Movers and shakers: Leanne Buer, Paul Littlefair and Russell Ambrose
SUSE appoints former SAP executive as its first female CEO
SUSE appoints former SAP executive as its first female CEO
We will deliver sophisticated end-to-end digital customer experiences for enterprise clients across B2B and B2C sectors, says Qrious CEO Nathalie Morris.
...and developed a playbook for success that other organisations can learn from.
The two firms extend partnership with integrations involving Adobe Sign and Microsoft’s collaboration platform.
‘Avoid long-term cloud SaaS contracts and prepare exit ramps,’ advises Forrester
Adobe CIO Cynthia Stoddard explains why the era of IT as a separate entity with a separate purpose is over.
‘If you treat your client success as your first priority, everything else follows.’
Digitalisation is impacting all organisations and prompting CIOs, CTOs and CMOs to work more closely than ever.
But Oracle and Salesforce are increasingly moving to the top space, reports Ovum
‘By making the decision to shift our marketing to digital, we are able to combine art and science,’ says Skelton, managing director, Adobe Australia and New Zealand
People not in the branding business don't see much difference between advertising and marketing. As new-age advertising technology, or adtech, and marketing technology, or martech, logically merge, what's the problem? For advertising agencies, which have been on the frontline of branding since the late 18th century, a lot is at stake.
A judge has approved a US$415 million settlement in a Silicon Valley employee hiring case, calling the amount "substantial" to settle claims that Apple, Google, Adobe Systems and Intel conspired not to hire each other's workers.
A proposed US$415 million settlement between tech workers and Intel, Google, Apple and Adobe Systems is likely to be approved by the judge, according to some of the lawyers in the case.
Hoping to avoid a potentially embarrassing trial, Google, Apple, Intel and Adobe have increased their offer to $415 million [m] to settle a lawsuit that accuses them of cutting secret deals not to hire each other's workers.
More than a dozen Romanian non-governmental organizations are protesting new cybersecurity legislation passed by the parliament last week that would force businesses to provide the country's national intelligence agencies with access to their data without a court warrant.