Tuesday, 29 June 2021

IBM Z Virtual Test Platform takes big stride forward with version 2.0

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The growing need for digital transformation has driven organizations to aggressively transform themselves and adopt DevOps to enable accelerated application delivery, which is a key part of the transformation. While it’s great to see the adoption rate growing significantly for DevOps, testing remains a major bottleneck to a continuous software development lifecycle.

Read More: C2090-424: IBM InfoSphere DataStage v11.3

The recent survey results from Gitlab on DevSecOps confirm just that.

“Testing remains tough — for the third year in a row, a majority of survey-takers resoundingly pointed to testing as the area most likely to cause delays. The other bottlenecks include planning, code development, and code review, again reflecting what we’ve seen in our 2019 and 2020 surveys.”

In our continuous and sincere effort to address this issue, last year we announced the general availability of IBM Z® Virtual Test Platform V1.0, which fundamentally changed the game by providing testing capabilities that allow application integration, transaction and batch testing to be shifted earlier in the development cycle on a fully virtualized test platform.

For the first time, developers were able to test complete application integration before the code is even deployed to production while automating testing as part of their build process in a CI/CD pipeline. With this week’s V2.0 release, we have further strengthened the solution, incorporating key feedback from our clients by providing an html-based test results viewer and the ability to effectively version control your test case and results ensuring auditability and pipeline integration.

Further with ZVTP V2.0, we are taking a big stride forward in adding test automation and deep integration testing capabilities with IBM Distribution for Galasa. Based on the open-source project ‘Galasa’, the solution allows you to test applications at scale regardless of platform — including z/OS. Galasa enables deep integration testing across platforms and technologies within a DevOps pipeline. Galasa is designed to support repeatable, reliable, agile testing at scale across your enterprise.

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IBM distribution for Galasa is not simply about providing the ability to write a test and run it in automation. It extends that to enable you to understand and manage your tests. This makes it easy to schedule the right tests to run at the right time and Galasa support is provided with VTP.

We will continue to strengthen our testing capabilities and you can look forward to some exciting and new capabilities coming up in our subsequent releases.

Source: ibm.com

Saturday, 26 June 2021

Extend privacy assurance in hybrid cloud with IBM Hyper Protect Data Controller

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As IBM CEO Arvind Krishna has stated, data breaches and ransomware attacks such as the recent attack on Colonial Pipeline are increasing in frequency and scope, making data protection and privacy more critical than ever. According to a recent study conducted by Ponemon and commissioned by IBM, customers’ personally identifiable information (PII) was the most frequently compromised type of record, impacted in 80% of the data breaches studied. At the same time, many enterprises are adopting hybrid cloud architectures to help them increase agility and drive innovation. In today’s threat landscape, sharing data across a hybrid cloud environment introduces new challenges around maintaining compliance and governance—and new security vulnerabilities that bad actors can take advantage of.

Enterprises need to be able to share data to extract value from it, but how can they maintain privacy assurance in the era of hybrid cloud?

Maintain privacy by policy

Today we announce the latest addition to the IBM Hyper Protect Services family designed to help you gain a higher level of privacy assurance and maintain data integrity: IBM Hyper Protect Data Controller. This data-centric audit and protection capability allows you to define and control who has access to eligible data as it leaves the system of record and moves throughout your enterprise. With the addition of IBM Hyper Protect Data Controller, the security capabilities and technical assurance associated with Hyper Protect Services help provide protection for your consistent data access policies. Additionally, robust audit logging can help you address your regulatory compliance directives.

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The data-centric protection provided by Hyper Protect Data Controller opens a wide range of new possibilities for data sharing, so you can leave non-sensitive data in the clear while keeping sensitive data private. Consider the data used by the call center agent at your bank. The bank stores data in their system of record, and the agent needs access to certain information to assist you—such as the last four digits of your social security number to verify your identity. IBM Hyper Protect Data Controller protects your eligible sensitive data using encryption and masking before it leaves the system of record, and only reveals the data that the agent is authorized to see. This is made possible through a set of centralized policy controls that the data owner can dynamically update when the agent’s access needs change—including revocation of future access if the agent no longer has the call center responsibilities and moves into a different role within the organization.

Prevent unauthorized policy changes

Once a data owner sets policy controls that govern data access, how can they be sure a bad actor won’t modify them? IBM Hyper Protect Data Controller is deployed within IBM Hyper Protect Virtual Servers, which establishes a protective boundary designed to prevent access by unauthorized users—providing the data owner with a tamper-resistant confidential computing environment to set and maintain policy controls for data access.

Whether you are running your workloads with sensitive data in the cloud, on premises or in a hybrid solution, Hyper Protect Services can offer you protection for your sensitive data, keys and now data access policies. We look forward to continuing our journey to protect your data access and use, wherever it resides.

Source: ibm.com

Thursday, 24 June 2021

5 signs your B2B business needs a modern order management system

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In the wake of an eCommerce wave that pumped 10 years of growth into just a 3-month period, B2B companies are under unexpected pressure to deliver digital experiences on par with those in the consumer space. In fact, more than 70% of B2B buyers say they are moving to remote or digital purchases. Are you prepared with a digital technology foundation that provides one connected view of inventory, orders and fulfillment so you can grow your eCommerce footprint and build stronger customer relationships in the process?

Let’s explore 5 signs your B2B business needs an order management system (OMS) that will allow you to drive new value for your customers and your business:

1. Fragmented view of inventory

◉ Are you confident that your available-to-promise (ATP) data is accurate enough that you can allocate inventory for on-time and in-full (OTIF) delivery?

◉ Is your inventory positioned to enable optimized fulfillment?

◉ Can you manage demand spikes and disruptions, transferring inventory to reduce delays?

If you answered ‘no’ to any of these questions, you’re not alone. Many B2B organizations still rely on custom Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems or legacy technology that function in siloed environments. These solutions were never designed to provide visibility into inventory across your organization and ecosystem of retailers, distributors, partners and suppliers. But if you can’t see inventory, you can’t effectively manage it or react quickly to disruptions and deliver exceptional B2B commerce experiences.

A lack of inventory visibility also creates blind spots for distributors and manufacturers. If distributors can only see inventory at their warehouse, and not what’s available at disparate supplier warehouses, they may miss inventory that could be drop-shipped for OTIF delivery and better customer outcomes. And when industrial manufacturers don’t know what’s planned or in-process in their manufacturing plants, they can’t provide customers a real-time picture of inbound inventory that is available to be promised.

