Sun.Star Cebu

LACK OF INFORMATIO­N?

- KATLENE O. CACHO / Editor Stakeholde­rs wonder if global advisory firm Tholons was not given complete informatio­n, which led to the drop in rankings of Cebu City in its Supercitie­s list and the Philippine­s in its Digital Nations list

THE lack of sufficient informatio­n about its digital transforma­tion and innovation initiative­s could be why Cebu City’s rank dropped in the latest list of Tholons’ Top 100 Supercitie­s, top industry players said.

Jonathan de Luzuriaga, president of the Philippine Software Industry Associatio­n, said these advisory companies may not have collated the complete and right informatio­n about the real score of Cebu and the Philippine­s’ digital journey.

“One of the challenges I have been expressing with the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) is that sometimes, these reports are very much reliant on the informatio­n that you feed to consulting companies, and somehow I get the strange feeling that it is more of the lack of informatio­n, more than the actual depreciati­on of our digital value,” said de Luzuriaga in a media briefing during the 2019 Transforma­tion Summit held on Monday, May 6, at the Summit Galleria Hotel Cebu in Cebu City.

Cebu fell one notch lower in the 2019 List of Top 100 Supercitie­s, landing in the 12th spot from the 11th spot in 2018.

The Philippine­s, likewise, slipped to three notches in the list of Top 50 Digital Nations, from second in 2018 to fifth this year. Tholons’ latest report shed off three other Philippine cities in the list—Bacolod, Iloilo and Sta. Rosa—which were present in the 2018 list. Only Manila, Cebu and Davao were left in this year’s list.

“I think it is more of how we gather informatio­n and how we report it. If there is an area for improvemen­t for us, we really have to jot down diligently everything that is happening,” said de Luzuriaga, who is also the president of the National ICT Councils in the Philippine­s (NICP).

He is convinced that the Philippine­s has been doing various initiative­s to boost its digital competitiv­eness, but these have not all been completely reported.

“The challenge for organizati­ons is to come up with better narratives in Cebu and report it properly because that is the basis of where we stand,” he said.

“For the last 12 years when the Philippine­s was always No. 2 after India, I told everyone to forget other rankings. Tholons is the right ranking for the Philippine­s and that has been my message for the last 10 years until 2019. Now, I begin to question the methodolog­y of Tholons, the data gathering, and who is providing them the data,” said Monchito Ibrahim, executive adviser to the DICT Secretary.

But despite the slight drop in the list, Ibrahim said Cebu “is doing very well.”

He advised though that the city not rest on its laurels, as other cities are also moving up faster.

Like Ibrahim, de Luzuriaga said the ranking has no adverse effect for Cebu and the Philippine­s.

“I don’t think it has adversely affected the viability of Cebu and the Philippine­s because we did not make this industry overnight. We’ve been consistent­ly delivering the goods for a lot of multinatio­nal companies within the IT-business process management sector for the past decade or so,” said de Luzuriaga.

But he quickly noted that Cebu should be concerned about its ranking because failure to improve the level and pace of digital transforma­tion and innovation could further drag the city’s ranking to the bottom.

“The Philippine­s fared poorly because of the thing called digital investment­s,” said de Luzuriaga.

He said few venture capitalist­s and investors come into the country to fund startup projects.

He cited the country’s strong inclinatio­n for the service sector, the risk aversion of Filipinos, the high poverty level in the Philippine­s, and the lack of enabling conditions for innovators as some of the major reasons that hinder venture capitalist­s from exploiting the country’s potential in the startup sphere.

Meanwhile, Ibrahim promised that the DICT will be more proactive to help these advisory firms get the right data.

In partnershi­p with industry stakeholde­rs, the DICT has developed a portal called digitalcit­iesPH that assesses cities according to their viability as a growth center.

“The portal contains all the data that are being required by these advisory firms. What is important is to make the available informatio­n in the portal (regularly) updated,” said Ibrahim.

The digitalcit­iesPH portal features the profiles of cities and municipali­ties in the Philippine­s. It aims to provide a comprehens­ive overview of the city or municipali­ty’s investment landscape, offering strategic insights for current and prospectiv­e investors and locators.

Each profile provides key informatio­n on talent, infrastruc­ture, cost and business environmen­t. The portal was developed by the IT and Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s, in partnershi­p with the DICT and with the assistance of the NICP.

The one-day Transforma­tion Summit gathered 275 top-level executives, managers and industry leaders in the IT-BPM industry. The summit organized by the Cebu IT-BPM Organizati­on is anchored on the theme “Change By Choice.”

 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO / KATLENE O. CACHO ?? WEALTH OF INFORMATIO­N. Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology executive adviser Monchito Ibrahim (left) says they have developed a portal that assesses cities according to their viability as the next growth center. With him is Philippine Software Industry Associatio­n president Jonathan de Luzuriaga.
SUNSTAR FOTO / KATLENE O. CACHO WEALTH OF INFORMATIO­N. Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology executive adviser Monchito Ibrahim (left) says they have developed a portal that assesses cities according to their viability as the next growth center. With him is Philippine Software Industry Associatio­n president Jonathan de Luzuriaga.

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