Matan Bordo, Author at ReadWrite https://readwrite.com/author/matanbordo/ IoT and Technology News Wed, 20 Sep 2017 13:52:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://readwrite.com/wp-content/uploads/cropped-rw-32x32.jpg Matan Bordo, Author at ReadWrite https://readwrite.com/author/matanbordo/ 32 32 ICYMI from F2 Capital: Tesla gets some blame, Apple goes AR, Dimon slams Bitcoin https://readwrite.com/tesla-apple-dimon-slams-bitcoin-tl1/ Tue, 19 Sep 2017 20:00:58 +0000 https://readwrite.com/?p=99399

It’s been a busy week in emerging tech, with a lot of big news. Here’s a quick recap of what […]

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It’s been a busy week in emerging tech, with a lot of big news. Here’s a quick recap of what you might have missed.

Apple debuts ARKit

This past week, Apple introduced ARKit, a new framework that allows you to easily create unparalleled augmented reality experiences for iPhone and iPad. 

Some believe this (along with Google’s release of its similar ARCore) is going to bring massive adoption to mobile AR while others don’t; including Ori Inbar, fellow Tribe member & Founder of Ogmento (which became FlyBy Media), which was acquired by Apple in 2012 and became the foundation for ARKit.

Instead, he argues, [massive adoption] will happen with The AR Cloud (the real-time 3D map of the world) — when AR experiences persist in the real world across space, time, and devices. Ori believes this won’t happen until the iPhone has a “…back facing depth camera that will put in the hands of tens of millions a camera that senses the shapes of your surroundings and can create a rich accurate 3D map of the world to be shared by users and for users.”

AR researchers and industry insiders believe the AR Cloud will be the single most important software infrastructure in computing, far more valuable than Facebook’s Social graph or Google’s page rank index.

IKEA has already released an AR app that lets customers see furniture as it would appear in their home.

Bankers hating on cryptos? No way.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan says “Bitcoin is a fraud, and will eventually blow up.” This, despite JPMorgan starting a trial project using blockchain.

Other reasons why his comments are perplexing. Especially weird considering just yesterday JP Morgan bought 19,102 bitcoin shares in the Swedish Nasdaq traded bitcoin ETN, translating to around 95 bitcoins, worth some half a million dollars. 

Tesla takes some blame

First, on AI: Seven Deadly Sins of Predicting the Future of AI

And after investigating the first documented crash involving the use of driver assist autopilot technology, the National Transportation Safety Board concluded Tesla bears some of the blame. This could have some interesting implications in the insurance space, especially as these “Auto-Pilot” modes become more ubiquitous.

Adobe wants to bring digital marketing to your smart car using analytics on the data captured from web-enabled autos. 

You’ve been Equif***ed

Finally, Equifax, a consumer credit reporting company which collects and aggregates information on over 800 million individual consumers and more than 88 million businesses worldwide, was hacked, exposing 143 million Americans and their social security numbers. Hackers had access from mid-May through July. Equifax had known about the hack since late-July and took over a month to tell everyone. 

The author is Program Associate at The Junction, which was established in 2011 as Israel’s first commercial accelerator. The Junction is owned and operated by F2 Capital, a seed-stage VC fund backing Israeli frontier technology companies at the cross-section of Big Data, AI and Connectivity. Partnered with multinationals such as SAP, HP, and Munich Re, F2 Capital is aligned with the emerging realities of startup financing to support exceptional founders before traditional VCs are ready to invest.

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How to avoid losing in the competitive “future of work” https://readwrite.com/how-avoid-losing-competitive-future-work-il4/ Tue, 01 Aug 2017 05:30:00 +0000 https://readwrite.com/?p=98893

Did you get the memo? We’re living in the future. But despite being in the middle of the 4th Industrial […]

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Did you get the memo? We’re living in the future. But despite being in the middle of the 4th Industrial Revolution (or Industry 4.0), we’re not seeing the increase in productivity we’re used to seeing with the previous revolutions.

Labor productivity growth is at a historical low, in defiance of the increased fetishization of productivity, countless technological innovations we have seen in this current business cycle (beginning Q4 2007), vacation days decreasing, and hours growth outpacing its long-term historical trend.

What’s happening, argues Jeff Schwartz, Deloitte’s HR thought leader, is that while technology is advancing at an unprecedented rate and individuals are usually quick to adapt, “…business productivity is not driven by Moore’s Law.”

So what can organizations do to move the needle and close the gap between business productivity and technological advancement? Adapt with your workforce.

Schwartz and his colleagues at Deloitte Human Capital, among many others, believe HR has a unique role to play in helping leaders and organizations adapt to this rapid shift in technology — and to the expectations of a rapidly growing Millennial and Gen-Z workforce. Recently, Deloitte’s Innovation Tech Terminal teamed up with ZipRecruiter and WeFind in Tel Aviv to host their 3rd Meetup for its HR Tech Community featuring experts ranging from HR Tech startups, investors, and corporations to discuss 1) the future of work, 2) the biggest challenges that organizations will face, and 3) what they can do to reinvent themselves for this digital age.

