Overview

Scarcity has re-emerged as an urgent priority at the executive agenda. Although we all longed that, with the Covid-19 crisis subsiding, we would enter a period of stable economic prosperity, the opposite is true.

Suddenly we find ourselves in a perma-crisis, where all certainties seem to have disappeared. The scarcity of talent will not alleviate anytime soon. Interest rates are rising, bringing an end to (almost) free capital to invest. Energy prices are expected to remain high. The world’s natural resources can no longer sustain our current levels of consumption. Inflation seems to be staying at an unprecedented high level for an extended period. The geo-political tension of the ‘cold-war’ seems to have returned, leading to an opposite trend of de-globalization of supply chains. The scarcity of almost everything is now a determining and social factor, as well as continuously rising pressure on the climate, resulting from an excess of carbon and other emissions.

And yet technological innovation seems to be unaffected by this situation of Uncertainty. There is a steady flow of new, potentially transformative, ready to scale technologies, like Generative Artificial Intelligence, Synthetic biology, Quantum Computing, and Virtual and Augmented Reality, that promise solutions to all our challenges. Yet in a world where scarcity is in abundance, we must think carefully about the choices we make, including the technologies our businesses use. The time of ‘let a thousand flowers bloom’ is replaced by successfully ‘Dealing with Dilemmas’. New concepts to guide our decisions like De-growth and Green-growth are introduced as alternative roads to the future.

Simply focusing on the creation of revenue, profit, shareholder value and superior performance is not enough. People, whether it’s your customers or employees, demand a clear purpose. They want businesses that contribute to society, addressing the big challenges of our time and actively shaping better futures for all. They expect ‘social’ businesses that ‘Do Well by Doing Good’. So, as we use technology to deal with the challenges our businesses face, we must find a balance between value creation, ease of use, convenience, climate friendly outcomes and the interests of society at large. Our businesses must take responsibility for the increasingly digital society they help to create.

During our Sogeti Executive Summit we will develop an optimistic scenario, minted by one of the speakers as “The Great Progression”, to write the future you want and explore some of the technologies that will help you get there. Questions we will address at the Sogeti Executive Summit are:

  • How can we stop looking at the present and the future through the lens of the past?
  • Will we be able to sustain our growth of prosperity, or will it reach its boundaries? And what does that mean for future generations?
  • What are the organizational consequences of alternative paths like De-growth and Green-growth?
  • Are we experiencing the end of ‘Consumerism’ as we know it: do Generation Z and Alfa desire just more stuff or are they expecting more than mere convenience?
  • How can organizations better deal with strategic dilemmas?
  • How will the Abundance of Artificial Intelligence (like ChatGPT) contribute to making better decisions?
  • How do we deal with the ‘Knowledge without Understanding’ generated by AI’s Large Language Models (LLMs), that is incredibly convincing yet regularly incorrect?

During a 24-hour intense program, perspectives from many different angles will be presented by authoritative speakers, interspersed with discussion amongst your peers. Participating in the Sogeti Executive Summit will help you develop a scenario for your organization successfully riding the wave of “The Great Progression”, including an action list of where to start.

Recognizing the environmental impact of travel, we want to ensure we make a positive contribution to investing in our planet, so will be planting trees with our partner Ecologi to reduce this impact.

State of the Art sessions

 

Revolutionizing Software Development and Testing with Generative AI

'Quality at speed' is the mantra, not just for testers but also for developers. This necessitates a paradigm shift in traditional methods, and that's where Generative AI comes into play. This transformative technology promises to revolutionize the way both developers and testers approach their work, enhancing productivity and expediting delivery.

In this insightful session, we will explore the disruptive potential of Generative AI in the realms of both software development and Quality Engineering & Testing (QE&T). Key use cases such as automated code generation, script creation, and test case formulation will be discussed, illustrating how AI-driven processes can drastically curtail manual effort and improve accuracy.

Our discussion will extend beyond the technical to encompass strategic considerations: the creation and maintenance of custom AI platforms, the upskilling imperative in an AI-integrated workforce, and the role of AI in crafting a unique market differentiation strategy.

Join us as we delve into the future of software development and testing, powered by Generative AI. Discover how this technology can help your organization maintain a competitive edge in an increasingly complex and fast-paced digital landscape.

 

Native Apps: Think of a new idea on Monday, have it running in production on Friday

Modern enterprises have evolved into software companies. Even if your business doesn’t sell software, the application and computing infrastructure at its core is now your most important product line. How long does it take your development team to deliver a new application feature, test it, and push it out to production for your users? Ten years ago, you could have been forgiven for saying “six months”. Five years ago, “three months” was still an acceptable answer. Today, and in the future, the answer will be weeks or days. For the most agile firms – pun intended – timeframes of hours are the new standard. To achieve this kind of velocity, enterprises have had to make the transition from monolithic, legacy desktop and client-server applications to lighter, loosely coupled RESTful, API-based services. Reuse of code, services, and infrastructure allows systems designers to focus on the business logic instead of the plumbing below. Let’s discuss the true value of Modern Apps.

