leverage human talent to meet the needs of customers. After all, digital capacity has a single purpose: to serve people, not the other way around.

      Alexander: How can technology shift the roles and responsibilities of the workforce?

      Imagine, for example, a sensor on a manufacturing line that provides real-time feedback. A digitally connected sensor can offer data that can be analyzed in a cloud-based IoT service, affording the manufacturer an opportunity to take action to adjust anomalies or capitalize upon an otherwise undetectable process improvement. Absent that assist from technology, our operational effectiveness may not be as swiftly optimized.

      This digital insight allows enterprises to achieve and maintain their critical commitment to customers — trust.

      Alexander: Which technology or digital capabilities are essential for a digital strategy?

      Edna: To answer that we must first appreciate that we have entered a platform economy. In fact, platforms are pervasive in industry and our personal lives, from connected factories leveraging a single platform for visibility to operations to our own individual use of on-demand personal transportation platforms.

      Given that reality, we must apply a layered approach to our digital strategies. There are two technologies that form the foundational layer of any digital strategy: cloud and mobile. These two are must-haves.

      Of course, no conversation about digital strategy would be complete without addressing the use of artificial intelligence and machine learning. These capabilities can only be deployed on a foundation of mobile data capture, data storage, and data sharing within a cloud platform.

      As a start, I suggest applying your digital strategy to your data storage needs. Then you can move on to address the variety of compute capacity needs for your business.

      Alexander: What ingredients are required to establish a digital culture?

      The first ingredient is fostering open minds that are comfortable with technology.

      The second ingredient is appreciating the criticality