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Source: Dassault Systèmes. Forestier. |
The company is also framing its strategy around the Experience Economy, which relies heavily on cloud, social communications, and big data and mobility - what IDC calls the Third Platform - as its enabling technologies.
At its 3DExperience Forum in Singapore on June 17, themed Doing Business in the Age of Experience, Philippe Forestier, Executive Vice President, Global Affairs and Communities, Dassault Systèmes, and one of the original members of the company, said that the company aims to provide a better life for the city and for the citizen. "Our strategy is summarised in three words: social, industry, experience," he said.
The ideal business experience is cloud-based and social to foster collaboration anywhere in the world, while information must be updated in real-time so that everyone sees the same information at the same time, he said, describing the flagship 3DEXPERIENCE Platform as a business experience platform.
"Business leaders can now connect people, data, solutions and ideas from within and outside the enterprise in a single, visual and intuitive environment creating a comprehensive business picture,” he said. “With the 3DEXPERIENCE Platform, our customers create ‘social enterprises’ that involve their customers in the innovation process. With its online architecture, the 3DEXPERIENCE Platform helps businesses to test and evaluate — anywhere in the development lifecycle of a product or service — the eventual experience they will deliver to their customers."
"Industry players are entering the third platform where big data and analytics, cloud computing, mobility and social business, are acting as disruptive forces – enabling new business models, creating opportunities for new competitors, and allowing customers and consumers to engage in an entirely different way,” said Dr Christopher Holmes, Head, Manufacturing Insights, IDC.
According to Dr Holmes, the third platform market is the only marketplace that matters, with a CAGR of 11.7% forecast from 2013 to 2020, but there is a human resource shortfall. "(Businesses) need to really look at developing those skills in-house," he said.
Kiren Kumar, Director of Infocomm & Media, EDB Singapore, also spoke at the event about a new manufacturing ecosystem and the talent required to support it. He noted that the manufacturing industry has become much more knowledge intensive, and is focused on three technology areas: additive manufacturing, advanced robotics and automation, and industrial automation.
"The adoption of these technologies will change the way businesses work," he said, noting that training is part of the initiatives at the NTU Additive Manufacturing Centre.
Co-creation between industry and government also comes to the fore, Kumar added, highlighting a partnership between EDF-Veolia and HDB to build an urban modelling and monitoring tool. "This year, a prototype was unveiled at the World Cities Summit in Singapore," he said. "Singapore is well positioned to be the digital capital of Asia for co-creation."
Samson Khaou, MD, AP South, Dassault Systèmes, shared that the company has 11,700 customers in the region, 55 partners in 8 countries, and has seen double-digit growth in 2013 on software revenues.
At its 3DExperience Forum in Singapore on June 17, themed Doing Business in the Age of Experience, Philippe Forestier, Executive Vice President, Global Affairs and Communities, Dassault Systèmes, and one of the original members of the company, said that the company aims to provide a better life for the city and for the citizen. "Our strategy is summarised in three words: social, industry, experience," he said.
The ideal business experience is cloud-based and social to foster collaboration anywhere in the world, while information must be updated in real-time so that everyone sees the same information at the same time, he said, describing the flagship 3DEXPERIENCE Platform as a business experience platform.
"Business leaders can now connect people, data, solutions and ideas from within and outside the enterprise in a single, visual and intuitive environment creating a comprehensive business picture,” he said. “With the 3DEXPERIENCE Platform, our customers create ‘social enterprises’ that involve their customers in the innovation process. With its online architecture, the 3DEXPERIENCE Platform helps businesses to test and evaluate — anywhere in the development lifecycle of a product or service — the eventual experience they will deliver to their customers."
"Industry players are entering the third platform where big data and analytics, cloud computing, mobility and social business, are acting as disruptive forces – enabling new business models, creating opportunities for new competitors, and allowing customers and consumers to engage in an entirely different way,” said Dr Christopher Holmes, Head, Manufacturing Insights, IDC.
According to Dr Holmes, the third platform market is the only marketplace that matters, with a CAGR of 11.7% forecast from 2013 to 2020, but there is a human resource shortfall. "(Businesses) need to really look at developing those skills in-house," he said.
Kiren Kumar, Director of Infocomm & Media, EDB Singapore, also spoke at the event about a new manufacturing ecosystem and the talent required to support it. He noted that the manufacturing industry has become much more knowledge intensive, and is focused on three technology areas: additive manufacturing, advanced robotics and automation, and industrial automation.
"The adoption of these technologies will change the way businesses work," he said, noting that training is part of the initiatives at the NTU Additive Manufacturing Centre.
Co-creation between industry and government also comes to the fore, Kumar added, highlighting a partnership between EDF-Veolia and HDB to build an urban modelling and monitoring tool. "This year, a prototype was unveiled at the World Cities Summit in Singapore," he said. "Singapore is well positioned to be the digital capital of Asia for co-creation."
Samson Khaou, MD, AP South, Dassault Systèmes, shared that the company has 11,700 customers in the region, 55 partners in 8 countries, and has seen double-digit growth in 2013 on software revenues.
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