Catching Up

Be flexible

At the meetup, Vered Raviv-Schwarz, COO of Fiverr — the world’s largest freelance services marketplace — discussed the huge shift in the way the world views & treats work that has major implications for organizations looking to hire top talent. “Almost 40% of the US workforce is freelancing. For employers, you’re competing not just with other companies, but with a way of life as well.” The “Freelancing in America: 2016”  survey performed late last year seems to validate these comments, with 63% of freelancers doing it by choice, and with 50% saying that there is no amount of money that would get them to go back to a traditional job — and why would they when, according to the survey, a majority of freelancers that left a full-time job made more money within a year.

According to Vered, “You’re not just competing on compensation, but flexibility — you need to give [employees] the feeling that they can be intrapreneurs.” Following the leads of the  Amazons and  Googles of the world, organizations are embracing a risk-tolerant culture and encouraging experimentation in the workplace. Others, like WordPress (with 400 employees) and Buffer, are ditching the office completely, opting to go 100% remote with many finding that, in terms of employee retention, there’s no place like home.

Instead of trying to compete with the gig economy, companies can choose to embrace it. Working with freelancers would provide companies numerous benefits such as the flexibility of a fluid workforce that you can easily scale up or down for projects and a wider access to hyper-specialized talent. Routine process tasks and hierarchy are being phased out by automation as organizations are shifting towards being project-based networks of teams, so these off-balance sheet workers could eventually represent a sizeable chunk of the organization of the future.

Love thy employee

It’s going to take a lot more than flexible work policies to motivate this growing digital-first generation of workers. Companies will need to be more employee-centric and place as much emphasis on the employee experience as they do on the customer experience. This means, according to Schwartz, HR Tech will need to provide an end-to-end view of the entire employee experience, from recruitment to retirement, rather than just focusing on engagement and culture.

This includes reinventing how you measure and evaluate employee performance. Gone are the days of annual reviews and focusing on individual achievements. Enter continuous feedback loops and aligning rewards with an individual’s contribution to the team and the team’s contribution to overall business goals of the company.

Ronni Zehavi, CEO & Co-Founder of Hibob, an HR and employee benefits platform for SMBs that focuses on the end-to-end employee experience, argues that many HR platforms are B2B-oriented, with no focus on the “C” — “C” being the employee. With companies devoting up to 80% of their monthly expenses on people, “…they’re essentially your largest asset and resource for growth. To manage your #1 expense and resource, you need tech. It doesn’t make any sense that you pay for CRMs like Salesforce to manage your sales pipeline and marketing, but you neglect the people.”

Develop your talent

It’s no secret Millennials are notorious for job-hopping —  60% say they are open to new job opportunities with 21% having changed jobs in the past year (3x non-Millennials). With estimates having Millennials making up 75% of the total US workforce by 2025, organizations must move fast to retain them or risk being left behind.

Millennials and Gen-Z workers can expect to live for 100 years, meaning they’ll be working for 60-70 years. And, according to Schwartz, with the average worker staying at their job for ~4 years and the half-life of a learned skill being ~5 years, everyone will have one job — to constantly be learning. This represents an opportunity for organizations to increase retention and develop the younger, more agile and digital ready leaders of the future by providing training in the beginning of their employees’ careers and throughout.

PepsiCo is doing this by focusing on a framework of “Critical Experiences” — immersive experiences (like pioneering a new product) that force you to deal with ambiguity, take you out of your comfort zone, and help you develop new skills & knowledge. The idea is that you can draw from the insights and perspective these experiences give you no matter where you end up in your career.

Overwhelmed

Be attractive

Ranked as the 3rd most important challenge businesses face in Deloitte’s 2017 Global Human Capital Trends report, it’s apparent organizations are scrambling to catch up their Talent Acquisition efforts to the dramatic shift in jobs & skills needs that are brought on by rapid technological innovation. In the new age of talent acquisition, companies will have to move beyond traditional systems and adapt to emerging technologies, capabilities, and needs if they want to attract the best and brightest.

Building a digital employment brand is a necessity if you want to recruit top talent now. Companies like Industry, a professional network and hiring platform for the service and hospitality industry, are breathing digital life into an entire sector that otherwise uses rather archaic hiring methods like paper resumes and Craigslist ads — not ideal when the job turnover is 72%. For instance, Industry leverages video & photos for its users to build their brands, allowing restaurants to post a “Company Culture Video” on their hiring page and professionals to post short clips and pictures to highlight their creations and personalities.

Others are leveraging cognitive systems like IBM Watson by consolidating data from the employee lifecycle and social media to predict future performance of candidates, optimize recruitment marketing, and increase the speed of hiring.

Moving forward

Previously viewed as a compliance-only function, with 404 deals and $2.2 billion in funding in 2016 alone, according to CB Insights, and changes in human capital philosophy, HR has emerged as the strategic function in helping organizations navigate the 4th Industrial Revolution and the new expectations & increased competition that comes with it.

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