Our Blog
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Take It Back In House
Insourcing offers control and alignment, but shifts cost and risk inward.
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Metrics That Actually Matter
The four metrics that cut through noise and show how product development is really performing, from speed to stability.
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The Platform Alliance: How Zoom Turned Collaboration Into an Innovation Engine
How Zoom turned collaboration into a platform strategy, using developer ecosystems to scale innovation while protecting its core technology.
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How Structure Shapes Breakthrough Ideas
Innovation doesn’t scale by accident. The right structure turns ideas into impact—without slowing the momentum that made them possible.
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The Two Captains of Enterprise Technology: How CIOs and CTOs Steer Strategy in Different Directions
CIO vs. CTO: how two technology leaders balance governance and innovation to steer modern organizations through complex digital strategy.
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When Core Competencies Meet Artificial Intelligence: Innovation Inside the Public Sector
Can government innovate without sacrificing accountability? How core competencies may determine whether AI adoption succeeds or fails.
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The Real Cost of “Cheap” Technology: Why Smart IT Leaders Think in Total Cost of Ownership
Cheap software rarely stays cheap. Why smart IT leaders evaluate cloud and enterprise tech using total cost of ownership.
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Work Design in the Digital Age: Why Technology Alone Cannot Fix Collaboration
Communication tools don’t fix collaboration. Work design does. Hoiw roles, processes, culture, and technology shape how teams actually work.
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Zoom’s Next Act: Why Its AI Companion Strategy Was a Well-Timed Move
Zoom’s AI Companion shows how timing matters in tech innovation, turning meetings into actionable knowledge with generative AI.
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When a Platform Becomes the Standard: Zoom and the Modern Battle for Dominant Design
In the technology industry, the fight to define the “standard” rarely happens in a conference room full of regulators. More often, it happens in the market itself, where adoption spreads rapidly and one design becomes the default simply because everyone starts using it. These contests, often called standards battles, determine which technologies thrive, which fade
