The Friday Roast - four fails with anal-yst led marketing This article is sponsored by:
Anal-ysts are two a penny. They're not doing their customers a good service allowing poor data to go out. IDC in the firing line.
Anal-ysts are two a penny. They're not doing their customers a good service allowing poor data to go out. IDC in the firing line.
Enterprise mobile app strategies are missing out on an important dimension: they have to take the impact of the Internet of Things (IoT) into account
ServiceMax's CMO Stacey Epstein says that Oracle's TOA acquisition may disrupt existing relationships between Salesforce and TOA, leaving more room for ServiceMax to grow.
Fred Wilson's zero-rating warnings don't stand up to scrutiny. Here are five reasons.
Did Oracle just fire the first shot in the next round of M&A activity in its ongoing tit-for-tat battle with best frenemy Salesforce.com with its acquisition of field service managment firm TOA Technologies?
Yahoo!’s results were basically just bad. Google’s were good, but with bumps in the road ahead. Then there was Facebook. Oh boy, oh boy and then there was Facebook.
Nadella spoke about how he will “responsibly” make the market for the Windows phone going forward, but stated that Microsoft will no longer be doing hardware for hardware's sake.
The on demand iPlayer service has been one of the BBC’s shining lights in recent years, but's its absence over the past few days and the reaction that provoked indicates a higher status in the digital DNA.
The disparity between Google’s dominance of the digital advertising sector and the struggles of Yahoo! make for a stark contrast, despite continuing decline in ad prices.
NetSuite has acquired London-based Venda, beefing up its omnichannel retail credentials and upping its European investment, says CEO Zach Nelson.
Last week Microsoft's new CEO hinted at a transformation of the company's culture; and this week he delivered, with 18,000 jobs set to disappear over the next year.
Marissa Mayer said in 2012 that Yahoo!'s best times were ahead of it. So why has she just turned in the worst revenue numbers since she took over as CEO while Google, Facebook and Microsoft win the digital ad wars?
In order to fully leverage enterprise mobility there is the assumption of ubiquitous connectivity, but that's not how it plays out in the real world. Until then, then the 'anytime/anywhere' approach to mobility is nothing more than a fancy buzzword.