from industrial revolution to digital innovation [poster]

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invest in early adoption ofIndustry 4.0 to drive growthand innovation

33%

early adoptorsexperienced10% growth

63%

early adoptorsexperienced30% growth

21%

Early Adoption• Aerospace • Automotive• Manufacturing • Defense

Industry Adoption 2020• Electronics • Pharma• Process • Healthcare• Machinery • Utilities• Agriculture • Financial• Construction • Retail• Logistics & Transport

China59%

France14%

Germany38%

UK33%

Nordics25%

USA35%

EarlyAdoptors

Growth by applying digital innovation

Experienced 10% growth

IndustryAdoptors

StandardAdoptors

EarlyAdoptors

Experienced 30% growth

3%

IndustryAdoptors

StandardAdoptors

KeyFindings

57%Change Strategy and Business Modelhave seen significant changes in their core business strategy orbusiness model and operating model

92%Follow patterns to outperformhave similar patterns to define and strengthen competitive advantage toinnovation in core differentiating competencies

62% Closer interaction with customersapply new technology for increased customer responsiveness

83%Industry frontrunnerinvest in performance accelerators and industry standards to improve competitiveparity and standardize core competitive competencies

57%Drive innovation and growthview emerging technology as investment that drives innovation and growth

57%Apply standardsapply standards that increase the level of reusability to improveand standardize the non-core competencies

63%

48%

35%

21%12%

Country maturity in early adoption

Key findings from early adoptors of digital innovation

1st RevolutionWater & Steam Power

2nd RevolutionElectric Power

3rd RevolutionAutomation

4th RevolutionCyber-physical Systems

Drivers

73%Improve Working Capital/Cash Flow Management

70%Increase Production

Capacity/Flexibility

82%Provide the basis forCompetitive Pricing

79%

Improve Competitive Position

76%Increased Operational Efficiency

Acquire NewGeneration Technology

Robotics (M2H, H2M, M2M)

Big Data 2.0 Bioinformatics

Artificial Intelligence Nanotechnology

Sensoring Mass Customization

Advanced Material Advanced Connectivity

Energy Storage Internet of Things

Quantum Computing Cyber Security

3D Printing Autonomous Vehicles

Cloud Services Neurotechnology

DigitalWorld

PhysicalWorld

VirtualWorld

The Four Industrial Revolutions

Drivers of the industrial revolution

Industry 4.0

LegendLess than 2 years 2-5 years 5-10 years More than 10 yearsTrend Curve Adoption CurvePerformance S-Curve

Early Adoption

StandardsAdoption

Source: Emerging & Disruptive Trends, LEADing Practice IndustryAdoption

Peak of hype

Question ofvalue and pivot

Pilots

Initialrollout

A wide range of success initiatives

Can’t be successfulwithout it

Inflectionof attitude

Attitudeconfirmation

Attitudeplateau

Attitude and adoption equilibrium

Time

Expe

ctat

ions

Real-time marketing

Virtual personal assistants

Personification

Programmatic TV advertising

Mobile commerce

3D bioprinting systems for organic transplant

Micro data centersSmart advisers

Tag managementDigital commerce marketing

Data-driven marketingAdvanced analytics with self-service delivery

Data management platforms (ads)Autonomous vehicles

Internet of Things

Speech-to-speech translation

Multitouch attributioniBeacons and bluetooth beacons

Machine learningSharing economyWearables

CryptocurrenciestConsumer 3D printing

Social marketingEvent-triggered marketing

Digital security

Virtual Reality

In-appadvertising

Gesturecontrol

Cryptocurrency exchangeAutonomous field vehicles

Personalization

Natural-language question answering

Enterprise 3D printingWorkforce tracking

People-literate technology

Native advertisingContent marketingPrivacy management tools

Real-timebidding (aps)

