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Are IT pros experiencing a significant drop in demand? Industry observers see a nuanced story of new pressures, risk aversion in both supply and demand, and roles that used to be in IT shifting to lines of business.
Escalating tariffs will cut significantly into IT expenditures, while increasing tech prices and market pressures on CIOs’ businesses, leading to shifts in IT and staffing strategies.
Data engineers work for enterprises in various industries to help them manage and store the data they need to operate, and, increasingly, to support their AI initiatives.
IT supplier relationships are critical for many businesses, but as many CIOs have learned, ensuring these partnerships deliver intended outcomes relies on more than just finding an experienced partner.
Agentic AI, highly adaptive to new variables and scenarios, has the potential to change enterprise workflows and operational decision-making.
Statistics reveal nearly half of IT leaders are afraid to admit mistakes, blocking organizations from valuable learning opportunities.
Just because technology solutions are readily available doesn’t mean transformation will automatically succeed.
AI consultants combine technology and management to develop customized AI solutions. Those who meet the high requirements will find a promising and varied career.
Scott Kessler, CIO for the nearly $7 billion multi-brand grocery business, views AI as an opportunity to redefine IT leadership.
It may have faded into obscurity but by an order of magnitude, the outage last July caused by the cybersecurity vendor was the costliest in IT history. What have we learned to prevent something similar from happening again?
While many companies are still hiring programmers, demand has fallen off as AI and ML experts can’t be hired fast enough, spurring some developers to rethink their roles.
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