Data for Net Zero: The gold standard for corporate climate action

While many businesses and governments have set net-zero targets, the evolving regulatory ecosystem and increasing pressure from investors and clients, combined with organizational and operational difficulties to measure emissions, mean that they now need to be fully equipped to act on their carbon accounting. By acting on carbon accounting, you’ll drive transparency and accountability on your ESG commitments. Once you’ve evaluated your current state, you can define your strategy; translating carbon assessment into tangible insights to monitor and report at scale through industrialized measurement powered by our trusted Data & AI accelerators and solutions. Act on your carbon accounting with Data for Net Zero as part of our overall sustainability framework, Data for Net Zero is seamlessly utilizing net-zero intelligence to build resilience and reduce climate and business risks.

By enabling simulations, and applying advanced sustainability analytics (providing centralized, real-time insights), you'll form actions plans – shaping your net-zero ambitions into a universal, sustainable future for you and others.

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Speakers

Although the program is work in progress, we are happy to announce the following speakers that have confirmed:

Christiaan Alberdingk Thijm : Legal implications of Generative Al

Alberdingk specializes in copyright, the right to privacy, information law and e-commerce. He has a particular interest in the interaction between law and new technologies and enjoys dealing with issues of principle for innovative entrepreneurs.

In 2004, Alberdingk Thijm was voted the best IP/IT lawyer in the Netherlands by his peers. He won the Golden Hourglass. He gained international fame by successfully defending the makers of Kazaa in proceedings against music organization Buma/Stemra. The win made Kazaa the world's first "legal" file-sharing program.

He is an advisor for clients such as KPN, Netflix and eBay.

Claudia Senik : The Economics of Happiness

Claudia Senik is Professor of Economics at the Paris School of Economics and the University Paris-Sorbonne. She is also a member of the IZA and of the Institut Universitaire de France. Her main research areas include happiness studies, political attitudes and post-transition economies, with a special interest in the subjective welfare effects of income growth and income distribution. She frequently appeals to a comparative approach, based on the different environments in Western versus Eastern Europe. She is in charge of several international scientific cooperation programs related to her field of research.

Cyril Garcia : Capgemini's Sustainability Vision

Cyril Garcia is the Head of Global Sustainability Services and Corporate Responsibility at Capgemini Group, and a member of the Group Executive Board.

With more than 25 years of experience in consulting across industries, Cyril has been at the forefront of the development of new services for Capgemini Group and its clients.

He joined Capgemini in 1993 and led numerous transformation projects, then held the positions of Director of Group Strategy, Capgemini Consulting France and Spain, and CEO of Capgemini Consulting. In 2018, he launched the new Capgemini Invent brand and the “Invent for Society” initiative embracing society-driven projects delivering positive impact.

Cyril Garcia was appointed Global Sustainability Services and Corporate Responsibility Head in early 2023. He is responsible for the integration of sustainability across Capgemini’s portfolio of client services, notably around sustainable enterprise transformation and climate tech. Cyril is also driving the Group’s own sustainability agenda and its Corporate Social Responsibility activities. Cyril has been a member of the Group Executive Board since 2018.

David Weinberger: Knowledge without Understanding

Since the dawn of the web, pioneering thought leader David Weinberger has been deciphering the impact of the technology on our lives, business, and ideas. He has pursued this work as a senior researcher at Harvard's Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, as former co-director of the Harvard Library Innovation Lab, as a journalism fellow at Harvard's Shorenstein Center, a Franklin Fellow at the US State Department, and currently as a writer-in-residence at an AI research group at Google. His many years as a marketing consultant to innovative tech companies, a marketing VP, and entrepreneur have given him first-hand experience in our new economy. A best-selling author, his latest book Everyday Chaos: Technology, Complexity, and How We're Thriving in a New World of Possibility examines how AI, big data, modern science, and the Internet are enabling us to embrace the chaos from which the future arises. Addressing both business and individuals, he explains how we're advancing as never before, not by anticipating the future, but by making it even more unpredictable. His first book, Cluetrain Manifesto has been called a “primer on Internet marketing,” revealing the Internet as a social space years before social networks like Facebook came along.

Eleanor ‘Nell’ Watson: Scarcity of Trust

Eleanor ‘Nell’ Watson, a pioneering ethics and machine intelligence researcher, has been a driving force behind some of the most crucial AI ethics initiatives, including the IEEE 7001 standard on transparency. Her contributions have earned her fellowships from prestigious organizations such as the British Computing Society, Royal Statistical Society, and The Atlantic Council.

Frank Trentmann: Empire of Things

 

Trentmann is professor of history in the Department of History, Classics and Archaeology at Birkbeck College, University of London. He was educated at Hamburg University, the London School of Economics and Political Science, and at Harvard University, where he completed his PhD. He has taught at Princeton University and at Bielefeld University. He was Fernand Braudel Senior Fellow at the European University Institute. He is a specialist in the history of consumption.

His latest book ‘Empire of Things: How We Became a World of Consumers, Fifteenth Century to the Twenty-First’, unfolds the rise of our modern material world and examines the global challenges of our relentless pursuit of more – from waste and debt to stress and inequality. The book, translated into six languages, was in 2016 chosen as the book of the year by The Times and was winner of the Austrian Wissenschaftsbuch/science book prize in 2018 for the best book in the humanities, social sciences, and cultural studies.

