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To: calgal who wrote (165736)6/7/2001 1:31:08 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) of 176387
 
70% of Executives Believe Internet Technology Is Key to Core Business Success, According to New Survey by DiamondCluster, Context Magazine, and The Wharton School of Business

CHICAGO, Jun 5, 2001 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- The Internet Revolution is dead. Long live the Internet Revolution. The technology that once promised to change everything is doing just that, despite the recent failure of the dot-coms. That's the chief finding of "Digital Strategies Survey 2001," a wide-ranging survey of nearly 150 senior executives co-sponsored by global strategy and technology solutions firm DiamondCluster International (Nasdaq: DTPI chart, msgs), Context magazine, and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

Even as the dot-coms fade, seventy percent of senior executives in the survey believe Internet technologies have become either "important" or "essential" to their core business success and that the positive effects are only now just beginning.

"The message is that Internet technology has won," said Chunka Mui, DiamondCluster chief innovation officer. "Take no comfort from the death of dot-coms. What was once the tool of upstart revolutionaries is now a weapon in your big competitors' arsenals. Any company that doesn't transform itself around this technology will be left behind."

According to the survey, companies that have been most successful in applying these new technologies have tended to start with customer-oriented initiatives.

"The leading companies have used Internet technology to hold on to their customers and strengthen the relationships they have with them," said George Day, the Geoffrey T. Boisi professor of marketing and co-director of the Mack Center on Managing Technological Innovation at the Wharton School.

Numerous executives reported that while their e-business initiatives made them more efficient, gains in productivity were often competed away as their rivals had been busy too. But these executives said that if they had not gone after those efficiencies, they would have been left further behind. Self- reported e-business "laggards" said their biggest obstacle to success online was outdated technology, including their basic infrastructure and customer databases.

Many executives felt that the bar will continue to rise, predicting that the impact of the Internet will expand significantly over the next 24 months. Of those surveyed, 30% expect e-business initiatives to have a major impact on reaching new customers and markets. Fully 46% said e-business projects will have a major impact on customer service, and 48% said it would greatly affect corporate purchasing. On average, respondents said 12% of sales will come via the Internet in two years, twice what they said the Internet accounts for today.

"Moore's Law isn't going on hiatus," said Kenton Morris, DiamondCluster principal and leader of the research study. (Moore's Law holds that computing power doubles every year and a half to two years with no increase in cost.) "There's a group of executives out there who will take advantage of their competitors' caution to pull away from the pack."

Other Survey Highlights

-- Companies have a long way to go before they make their online customers
happy. Only 15% of respondents reported being very successful at
handling customer-service requests electronically, while fewer than 10%
said they had been very successful selling directly to customers
online.
-- The focus of e-business efforts is shifting away from customers and
toward back-office, supply-chain improvements that may generate
efficiencies and allow companies to see clear, quick results.
-- Companies are pulling their Internet activities back inside their main
businesses rather than running them as separate operations. Of those
surveyed, 30% said their e-business initiatives are now mostly or fully
integrated with core operations. More than 65% of the executives said
they intend to reach that level of integration in the next 24 months.

"Digital Strategies Survey 2001" is divided into three segments. In addition to e-business, the survey explores executives' perspectives on mobility and innovation. For more information, including a complete download of the survey, visit

diamondcluster.com .

About the Methodology

The survey consisted of 20-minute phone interviews with 125 executives at businesses in North America. The executives were all vice presidents or above and represented all the major business functions. The executives came from companies with at least $1 billion in annual revenue in a broad range of industries.

The survey also involved 22 face-to-face interviews with top executives at major businesses in a wide array of industries. These interviews, which generally lasted an hour to an hour and a half, built upon the results from the phone survey.

"Digital Strategies Survey 2001," which is a follow-up to a similar research study conducted in 1997, includes comparisons between the results of the two surveys.

About DiamondCluster International

DiamondCluster International, Inc. (Nasdaq: DTPI chart, msgs) is a premier business strategy and technology solutions firm, delivering value to clients worldwide by developing and implementing innovative digital strategies that capitalize on the opportunities presented by new technologies. Headquartered in Chicago, DiamondCluster also has offices in Barcelona, Boston, Dusseldorf, Lisbon, London, Madrid, Munich, New York, Paris, San Francisco and Sao Paulo.
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