SuiteWorld 2022 - Studio McGee overcomes supply chain surprises with NetSuite This article is sponsored by:
Integrated ERP system proved vital when shipping container price leapt from $2,000 to $30,000.

Integrated ERP system proved vital when shipping container price leapt from $2,000 to $30,000.
Subject Access Requests (SAR) are a core component of GDPR and require that an organization must provide individuals with information held on them when asked to do so.
Automation is complex - especially in the manufacturing industry. Will the automation trend continue to accelerate? Infor's Henning Dransfeld looks at some examples of smart connected factories
Cloud data was supposed to enable AI at scale and democratize data. But how do we cope with the new complexities of distributed data? The emerging discipline of DataOps may help us here - along with concepts like "Data in mind, data in hand."
After shaky start, the wallet maker has a system that will support growth.
Think a global S/4HANA upgrade with 18 parallel projects is a challenge? Try doing it all remotely during a pandemic. Fortunately, CENIBRA had the right partnerships - including process mapping and management from Software AG. Here's how it went.
Oracle NetSuite is hosting its annual user conference in Las Vegas this week and is taking the opportunity to announce its latest product updates.
Grocery giant Kroger is looking to take the lessons it had to learn during COVID and applying the best to its ongoing strategy.
Sound Off helps highlight Trailblazers at Dreamforce through human storytelling.
Hyperautomation is coming, but will it solve the great resignation crisis, and deliver much-needed economic growth? John Appleby of Avantra thinks hyperautomation could be the key to both - but the reason why may surprise you.
Quiet quitting is a viral term to describe people - particularly those under the age of 35 - who don’t go above and beyond when at work.
Duncan Ash of Confluent explores how data in motion enables financial services providers to make intelligent and automated decisions that benefit the customer experience while also tackling security risks.
If humans aren't to blame for AI bias, who is? We can point to the data, but the data isn't static either. A recent article seemed to let humans - including data scientists - off the hook. Here's my critique.