By augmenting your existing ERP or legacy system with an aggregated view of inventory, wherever it resides – across divisions, geographies, channels and partners – you can optimize fulfillment to capture maximum demand. User friendly tools, insights and automation allow you to simplify complex inventory actions such as segmentation and substitution. And when supply chain disruptions happen, real-time alerts let you manage through them proactively.

2. Lack of visibility into SLAs

To limit their business risk, B2B customers use contracts based on service level agreements (SLAs) and set thresholds to make sure they get the right product at the right place and time for the right price. They hold you to that promise and impose penalties if the business doesn’t deliver.

A modern OMS empowers you with end-to-end visibility across the supply chain ecosystem to track orders from request through fulfillment. Insights to improve planning and execution, automated workflows to quote and process orders faster, and dashboard alerts to monitor KPIs such as OTIF or expedited freight, allow you to consistently manage effectively against customer SLAs.

3. Cumbersome order validation and pricing 

Complex orders are a fact of life, and business policies and customer contracts add rules and restrictions. Some customers may qualify for volume-based pricing or require validation for certain SKUs before their orders can be processed. These steps slow down or stall when human intervention is needed to coordinate across different divisions and partners.

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Implementing a modern OMS to drive your B2B eCommerce experience will allow you to deliver personalized buying experiences based on individual customer relationships. Offering custom online sales catalogs with permissioned products, and embedding unique pricing, products and service configuration rules, makes it easy to consistently deliver the perfect order while flawlessly executing large volumes of complex orders.

4. Inefficiencies in manual processes

Think about all the touchpoints across the order lifecycle where you rely on manual processes that are time-consuming and error prone. The more complex your order management process, the more difficult it is to scale for growth if employee involvement is required for order execution. And when it comes to picking the optimized fulfillment option, employees simply can’t be aware of all the cost and profit drivers and real-time trade-offs that need to be made to lead to the best possible choice.

With a multi-enterprise OMS, you can automate certain processes and incorporate AI-enabled insights so that staff can make smarter sourcing and fulfillment decisions, even when dealing with intricate product and service configurations and fulfillment types. Unifying production schedules, sourcing options and inventory availability across multiple entities takes the guesswork out of delivery estimates. You’ll reduce costly errors, find the true lowest cost-to-serve option, improve customer service and reduce business risk.

5. Can’t meet customer expectations for eCommerce experiences

B2C markets have set the standard B2B buyers have come to expect, leaving many B2B organizations faced with the pressure to develop systems fast. Visibility across the supply chain and scalability to keep up with spikes in demand are crucial to meet customer expectations. But many B2B organizations rely on rudimentary online catalogs with manual processes and legacy systems to allocate orders, often on a “first come, first serve” basis. It’s hard to accelerate new digital experiences when you’re relying on traditional constructs for contracts, pricing and configuration.

Powering your eCommerce experience with an OMS built for B2B enables faster and more efficient delivery at the lowest cost-to-serve, even during peak periods. Digitized processes and intelligent workflows enable dynamic pricing and configuration through collaboration and automation. You can create a modern, digital environment for buyers that includes consolidated, personalized views that make ordering easy. And, you can leverage insights to improve demand sensing, order promising, sourcing decisions, and provide transparency so buyers can get their questions answered, like: “Where is my order right now? When can I expect delivery?”

The pressure is on for B2B organizations to embrace the eCommerce challenge and deliver modern ordering and fulfillment experiences. If any of these five signs resonate with you and your organization, let IBM help you ride today’s eCommerce wave. IBM Sterling Order Management is a multi-enterprise order management solution that enhances customer experience, increases revenue and improves operational margin. Built for B2B, it picks up where ERP and legacy platforms leave off, so you can accelerate new digital experiences for your customers and lower total cost of ownership.

Source: ibm.com

Tuesday, 22 June 2021

Spectrum Scale, SDI and my love of motorcycles

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Motorcycle riding is my passion. I got my first minibike, a two-wheeled contraption powered by a lawn mower engine, when I was eleven years old, and I’ve been riding ever since. I love the ride itself, the sights and the smells. Equally important, the ever-evolving technology is pretty cool. I am always adding enhancements to my bike, to give it more power, comfort, capabilities, storage and speed. I cannot leave a stock motorcycle “stock”. Personalization is the way to go.

Read More: C2090-101: IBM Big Data Engineer

I have the same passion for IBM Spectrum Scale, high performance scale-out storage software and enterprise data services with global federated capacity, as well as Spectrum Scale RAID, simple scalable building blocks for high-performance IBM Spectrum Scale hybrid cloud storage solutions. I enjoy working with our clients to get the most out of their Spectrum Scale implementations, helping them to reach their business objectives.

I’ve written about this comparison between motorcycle riding and IBM Spectrum Scale before, explaining that scaling up and scaling out a motorcycle is much like Spectrum Scale capabilities.

I wrote:

The hardware that IBM Spectrum Scale runs on can be thought of as the engine of a motorcycle. If you want to increase the power of your engine, you scale up Spectrum Scale by upgrading to a more powerful system, adding more processing power, memory and so forth. The more horsepower a motorcycle has, the less effort is required to move me from one location to another. In the same manner, scaling up Spectrum Scale will allow it to operate faster and more efficiently.

The “scale out” process is akin to adding storage capacity to your motorcycle. Spectrum Scale can be scaled out by adding additional components — in this case, more disk or solid-state drive (SSD) storage. We can further scale out Spectrum Scale by adding additional NSD servers to the cluster. This would be similar to adding an additional motor to a motorcycle or replacing the two-cylinder motor with a four-cylinder motor. However, in Spectrum Scale, the process of scaling out is much easier!

Today, this analogy still feels like a good fit.

If you’re talking about motorcycles, you can buy a new model with new features. The new bike would have features such as “rear cylinder shutdown” so it does not overheat in traffic. This is applicable to air-cooled engines only. Another feature is software that controls the performance of the engine. For instance, many motorcycles now have a “regular, sport and cruising” selection which changes the handling, air and fuel ratios depending on which mode is selected. If you are into the gadgets, you can upgrade, or like me, you can keep your older motorcycle, and take advantage of the software updates that have new features. This would enable you to have some (GPS updates, satellite radio, ride mapping) features that may not be part of your original motorcycle. This will vary, because just like software and hardware, there are limitations to upgrades.