Responsive design

Hybrid cloud computingAdvocacy/loyalty marketing

Multichannel marketing

IT/IO integrationBig Data

Cross-device identification

Programmatic direct advertisingPredictive analyticsSmart robots

Affective computingIoT platform

Biochips Augmented reality

Digital marketing hubsNeurobusiness

Mobile marketinganalytics

Software-defined securityAuto-content recognition

Digital dexterityVoice of the customer

Connected home Cloud services brokerage

SMART Dust

Bioacoustic sensingImmune

engineering

Brain-controlled computersShopable media

Citizen data science

Quantum computing

Systems engineeringIntelligent robotictechnologies

End-to-end workflow innovation

Online advertising data exchanges

Gamification

Campaign segmentationSocial TV

Volumetric & holographic displaysHuman augmentation

Customer journey analytics

Consumer telematicsDigital out-of-homeDynamic creative optimization

Robotic automationIntegrated robotic service flow

Remote monitoring

Equipment integrated on enterprise systems

Nanotechnology

Automation in complex production

Advanced materials

Mobile advertisingRobotics as a

Service

LEADmanagement

Bioinformatics

Marketing talent communities

Highlights of the Global University Alliancequantitative and qualitative analysis of 1398companies from 26 countries across 17industries by analyzing investment, performance,current behaviours, patterns and future intent.

The venue of the event is located at:Birmingham City University, Innovation BirminghamFaraday Wharf, Holt St.Birmingham B7 4BBUnited Kingdom

January 26th 2018, Birmingham City UniversityFrom Industrial Revolution to Digital Innovation

SystemsIntegration

AdvancedAnalytics

SMARTProducts

First-MoverAdvantages

RoboticAutomation

SMARTCities

Data-drivenServices

Productivity

SMARTManufacturing

End-to-EndWorkflows

Outperformers

Competitiveness

Disruptions

Innovation

Growth

LeadingPractices

GameChangers

#1 provider of Enterprise & Industry Standards. Missionis to empower through Reference Content, enablingorganizations to innovate, transform & deliver value.

International consortium of 450+ universities that collaborates onacademic research, analysis and development and to exploreleading practices, best practices as well as develop missing practices.G

LO

BA

L U

NIVERSITY A

LL

I AN

CE

GLOBALUNIVERSITYALLIANCE

Industry 4.0 Emerging & Disruptive Trends

Agenda for the From Industrial Revolution to Digital Innovation event09:00 AM Welcome & Introduction

Ardavan Amini, Birmingham City UniversitySimon Polovina, Sheffield Hallam University

Georg Etzel, CEO at LEADing PracticeMark von Rosing, Global University Alliance

09:15 AM Industrial Revolutions, Challenges & Changes

Sir David Hardman, CEO of Innovation BirminghamChair of UK Science Cities

10:15 AM The Need for Innovation

Dave Maclean, Chair of the WMCA Digital Board

11:05 AM Driving Long Term Growth in the Digital World

10:35 AM Break & Networking

3:15 PM Break & Networking

Jamie Caine, Sheffield Hallam UniversityHans-Jürgen Scheruhn, Harz University

12:25 PM Lunch & Networking

1:10 PM Introduction to Industry Sessions &Enterprise GPS

Imtiaz MurshedExecutive DirectorGroup Project Management OfficeNational Technology Enterprises Company

1:55 PM SMART Parking: Transforming A Country’sParking Environment

2:35 PM Health 4.0: SMART Clinical Access Systems

Angus Watson, Senior DirectorNorthern HealthGovernment of Canada

11:25 AM Using Best, Industry & Leading Practices

Ardavan Amini, Birmingham City UniversitySimon Polovina, Sheffield Hallam UniversityMark von Rosing, Global University Alliance

Thomas Olsen, Senior ExecutiveNovozymes

3:45 PM Biotechnology 4.0: End-to-End WorkflowInnovation

5:05 PM Summary of the Day: Next Steps

Ardavan Amini, Birmingham City UniversitySimon Polovina, Sheffield Hallam University

Joshua von ScheelSheffield Hallam University

4:25 PM Finance 4.0: Challenges & Changes

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