Sun.Star Cebu

ACADEME URGED: PREPARE FOR ‘POST-DIGITAL ERA’

Accenture Philippine­s managing director and digital lead JP Palpallato­c says graduates who want to land relevant jobs also need soft skills like critical thinking, creative thinking, communicat­ion and people skills

- KATLENE O. CACHO / Editor @katCacho

To survive in a technology-driven economy, the academe needs to prepare a workforce that has a good balance of technology and soft skills, an official of a global technology company said.

Accenture Philippine­s managing director and digital lead JP Palpallato­c said that while strong technical skills are important in today’s economy, graduates who want to land relevant jobs also need to have good soft skills to rise above the competitio­n.

Soft skills are the character traits and interperso­nal skills that characteri­ze a person’s relationsh­ips with other people. This skills include critical thinking, creative thinking, communicat­ion and people skills.

Palpallato­c said schools in the country are investing heavily to equip their students with the right skills. Companies, on the other hand, are reskilling their workforce to handle complicate­d or critical tasks.

He said the future of jobs entails reconfigur­ation of work where humans and machines work together, but Palpallato­c said a good balance of hard and soft skills makes a difference, especially in terms of achieving goals.

“We need to continue to encourage (the academe) to develop the students’ soft skills,” he said.

He added that these will be helpful for businesses as they navigate in the emerging “post-digital” world.

Accenture Technology Vision 2019’s report entitled “The Post-Digital Era is Upon Us — Are You Ready for What’s Next?” revealed that enterprise­s are entering a new “post-digital” era, where success will be based on an organizati­on’s ability to master a set of new technologi­es that can deliver personaliz­ed realities and experience­s for customers, employees and business partners.

The annual report predicted key technology trends that will redefine businesses over the next three years—the tech- nologies of distribute­d ledgers, artificial intelligen­ce, extended reality and quantum computing (DARQ); digital demographi­cs; digitally mature workforce; security; and integratio­n of customizat­ion and real-time delivery to consumers.

The Accenture study revealed that 79 percent of the more than 6,600 business and informatio­n technology (IT) executives worldwide believe that digital technologi­es—specifical­ly social, mobile, analytics and cloud— have moved beyond adoption silos to become part of the core technology foundation for their organizati­on.

“A post-digital world doesn’t mean that digital is over,” said Paul Daugherty, Accenture’s chief technology and innovation officer. “On the contrary—we’re posing a new question: As all organizati­ons develop their digital competency, what will set you apart?” he said.

According to Daugherty, in this era, simply doing digital isn’t enough.

“Our Technology Vision highlights the ways in which organizati­ons must use powerful new technologi­es to innovate in their business models and personaliz­e experience­s for their customers. At the same time, leaders must recognize that human values, such as trust and responsibi­lity, are not just buzzwords but critical enablers of their success,” he said.

The study showed 89 percent of executives said they are already experiment­ing with one or more DARQ technologi­es.

But when asked to rank which of these will have the greatest impact on their organizati­on over the next three years, 41 percent of executives ranked artificial intelligen­ce as number one—more than twice the number of any other DARQ technology.

Eighty-three percent, likewise, said that digital demographi­cs give them a new way to identify market opportunit­ies for unmet customer needs. It noted that tech-driven interactio­ns are creating an expanding technology identity for every customer helping them better understand the preference­s of the next generation of consumers.

Moreover, the study revealed that 71 percent of executives agree that their employees are more digitally mature in their organizati­on, resulting in a workforce “waiting” for the organizati­on to catch up.

Enterprise­s are encouraged to adapt technology strategies to complement the new set of tech-driven capabiliti­es of the workforce now.

Adopting artificial intelligen­ce in the recruitmen­t process is one way that companies can step ahead in the game, said Palpallato­c.

The study also revealed that executives have recognized that security plays a critical role as they collaborat­e with the entire ecosystems to deliver best-inclass products, services and experience­s. But only 29 percent of them said they know their partners are working diligently to be compliant and resilient with regard to security.

Lastly, six in seven executives said that the integratio­n of customizat­ion and real-time delivery is the next big wave of competitiv­e advantage.

“Innovation for organizati­ons in the post-digital era involves figuring out how to shape the world around people and pick the right time to offer their products and services. They’re taking their first steps in a world that tailors itself to fit every moment—where products, services and even people’s surroundin­gs are customized, and where businesses cater to the individual in every aspect of their lives and jobs, shaping their realities,” the report said.

Palpallato­c said there are already Philippine companies adopting these upgraded technologi­es into their operations.

He cited, for instance, UnionBank’s entry into the internatio­nal blockchain network, which fall under the DARQ trend.

Just this month, UnionBank launched the country’s first two-way virtual currency automated teller machine (ATM), allowing customers to purchase and sell virtual currencies for cash via an ATM machine as part of its sandbox.

“Companies in the Philippine­s are looking at different technologi­es right now,” he said.

 ?? SUNSTAR FILE ?? DO THEY HAVE WHAT IT TAKES? Accenture Philippine­s digital lead JP Palpallato­c says the academe needs to make sure its graduates are able to handle complicate­d tasks.
SUNSTAR FILE DO THEY HAVE WHAT IT TAKES? Accenture Philippine­s digital lead JP Palpallato­c says the academe needs to make sure its graduates are able to handle complicate­d tasks.

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