As for Spectrum Scale and Elastic Storage Server (Spectrum Scale GPFS Native RAID), new models and software have eclipsed the old models. Some of the software is no longer supported, and the base needs to be upgraded to support the new change. But there’s always the option of remaining on the current configuration until such time as you must upgrade/update or run the risk of not being supported. I don’t recommend that. It is better to upgrade before the end of life of a product/solution.

It’s always a matter of decisions, decisions. Do I purchase a new motorcycle? Or do I stay where I am and upgrade the software that manages and powers the bike? Spectrum customers have to make similar decisions when they think about upgrading the software that currently runs their Spectrum Scale, ESS or any other infrastructure in their data centers.

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Software updates can, and do, fix issues, add features and functions, and further enhance the operation of the systems. It is something that should be considered, especially if you are N-2 or more releases behind. It is highly likely that that at an N-3 level, your software stack is no longer supported and upgrading is a necessity. Look at it this way, you have built a very reliable, comfortable motorcycle with a great rider experience (think GPS, music, comfort) that supports your “workload” reliably, and performs very well. The newer upgrades to the software and even hardware (engine, transmission) will further enhance your ride. Why not do the same for your software-defined infrastructure (SDI) and software-defined storage (SDS) infrastructure?

While motorcycles are perfectly fine and supported for decades, it is not the same with business-critical operations that have a direct impact on your customers. You must provide the most up to date, fastest, reliable SDI/SDS infrastructure. If you do not, then you risk customer satisfaction issues, and even more important, you risk impacting your business.

Customers need to look at all the possible changes. Some are critical. But others, need to be examined closely. How will they positively or negatively impact the business? “Who is this change going to impact”? What is the impact to “the Who“? And “Why” should I change? If you can answer the “Who, What and Why” question with more pros than cons, then it could be very beneficial to upgrade for more “scale out and scale up” capabilities.

Source: ibm.com

Saturday, 19 June 2021

Keeping your IBM Power Systems highly available

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We’ve all heard of the “blue screen of death.” It’s the dreaded crash on a Windows-based computer. The potential loss of everything. If you’ve had the misfortune of seeing one, you know how upsetting it is. To put it mildly, it’s not fun.


An operating system crash of any kind leaves application users dead in the water. So avoiding single points of failure (SPOF) is a high priority. The UNIX® operating system is a potential SPOF, and this is true of all UNIX based operating systems including versions such as AIX®, HP-UX, iOS and all Linux flavors such as Ubuntu, RHEL, Android and SUSE.

IBM’s solution


Fortunately, thirty years ago IBM introduced high availability cluster multi-processing (HACMP) to combat this issue on its AIX RS/6000 systems. To state things in the simplest terms, two or more systems are paired in a cluster. When one system crashes, the other takes over. There is an application outage, but recovery is automated and downtime is primarily dependent on how long the applications themselves take to recover/restart. In the days without storage area networks, IP aliases or virtualized machines, HACMP/PowerHA® was a terrific way to go.

HACMP software is still widely used on the newest IBM Power Systems, having been renamed PowerHA SystemMirror®. But fourteen years ago, IBM introduced Live Partition Mobility (LPM). LPM gave users the ability to move fully virtualized AIX machines between physical hardware servers while the applications continued running. Ultimately, this is a game changer in high availability.

VM Recovery Manager High Availability (VMRMHA)


Keeping your IBM Power Systems highly available
VMRMHA utilizes LPM simplified remote restart (SRR) technology for high availability. A user utilizing VMRMHA can set up an HA environment not just for selected virtual machines, but every virtual machine on an IBM Power® server. This includes Linux and IBM i virtual machines as well.

One drawback of using VMRMHA versus PowerHA is that with VMRMHA, the operating system must boot on a new physical server after an OS crash, and then the application restarts. In a PowerHA environment, only the application must restart. However, using VMRMHA has an advantage over PowerHA in that there are no “cluster of two AIX servers” that must be maintained or kept in sync.

To summarize:

No “cluster” to maintain.

– plus –

Only one AIX OS to maintain.

– plus –

Only one set of application code to maintain.

– multiplied by –

Number of PowerHA clusters

= equals =

Application High Availability is easier to maintain!

Converting existing PowerHA/HACMP clusters to a VMRMHA strategy is not a trivial task, but in the long term, it’s worth it because of reduced administrative overhead.

Source: ibm.com

Thursday, 17 June 2021

3 high-value ways to accelerate your journey to supply chain sustainability

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Today, consumers want to know where their coffee was sourced and where their diamonds were mined. In fact, more than 70% of consumers indicate that traceability is very important and are willing to pay up to a 35% premium. Governments and investors are holding companies accountable for sustainable supply chain practices too, with Blackrock, the largest investment management company worldwide, asserting it will put sustainability at the center of its investment approach.

Although many people think sustainability programs cut into profitability, research shows otherwise. Numerous reports cite a direct correlation between sustainable practices, share prices and business performance.

More Info: C9530-519: IBM API Connect v. 5.0.5 Solution Implementation

Supply chain leaders are stepping up to the challenge. Now, 49% of all companies have supply chain sustainability goals and 70% are planning to invest in circular economies in the next 18 months. With the rush to Net-Zero, carbon neutrality and energy management are top of mind. However, there are opportunities everywhere along the end-to-end supply chain to embed best practices to drive sustainability and help enable circular economies that reduce waste and encourage reuse.

Reaching supply chain sustainability goals requires a global, accurate, real-time view of inventory and the ability to share data across your supply chain ecosystem in a trusted way. But the truth is, all too often supply chain leaders operate in the dark. When you don’t know exactly how much inventory you have and where it is, you over order and have too much working capital tied up in inventory to avoid stockouts. This creates a ripple effect, generating waste in other areas, like warehousing and logistics. And if you lack transparency and data sharing with your deep-tier suppliers, it’s incredibly difficult to track product provenance – from point of origination to delivery – in a trusted and controlled way to identify supplier risk and protect your brand.

Fortunately, technology can help you overcome the visibility and data sharing challenges and enhance your existing supply chain processes to create a sustainable and profitable path forward. Here are three high-value places to focus first.

1. Inventory management

In asset-intensive markets such as oil and gas, mining, utilities, petrochemical, and industrial, companies are optimizing maintenance, repair and operations (MRO) inventory to ensure they have never too much and always enough. Through right-sizing inventory levels they can also achieve a quick and meaningful boost to their sustainability efforts. With IBM Maximo MRO Inventory Optimization, you can make more informed decisions to optimize MRO inventories, increase service levels and minimize unplanned downtime, while freeing up working capital to spend in other strategic areas. You can also help reduce your organization’s carbon footprint as you use excess inventory and reduce warehouse space. An accurate, granular view of MRO inventory performance and optimized recommendations for inventory and reorder levels for each stock item, further cuts waste and environmental impact by reducing dead inventory and the need for emergency shipments.

