This year the debate will focus on the importance of using technology innovatively in order to transform processes and business models for the achievement and maintenance of high performance and market leadership. The ability to align the core activities in real time to the evolution of a fast-evolving market is becoming one of the most important strategic levers in businesses. From this point of view, this IDC event represents the occasion to highlight how enterprises are going to enhance their productivity and their competitive advantage, passing from a rigid technological infrastructure to a flexible one, that IDC defines Dynamic IT, able to adapt itself to business objectives.
“Businesses throughout Europe have invested less in information and communication technology in recent years, even though the strategic use of ICT has become much more important, both for driving growth through innovation, and for meeting the growing demands of corporate governance and legal compliance. That's why IDC considers the development of Dynamic IT capabilities as critically important for the success of European businesses in a rapidly globalizing marketplace,” said Frank Gens, senior vice president of research, IDC.
Among the keynote speakers at the forum are: Thierry Breton, French Minister of the Economy, Finance, and Industry; Nicholas Negroponte, founder and director of the Media Laboratory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Jeremy Rifkin, president of the Foundation on Economic Trends; Luc Soete, director of the United Nations University Institute for New Technologies (UNU-INTECH) and the Maastricht Economic Research Institute on Innovation and Technology (MERIT); Lester Thurow, Professor of Management and Economics, Sloan School of Management, MIT; Peter Weill, director of the Center for Information Systems Research, Sloan School of Management, MIT, and one of the leading experts on the role of IT governance in enterprises; John Gantz, chief research officer and IDC senior vice president; and Frank Gens.
During the event, the "IDC EMEA 2005 Award for ICT Innovation and Business Transformation” aims to recognize outstanding organizations that have substantially improved their competitiveness and business results by applying ICT to product and/or process innovation. Over the following months, members of the expert committee formed by IDG and IDC senior executives and chaired by Frank Gens, will identify a shortlist of projects where the use of information technology has been especially noteworthy for the originality of its conception, the breadth of its vision, and the significance of its benefits. The expert committee will select the award finalists from the shortlist.
Top management from the following sponsor companies will also attend The European IT Forum 2005: Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, SAP, Sun Microsystems, Cognos, Ericsson, Symantec, Foundry Networks, Novell, Secuware, and Xerox.