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Key trends to shape enterprises

Key trends to shape enterprises

SEVEN emerging trends that are expected to affect business, technology and design in the year ahead have been examined by Accenture in its Fjord Trends 2018 report.

 Rapid technological advancements are altering the world we live in today, provoking both wonder and angst about the possibilities, Accenture says. 
Whether it's artificial intelligence, computer vision or blockchain, emerging technologies are uprooting the digital and physical experiences of our everyday lives. These joint forces are simultaneously creating optimism and concern about the unprecedented wave of change that is unfolding.
 “Each of our 2018 trends is born out of a fundamental tension - be it a shift, a collision or a parting of ways,” said Nontawat Poomchusri, country managing director and financial services lead for Accenture in Thailand. “Winners in 2018 will be those who best navigate these tensions and seize the opportunity.
“Digital versus physical, human versus machine, centralised versus decentralised, speed versus craft, automation versus control, traceability versus to collectively design the world we'll be living in.”
Fjord Trends 2018 suggests how organisations can navigate these currents and design for positive change.
 It examines the seven trends expected to shape the next generation of experiences including physical fights.
 Digital has had the limelight long enough – there are two brand experience headliners now. 
The time has come to blend the digital with the physical.
 Computers have eyes: As well as comprehending our words, computers now understand images without any help from us. Imagine the exciting possibilities for next-generation digital services.
Slaves to the algorithm: How do you design a marketing strategy to win over the algorithms – immune to conventional branding efforts – that sit between brands and their customers?
 A machine's search for meaning: Artificial intelligence might change our jobs, but need not eliminate them. We can – and should – design our collaboration with the machines that will help us develop.
 In transparency we trust: Blockchain has the potential to create transparency that will clear the fog of Internet ambiguity, regain lost trust, and repair relationships with the public.
 The ethics economy: Organisations are feeling the heat to take stands on political and societal hot button issues, whether they want to or not. And consumers are speaking with their dollars, choosing brands that align with their core beliefs.
 And, design outside the lines: Design's rapid ascedency and newfound respect within organisations is a win for all. |But, in a world in which everyone thinks they're a designer, today's practitioners need to evolve – how they work, learn and differentiate themselves – if they are to continue having impact.
 “We believe this edition of Trends will provoke and inspire but, above all, provide actionable advice for organisations to prepare for the opportunities ahead,” said Nontawat. “Many of the thorny questions ahead of us revolve around human-machine interactions, the consequences of which will be profound for individuals, society and organisations of all kinds. 
“As digital fades from being stand-alone to being embedded in our physical world, our relationships with everything around us will be redefined."
 

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