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With IBM Maximo MRO Inventory Optimization, a U.S. utility achieved net improvement in MRO inventory costs of $25 million and brought their 10% inventory growth rate down to zero.

In more consumer-focused sectors like retail, global real-time inventory visibility can make the difference between delighting or losing a customer. IBM Inventory Visibility easily connects to existing systems, so you can check stock across multiple locations and get up-to-the-minute views on what’s available nearby or in transit. Customized alerts and thresholds for your business allow you to fill demand and design out waste by reducing safety stock, markdowns, carrying costs and optimizing physical store and distribution facilities footprints.

2. Fulfillment optimization

Leading retailers and brands – B2C and B2B – are hyper-focused on omnichannel order fulfillment today to give customers the right products at the right time and place. The opportunity also exists to do this in a greener way. IBM Sterling Fulfillment Optimizer with Watson enhances and extends existing order management systems, so you can purposely source inventory that’s closer to the customer to reduce your carbon footprint. You can optimize fulfillment at the lowest cost to serve and reduce logistics-related emissions due to often expensive and unnecessary shipments.

3. Product provenance

From coffee to seafood, batteries to wine, companies that take sustainability seriously work to ensure raw materials are responsibly sourced and products maintain their quality and integrity as they travel through the value chain. With IBM Blockchain Transparent Supply you can build a viable and sustainable ecosystem of partners, designing business and governance models that reflect shared values. Sharing data through an immutable, distributed and shared ledger, you can transact with supply chain partners in a more trusted and efficient way to ensure provenance and quality, reduce product waste and increase profitability. You can provide transparency to today’s purpose-driven consumers by helping them purchase in alignment with their values – and deepen engagement by allowing them to directly engage in sustainability initiatives.

Farmer Connect is using IBM Blockchain Transparent Supply to provide traceability to ensure that coffee is sourced in a sustainable way and even show consumers the journey their coffee has made and allow them to leverage the platform to direct a donation to a sustainability initiative in the farmer’s community.

IBM has dedicated experts with deep domain and industry expertise to help you develop and implement the right strategies, operating models, intelligent workflows and technology innovation to achieve your sustainability goals. Wherever you are on your supply chain sustainability journey, IBM can help.

Source: ibm.com

Tuesday, 15 June 2021

4 organizations adopt B2B order management technology to optimize their supply chain

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COVID-19 rapidly accelerated eCommerce, with 10 years of e-commerce adoption compressed into a three month period. With more customers than ever relying on digital purchasing, B2B organizations are now confronting increased pressure on their existing systems for order management and inventory visibility. And while the digital approach for B2B purchasing started during the pandemic as a crisis response, it’s here to stay. Only about 20% of B2B buyers hope to return to in-person sales, meaning that B2B organizations need to lay a modern digital foundation for the new normal. B2B customers also increasingly expect the same personalized, frictionless buying experience that they experience in B2C markets, with visibility into their orders and real-time fulfillment options.

Read More: C2090-913: IBM Informix 4GL Development

The majority of B2B organizations still rely on Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems alone, which function in siloed environments, and regard inventory, orders, and fulfillment as separate units instead of one connected workflow or view of data. With this approach, B2B organizations often face slower production, delivery, and service, leading to inefficiencies and increased costs.

IBM Sterling Order Management for B2B

With so much complexity to maneuver, and the need for a customer-first approach, manufacturers and distributors need to consider digitally transforming with an order management system (OMS). A modern order management system empowers B2B organizations to enhance automation, accelerate operations, and reduce errors — all while optimizing the supply chain and the customer experience.

B2B organizations can implement order management technology to remove friction and create value for themselves, their supplier network, and their customers. Here are some great examples:

1. With their drop-ship activity trending upward, one technology distributor struggled with taking ownership of their inventory. Products were shipped direct from their supplier warehouses, but the company couldn’t see past their own warehouses into those of their extended supplier network. With this lack of visibility into what was available-to -promise, they couldn’t deliver the best B2B omnichannel experience for their customers. And, they needed help allocating orders more effectively. With their legacy system, they fulfilled orders on a “first come, first serve” basis, rather than prioritizing based on customer SLAs or competing priorities. On top of that, the technology distributor also faced challenges with the tedious, manual internal bidding process for manufacturers.

To automate the bidding process so they can quickly detect the best sourcing option to maximize customer satisfaction and optimize costs for themselves, the technology distributor now leverages a modern OMS. This solution helps increase inventory visibility, provide dynamic sourcing and fulfillment options, ease collaboration, and create a transparent workflow. They’re able to prioritize SLAs with real-time visibility into exactly what inventory is available-to-promise and utilize dynamic sourcing to investigate the tradeoffs of shipping from their own warehouses versus from those of their suppliers to fulfill customer orders at the lowest cost and highest service level.

2. An automotive company’s aftermarket business produces vehicle parts and equipment after the sale of a car from the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) — distributing their parts to online retailers and independent distributors. After orders came in through their electronic data interchange (EDI), order administrators at the manufacturer completed manual tasks, called their warehouses to ensure they have enough inventory, checking the capacity of trucks to ship out products, and checking for account holds. To make things more complex, all this data sits across multiple systems. With no upfront validation, it made it challenging to keep up with SLAs and deliver their inventory efficiently to customers.

By using an OMS, inventory is consolidated into one environment to provide a single view of available-to-promise inventory, better validating each order. The 4000+ locations in the fulfillment network are all on the OMS platform to help efficiently fulfill orders and provide multiple fulfillment options at the lowest cost to serve. The OMS also plugs into their EDI — automating the order workflow and reducing manual touchpoints during order processing to enable faster and more efficient delivery to customers.

3. A third-party logistics organization began expanding their services offering to pick, pack, and ship orders for small and medium retailers, but quickly realized that their existing technology wasn’t built to scale with this shifting model. The complex manual processes involved in managing the inventory of their customers required automation. As they grew this new component of their business and scaled to hundreds of customers, they needed an OMS that could provide multi-channel fulfillment capabilities and deliver frictionless customer experiences.