James McQuivey: Leading in times of "Scarcity in Abundance"

James tracks and predicts behavior change, whether among consumers or employees. In his tenure at Forrester, he successfully forecast the rise of online shopping in 1998 and more recently predicted the arrival of Amazon’s Echo platform before it existed. His models succeed because he focuses on an understanding of core human needs and motivations, using that foundation to predict why, when, and how people will try new things. In February 2013, James published his book Digital Disruption: Unleashing the Next Wave of Innovation. Currently, he is the research director for Forrester's Future of Work team, guiding a team of analysts to not only identify changes in the world of work but also prepare clients in every industry to approach these changes as opportunities instead of threats.

Previously at Forrester, James ran Consumer Technographics® North America, Forrester's unparalleled consumer research effort. In addition to keynoting at industry events and Forrester forums, James is routinely sought after for comment by such publications as The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal

Jeroen van der Most : Art and Al

For over 10 years, Dutch artist Jeroen van der Most has been creating art that combines data, algorithms, and AI. To explore a new use of technology that deepens our relationship with our natural surroundings. His work challenges our understanding of reality by fusing past, present, and future into a mind-bending experience.

Van der Most has been a resident artist at renowned institutions like Technical University Delft and global media frequently covered his work. He created commissioned art for major organizations like NVIDIA, Amnesty International, Nike - Footlocker, the Jumbo - Visma cycling team, and NH hotels. His work has been exhibited worldwide, from ZKM Karlsruhe and CES Las Vegas to AAF Hong Kong.

Marcus Du Sautoy : The Creativity Code

Marcus du Sautoy is the Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science and Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford. He is the author of six books including his most recent book "The Creativity Code".

He has presented numerous radio and TV series including a four part landmark TV series for the BBC called "The Story of Maths". He works extensively with a range of arts organisations bringing science alive for the public from The Royal Opera House to the Glastonbury Festival.

In his intriguing talk professor du Sautoy explores the role the new emerging world of AI might play in unleashing our own human creativity. Often we get stuck behaving like machines repeating the same ideas. This talk explains how AI might help us humans to behave less like machines and more like humans again.

Peter Leyden: The Great Progression

Peter Leyden has spent his career in a wide range of roles figuring out the future, explaining what’s probably coming next, and helping envision how we can build a better world. He came to San Francisco at the beginning of the digital revolution to work with the founders of WIRED magazine, he then learned the futures business working with the founders of the pioneering strategic foresight firm Global Business Network, and eventually founded two of his own media startups focused on the future.

Leyden now is considered a thought leader on the future, on the impact of new technologies, and on the repercussions of megatrends. He has worked for 25 years as a futurist and tech expert through Keppler Speakers, giving keynotes on roughly a monthly basis throughout America. He’s written two influential books on the future that went into multiple languages, and most recently written popular online pieces like The Great Progression, 2025 to 2050. He is regularly interviewed by the media and podcasts. Leyden also is a senior advisor on strategic foresight operating through his firm Reinvent Futures. He frequently takes what he learns about the future and helps senior leaders of organizations think through the strategic implications of what’s coming in the decade ahead. More at PeterLeyden.com.

Susan Paulson : The Case for Degrowth

Susan Paulson serves as Professor at the University of Florida’s Center for Latin American Studies, and previously taught sustainability studies at Lund University, Sweden. For 30 years she has studied human-environment relations in Andean and Amazonian territories, 15 of those years living full-time in South America. Paulson analyzes environmental dynamics from local to global scales, with attention to roles played by class, gender and ethnoracial systems. Her delight in conversation across difference and commitment to engaging wide audiences are manifest in invited lectures delivered in 20 countries, and in publication in scholarly journals representing an unusually wide range of disciplines (anthropology, environmental studies, forestry, gender studies, geography, political science). For the past decade, Paulson has been exploring paths toward degrowth in diverse forums, among them Feminisms and Degrowth Alliance. Her most recent book, the co-authored The Case for Degrowth (2020), has been translated into eight languages.

Tijana Nikolic : The Myths of Generative Al

Tijana is the AI Lead in Sogeti NL, specializing in trusted and scalable AI implementation, MLOps, and synthetic data. Her vision is to bring innovative solutions to the market with a strong emphasis on privacy, quality, ethics, and sustainability, while enabling growth and curiosity of team members. One of those solutions is the Artificial Data Amplifier, the winner of the Sogeti Innovation of the year award for 2020. She is an active thought leader in ethical and sustainable development of AI solutions, with contributions to publications ‘State of AI applied to QE’, ‘Data-powered Innovation Review’ and many blog posts around the same topics.

Nell Watson @ Sogeti's Scarcity in Abundance Summit '23

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Peter Leyden @ Sogeti's Scarcity in Abundance Summit '23

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Scarcity in Abundance - Program

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Register

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If you have any questions, please contact

Margo Langeweg
Margo Langeweg
Executive Event Planner, Sogeti
Phone: +31622546440