Leveraging multi-tenant architecture in their new order management system, they can more effectively manage the orders and inventory of multiple autonomous customers in one place. With quick implementation in under 8 weeks, they start creating immediate value as they onboard customers to their new services offering.

4. With the start of COVID-19, and a spike in online ordering, a heavy duty vehicles aftermarket parts distributor urgently needed to develop an eCommerce system that could handle their B2B ordering. Their existing system relied on a rudimentary online catalog, and once orders were placed, an employee had to make manual decisions about fulfillment and delivery. Reliance on manual efforts created room for error and limited optimization. Their custom ERP lacked inventory consolidation and a connection between data sources to truly see what was available-to-promise.

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The distributor sought out an order management system that could power their new eCommerce system with added inventory visibility and scalability. With this solution, they can reduce manual touch-points in the order fulfillment process by using automation to find the most efficient fulfillment option within their distribution centers’ delivery radius. In an industry where timeliness is critical, they are now able to find optimal delivery nodes and ensure on-time delivery — even on the same day.

“Historically our business has had to run B2B fulfillment processes manually because of our legacy systems. With IBM OMS, we have the capability in a consolidated platform to provide realtime inventory visibility and optimized order orchestration for our ecommerce channel which will result in a better customer experience”

–Mohit Jain, CIO at Fleetpride

With growing complexity and customer demands for B2B organizations, order and inventory management solutions, with precise, real-time inventory counts and the ability to help better manage SLAs, are the answer for B2B organizations looking to transform their business. IBM Sterling Order Management empowers B2B organizations to increase automation, accelerate operations, and reduce errors — all while optimizing the supply chain and delivering on customer promises.

Source: ibm.com

Saturday, 12 June 2021

Get a health check for your SAP HANA on IBM Power Systems

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We all know that seeing a doctor for regular checkups is important. Even if you aren’t having any problems, it’s always a good idea for your physical health. In some ways, a “health check” for your SAP HANA on IBM Power Systems is similar. You may be getting optimal availability and performance, but a regular review is very important.

Read More: C2070-981: IBM FileNet Content Manager V5.2

IBM Power Systems technology for HANA has numerous advantages such as flexibility, efficient resource utilization, server consolidation, performance and reduction in cost. An SAP-certified person is required to install and configure HANA using the tailored data center integration (TDI) model. During deployment, a certified HANA engineer sets up the system following IBM Power server and SAP HANA best practices as per SAP notes and runs the SAP HANA Hardware and Cloud Measurement Tool (HCMT). This ensures the environment has been configured for HANA prerequisites and for hardware performance to meet HANA key performance indicators (KPIs).

After deployment, however, organizations will eventually need to make changes to their workloads and infrastructure. The monitoring tools you use might not capture deviations from best practices. Some components of your system might require periodic checks like firmware updates, patches, backups, cluster operations and so on.

The need thus arises for a periodic health check for SAP HANA on Power Systems. Without periodic health checks, you might not be getting the best availability and performance from your systems, and you could be at greater risk for an unplanned outage.

What is an SAP HANA on Power Systems health check?

A health check involves inspecting your system in several key areas. These include:

◉ Ensuring up-to-date software levels

◉ Examining the adequacy of hardware resources

◉ Looking at system tuning based on your current workload pattern

◉ Doing checks for best practices in virtualization

◉ Checking for security hardening implementation as per your company security policy

◉ Checking the feasibility of adopting newly released features in the Power server/OS/HANA

Your HANA configuration, error logs, high availability and backup policies are also validated.

Minimum checks that need to be carried out as a part of SAP HANA on Power Systems health check

Here is a list of the minimum checks that must be covered as a part of SAP HANA on Power Systems health check. This is only a high-level list. You might need additional checks based on your results.

1. Physical hardware installation checks

◉ PCI adapter placement and memory dual inline memory module (DIMM) placement

◉ Active/inactive core/memory distributions

◉ Check for working links (link up status) for network and host bus adapters (HBAs)

2. Software-level checks

◉ Check to see the support of all installed software levels and their compatibility

3. Availability and redundancy checks

◉ “Working” redundancy at all levels such as I/O adapters, switches, storage, LPARs, frames and so on

◉ Business expectation of recovery point objective (RPO), recovery time objective (RTO) and infrastructure readiness to meet these numbers

4. Operating system configuration checks

◉ Checks to confirm OS installation as per best practices and as per SAP notes for SAP HANA on Power systems

◉ Checks to see security hardening implementation

5. LPAR/Frame-level resource utilization checks and performance

◉ Processor, memory, disk and network utilization and comparison with available capacity

◉ Check to see the tunable values associated with processor, memory, disk I/O and network I/O are optimal for the current load

6. HANA checks

◉ HANA file system checks

◉ Review of HCMT results

◉ HANA configuration verification

◉ HANA backup checks

◉ HANA resource utilization checks

Benefits of a HANA system health check

An SAP HANA on Power Systems health check offers numerous benefits:

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◉ Identify any single point of failure and fix it

◉ Prepare you for handling unexpected downtime, if any

◉ Demonstrate current hardware utilization and growth trends, thus helping you plan for future growth or release a portion of your hardware for other workloads, saving on budget for any additional workloads

◉ Get better support by staying up to date with software versions

◉ Better manage your IT budget by knowing growth trends

◉ Identify new technologies that could be applied to your environment

◉ Improve productivity, security and confidence. May reduce the cost of acquiring additional hardware for new workloads

Who can perform an SAP HANA on Power Systems health check?

Anyone who has good knowledge of IBM Power Systems, Linux and HANA can do an SAP HANA on Power Systems health check. You could do it yourself or engage a team of experienced consultants such as IBM Systems Lab Services. Lab Services helps organizations build and optimize SAP HANA solutions with Linux on Power Systems with a tailored data center infrastructure strategy. Health checks are among the many services we offer to help clients optimize their SAP HANA environments.

Source: ibm.com

Thursday, 10 June 2021

IBM expands investment in data protection

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IBM’s customers continue to validate that data protection and cyber resiliency are key challenges on their hybrid cloud journey toward digital transformation. Modernization of applications and the shift to container-native solutions are prerequisites for speed and agility, and this goes hand-in-hand with best-in-class data management practices for high availability, disaster recovery and data resiliency.

As another clear example of IBM’s commitment to our customers’ ongoing transformation success, as well as our venerable storage business unit, IBM has acquired technology assets and the associated engineering teams from Catalogic Software, a proven provider of data protection, copy data management and data resiliency solutions.

Read More: C2090-543: IBM DB2 9.7 Application Development

Catalogic Software has been an important development resource for IBM Storage® technologies over the past few years, and these acquired assets and engineering talent have helped innovate our award-winning IBM Spectrum® Protect Plus and IBM Spectrum® Copy Data Management solutions.

This move will enable IBM to swiftly integrate advanced data protection and cyber resiliency capabilities into our highly anticipated IBM Spectrum® Fusion family of container-native software defined storage solutions. Designed for AI, analytic and big data applications and workloads, Spectrum Fusion will seamlessly span edge, core data center and hybrid cloud environments (announced April 27th). In addition, we will leverage the technologies to continue to accelerate our data protection roadmap and advance these products, as well as enable new hybrid cloud and container-native cyber resiliency capabilities across the entire portfolio.

“Modern data protection and data resilience are top-of-mind with our customers, from the largest to the smallest,” said John Callisto, Vice President, US Sales at GlassHouse Systems. “To solve the multitude of challenges they face to keep their data protected and resilient, they rely on IBM’s Spectrum Protect family, which not only protects their data, but enables them to recover quickly in the event of a breach. With today’s agreement, IBM will be able to continue to accelerate their leading-edge data resilience and data protection solutions.”

This investment also further bolsters our leadership in hybrid cloud and container-centric data protection and cyber resilience. IBM Spectrum Protect Plus, which is already used by several cloud providers for their backup-as-a-service offerings, is also available from several of the largest hyperscalers, including IBM Cloud, through their cloud marketplaces.

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Simply put, Catalogic Software’s technology combined with IBM’s storage portfolio will help customers discover, secure, protect and manage data from the edge, to the data center, to the public cloud.

*Statements by IBM regarding its plans, directions, and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice at the sole discretion of IBM. Information regarding potential future products is intended to outline general product direction and should not be relied on in making a purchasing decision. The information mentioned regarding potential future products is not a commitment, promise, or legal obligation to deliver any material, code, or functionality. Information about potential future products may not be incorporated into any contract. The development, release, and timing of any future features or functionality described for IBM products remain at the sole discretion of IBM.

Source: ibm.com

Saturday, 5 June 2021

How to get the most value from SAP HANA

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3 ways running SAP HANA on Power Systems can benefit your business

Increasing disruption creates increased complexity and a need to solve problems quickly—as in yesterday. The last year forced businesses to take a quantum leap in the acceleration of, and focus on, digital transformation. We all saw entire industries go completely online overnight, and companies that had started modernizing their businesses were in a better position to adapt quickly, while many struggled to maintain business continuity. What’s clear is today’s customer preferences and appetite for exceptional digital experiences is demanding, and the success of every business relies on the ability to adapt as the needs of customers continue to evolve.

More Info: C2090-543: IBM DB2 9.7 Application Development

Core business applications, such as SAP HANA, are key to ensuring your organization can keep up with the speed of change; the time to embrace migration and modernization is now. By using SAP business applications, IT teams can simplify workflows, speed processes, and reduce business risk, thus freeing up time and resources to focus on their move to SAP S/4HANA.

Why should running SAP HANA on Power Systems matter to you?

In the simplest terms, SAP HANA is a platform that can efficiently and cost-effectively process data faster than any traditional database. It can help your organization process information that is coming from, including but not limited to, the business, mobile, UX/UI, and the Internet of Things (IoT), efficiently and cost effectively. Notably, SAP HANA facilitates analytics and data processes as well as application development and deployment.

Furthermore, SAP HANA’s in-memory database can be run on-premises, on an IBM Power® Systems server, in the cloud, or both, and can be an integral part of your hybrid cloud strategy. It’s worth mentioning Power Systems is built precisely for memory-intensive applications, such as SAP HANA, offering the resilience, scale, and performance you’ll need to ease the process and still quickly deploy your applications.

Three scenarios where the benefits of SAP HANA on IBM Power Systems are undeniable

So, how can SAP HANA on IBM Power Systems benefit your business? Here are three questions and answers to help you get the most value out of SAP HANA and achieve your broader business goals.

Scenario 1: My SAP HANA application is due for a refresh. What do I stand to gain by updating my SAP HANA application?

If you’re running SAP HANA appliances on architecture that needs a refresh or are in the process of a strategic hybrid cloud transformation, upgrading to SAP HANA on Power Systems can help you reduce data sprawl, increase flexibility, improve reliability, boost performance and consolidate fewer workloads in a smaller footprint.

In fact, even if you’ve never had IBM Power Systems in your data center, establishing the platform will provide you with a powerful Linux system offering significant processor benefits and positions you to develop a customized solution for your business needs.

Scenario 2: I’m running a traditional database or other non-SAP HANA processing solution. Why should I make the costly and challenging move to SAP HANA from a traditional database?

SAP is discontinuing support for the SAP Business Suite with traditional databases in 2027, creating a mandatory move to SAP HANA. By maintaining traditional SAP deployments, you’re consuming IT resources that could be better diverted to more strategic initiatives. Migrating to SAP HANA on IBM Power Systems will significantly boost your performance, ease data administration and processing and increase user response time for transactional in-memory processing.

IBM Power Systems is an important part of this process because, as an in-memory database, SAP HANA performs best with high-quality memory and large memory spaces. With Power Systems you can easily shift resources from your traditional environment to a growing SAP HANA portfolio.

Scenario 3: I have on-premises SAP applications. Can I expand to off premises?

Absolutely! In fact, as customers develop their hybrid cloud strategies—and, simultaneously, SAP discontinues support for SAP Business Suite—there’s even more urgency to develop and execute on a migration plan toward SAP S/4HANA. Fortunately, you can easily extend your SAP environment to our IBM Power Virtual Servers. Power Virtual Servers provide a wide variety of SAP-certified options for running SAP workloads. One use case we see is customers utilizing Power Virtual Servers for non-production/test environments, freeing up on-premises infrastructure to optimize their production SAP workloads.

How to get the most out of SAP HANA on IBM Power Systems

SAP HANA can be complex, but the benefits of running SAP HANA on Power Systems are compelling—you can reliably process and analyze your data-intensive workloads with minimal delays, improved performance, faster load times and a lower overall cost.

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If you’re curious and want more information, the IDC white paper, Who Can Benefit from SAP HANA Database and S/4HANA on IBM Power Systems? outlines the benefits of SAP HANA on IBM Power Systems, including deployment options, performance and cloud capabilities. Click below to learn more about how your organization can realize the benefits of SAP HANA on Power.

Source: ibm.com

Thursday, 3 June 2021

Best practices of inventory management and visibility

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It’s difficult to envision a supply chain that is agile enough to handle a sudden fluctuation from suppliers or consumers, let alone one that could meet countless changes and disruptions brought upon by the pandemic. The new world emerging must account for consumers’ digital preferences, increased buy-online-pick-up-in-store behaviors and unusually high demand spikes for certain goods. There are also considerable delivery delays from clogged pipelines, overwhelmed carrier services, mandatory closures and decreased available work staff.


In order to meet the expectations of omnichannel shopping patterns, unprecedented accuracy is required to track supply, demand and availability in a single cache. This is imperative to provide consistent information across the many channels of promise that require the same view of constantly updated data. Every touchpoint of the supply chain lifecycle and the order process needs to be in sync, which makes inventory visibility the first place to invest to achieve bottom-line business objectives and consistent customer experiences. By having a unified, real-time view, a business will never miss a sales opportunity because of hidden inventory or overpromise on stock that is not available.

Objectives of inventory technology solutions


The primary objective of inventory management technology is to track and utilize inventory in a way that balances business objectives with customer service requirements. In order to optimize a business’ financial and operational health, any technology solution that is selected for an implementation must effectively extend to, and integrate with, existing solutions. For external stakeholders, the solution must empower the business to go above and beyond to deliver the highest level of customer service. With a trusted inventory management system in place, you’ll be able to produce internal value by reducing out-of-stocks, lost margins from markdowns and expedited shipping, and excess inventory carrying costs.

Operational – Whether it’s raw materials, components, work-in-progress, or finished products, inventory should be readily available to support production and sales across all channels. Sufficient inventory allows you to fulfill orders, keep sales promises, and meet customer expectations. Care for that inventory – including minimizing theft and loss, reducing spoilage and damage, and ensuring quality of inventory for production or sale – is also a core operational objective. These basic operations also require better visibility to on-hand inventory levels, safety stock management, and their network’s overall picture of inventory for greater flexibility when making decisions for the business, logistics teams, partners, third-party sellers and customers.

To reach these operational objectives, businesses need real-time inventory visibility that is transparent and accurate to help track and monitor the status, location, and health of their inventory, wherever it is across the supply chain.

Financial – Businesses strive to minimize the cost of goods sold while ensuring high quality products. For businesses in the manufacturing, wholesale and retail sectors, working capital investment in inventory can be significant, representing the company’s single largest investment. Companies seek to control and manage three main types of inventory costs: order costs, stock-out related costs, and carrying costs.

Companies must balance demands with the proper amount of inventory, keeping the lowest possible inventory on-hand and avoiding over-stocking. They forecast demand so they can optimize their supplier order processes, maintain just-in-time inventory, minimize obsolete stock and ultimately reduce inventory storage or warehousing costs.

Goods and materials are constantly flowing out of a business’ inventory and warehouses to production and customers – while a steady stream of returns or re-shipments are coming back in. Proper handling and tracking of these goods and materials is an essential contributor to a business’ financial security.

Sales – Inventory also supports sales and revenue, further emphasizing its direct impact on the bottom line. Inventory management plays a key role in providing the sales, marketing, and purchasing/product development teams with accurate visibility into sales patterns. The data around current and future demands, matched against current and future supply is critical to inform strategies around pricing and placement of the inventory itself.

Technology – Building a more robust, modern technology stack with inventory visibility tools can enhance capabilities and streamline processes that greatly elevate performance while merging disparate data sources. Most organizations are too reliant on outdated and static ERP systems, restricting their ability to establish central inventory visibility – or to connect inventory management to the broader supply chain, logistics, third-party sellers, order management and/or fulfillment parts of the business. This technology stack must also be scalable enough to confidently handle peak seasons, when millions of inventory queries and supply/demand changes happen in a single day. Any page errors or outages would dramatically impact sales and brand loyalty.

Inventory management strategic investments


Inventory management services are maturing rapidly to keep up with growing business requirements. There are a variety of strategic investments that may be made depending on your organization’s goals. Let’s review the top two:

Promising – With the boom of e-commerce as a preferred shopping channel, businesses are leveraging a promising engine to surface a reliable delivery date at every stage of the digital commerce journey, from search to the product details page to checkout. By investing in a promising engine that sits on top of an accurate inventory picture, customers can confidently be driven to sales conversions. The system helps shoppers understand all of the options available to obtain desired inventory in the way that is most convenient from discovery to delivery. The Amazon effect has driven the need for convenience, immediacy, transparency, and personalization. Businesses must deliver confidence, choice, and clarity throughout the order journey. This establishment of trust can be done through updates on accurate delivery estimates while moving through the order journey, providing narrow pickup and delivery estimates, surfacing when out-of-stock items are back in stock, clear and upfront displays of backorder items or low quantity remaining inventory, buy-online-pick-up-in-store locations and dates/times, and even specific dates/times for services such as installation. These are just a few examples of how the emotional intent of the shopper has become a core influence on making or breaking shopping with a company ever again. Rules-based or AI solutions can balance the business objectives of speed of delivery and cost to the business.

Inventory exposure – Setting accurate omnichannel safety stock is a fine balancing act between having too much or too little inventory set aside. This also requires consideration of the age of the inventory as it grows closer to expiration, end of season, or markdown. When set effectively, inventory safety stock positively contributes to core business objectives of maximizing sales by exposing more store inventory online, while ensuring high service levels by limiting cancellations. The biggest challenge is that there are many factors that need to be considered when determining the optimal amount of safety stock to apply to meet your business objectives. It’s no surprise that managing the most granular levels of SKU-location safety stocks, having to remember all of the rules around events, supply types, categories, departments and classes (just to name a few) is a pain point that requires guidance from AI to understand how rules and safety stock changes can impact the business’ objectives. Dynamic safety stock will maximize not only the productivity of the inventory, but also the people who spend hundreds of hours setting and reviewing the rules.

Challenges associated with inventory management


Inventory management has a variety of challenges, including:

Supply chain complexity – Most larger businesses, and in particular global businesses, have an increasingly complex supply chain that may be expanding their reliance on suppliers and partners. They face increasing disruptions and risk, and are under cost, compliance and other pressures. This creates a more complex environment in which to implement inventory management technologies, and many organizations struggle to reach optimal inventory management processes, as well as achieve broad or deep inventory visibility. With steady growth, it is clear that systems lacking harmonized visibility into inventory across locations, geographies, business units, suppliers and partners will not be able to keep up.

Customer and product complexity – Products and inventories are growing in scope and complexity. Products are becoming more sophisticated, involving more components or service/delivery inputs, and requiring greater care and control in handling and shipping. In addition, customers are accustomed to a level of gratification and service delivered by large online retailers. These factors have driven up inventory size and demands for more accurate and efficient inventory management.

Change and personnel management – No matter how much automation or technology underpins inventory management, people will always play a critical role. And people can be resistant to change and limited in their knowledge or experience, an often-discussed topic in inventory and warehouse management. Personnel management and change management, which involves getting people to adopt new best practices and technologies, should never be overlooked as a challenge. It is imperative that previously constrained personnel are able to quickly develop new features to meet market and business needs. With the right training and technologies, aided by AI and intuitive user experiences, change is possible – and the benefits of that change make it necessary and inevitable.

Lack of inventory visibility – Many of the challenges of modern inventory management are rooted in a lack of visibility into inventory across locations and across the business. In many homegrown solutions, this is apparent in their system limitations and typical overnight batch updates. In an age when businesses are over-run with data, companies have a difficult time connecting and correlating data from across the organization and supply chain. This is the result of disconnected ERPs and homegrown systems, often cobbled together through acquisitions and partnerships. These disparate inventory management technologies and platforms lead to multiple versions of what should be a singular picture.

Data management – Organizations also struggle with data management, specifically in turning data into intelligence and insights on demand, inventory and logistics, and applying that data to decision making and action.

These challenges stand out amidst a litany of others which include: demand forecasting, demand planning, inventory auditing, inventory analytics, tracking, disconnect with order management, inventory loss, risk of over-stocking, poorly defined or executed processes, and highly manual and error-prone tasks.

Benefits and advantages of inventory management


Executing best practices in inventory management, and leveraging inventory visibility and AI technologies to improve inventory management, can have impacts across the supply chain and business such as:

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Underpinning profitability – As inventory accounts for a significant percentage of working capital at manufacturing, distribution and retail companies, improving and establishing solid inventory management practices has a direct impact on the bottom line. In fact, few areas of the business can have such an impact. Not only does inventory management directly impact the cost of goods sold and support sales strategy, every dollar saved in inventory costs drops straight to the bottom line. Inventory management can help eliminate stockouts and lost sale opportunities, reduce or eliminate inventory write-offs and losses, remove barriers to holding costs, and aid in quick and accurate auditing.

Quality inventory for customer satisfaction – Whether raw material or component inputs to a product, or inventory managed for sales, the care-taking role of inventory management directly impacts the quality and freshness of the product sold. Inventory costs are a key component of overall costs and thus impact the price to the customer. And inventory management must be running smoothly to ensure items are in stock and delivered on time and in full to customers as promised. Every improvement in inventory management flows directly to the customer experience

Optimizing supply chain management – There is no optimal supply chain management without inventory management; there is no optimal supply chain visibility without inventory visibility. For B2B companies, inventory management is critical to streamline warehouse operations and ensure the flow of raw materials and components. For retail and distribution companies, inventory management is the business. To reduce product costs, speed fulfillment and delight customers you must continuously improve the inventory management process.

Augmenting existing Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) – Best practices in inventory management, and specifically inventory visibility and order management technologies, can augment a company’s existing ERP solutions. A solution can connect data from across the supply chain and organization to provide centralized visibility and insights into potential disruptions and opportunities. Optimal inventory management practices can make the organization more efficient – and inventory visibility and management solutions can provide a quick source of data and intelligence, enabling the business to be more resilient and agile.

Great strides have been made in inventory fulfillment systems to meet the customers’ rising expectations. Inventory management software is a critical foundation of omnichannel fulfillment and one of the advancements you can adopt to immediately improve the customer experience, protect your bottom line and help grow your business.

Source: ibm.com

Tuesday, 1 June 2021

Start on the path to lifelong learning and employability with IBM

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In 2020, the global workforce lost an equivalent of 255 million full-time jobs, an estimated $3.7 trillion in wages and 4.4% of global GDP, a staggering toll on lives and livelihoods. While vaccine rollout has begun and the growth outlook is predicted to improve, an even socio-economic recovery is far from certain.

More Info: C2070-981: IBM FileNet Content Manager V5.2

As we look to recover the global economy, we must continue to push the talent paradigm and expand ways for people to enter the workforce. Together, the private and public sectors and educational institutions must adjust training and education practices to prioritize pathways and skills that allow people to conveniently access today’s most in-demand jobs. The key is to shift focus from credentials to capabilities, and make acquiring those skills more accessible than ever, so that more people can be prepared for success in new collar jobs where having the right skills matters more than having a traditional degree.

Part of the problem is that education and industry have focused too heavily on just one path to a good job: a bachelor’s degree. For those just entering the workforce and those who need mid-career reskilling, we need to expand access to and awareness of other pathways to developing the skills and capabilities they need for great careers.

Through programs that scale rapidly, IBM is working to tackle the high-tech skills gap and put more people on track for success in new collar careers.

We’ve invested hundreds of millions of dollars in programs to help train and prepare the global workforce for a new era of technology, including:

◉ The P-TECH school model, a 6-year program that offers a high school diploma and an associate degree, along with real-world work experience and mentorship – all at no cost to students.

◉ Our 21st century apprenticeship program, which provides on-the-job training in areas from blockchain to cybersecurity and mainframes, and which grew nearly twice as fast as projected in its first year.

◉ Community College partnerships: IBM has partnered with community colleges across the United States to provide curriculum reviews, in-classroom subject matter experts, and various pathways to employment.

◉ Returnships for women re-entering the workforce, veterans training programs and volunteer skills-building sessions for more than 2 million students worldwide.

Getting YOU started on your learning journey the right way: SkillsBuild

SkillsBuild is a digital platform providing jobseekers—including those with long-term unemployment, refugees, asylum seekers and veterans—a multimodal journey. Digital, live-virtual and face-to-face, the SkillsBuild experience includes career fit assessments, training, personalized coaching and the experiential learning users need to re-enter the workforce.

The comprehensive ecosystem of support, coaching and other learning experiences designed to empower learners, is what differentiates SkillsBuild. This ecosystem includes experts who understand the challenges users face outside of learning and these experts are also given an opportunity to upskill so that they can be successful in their role.

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Source: ibm.com