Strategy, Technology, Corporate Finance on a Global View.
miércoles, 12 de agosto de 2020
The Order of Time. An Excerpt for the Business Landscape..
viernes, 5 de mayo de 2017
Santiago Jimenez Barrull
Corporate Finance - Digital Transformation
* Relación a la escisión parcial empresa: ESCISIÓN DE EMPRESAS (BORME 186 de 27/9/2010)
(SOCIEDAD ESCINDIDA)
MAATG TECHNOLOGY, S.L.
(SOCIEDAD BENEFICIARIA)
* Subdirector general del IMPI: Resolución de 1 de febrero de 1995, de la Secretaría de Estado de Industria, por la que se dispone el nombramiento de don Santiago Jiménez Barrull, como Subdirector general en el Gabinete de Estudios y Centro de Información del Instituto de la Pequeña y Mediana Empresa Industrial.
Infanta Cristina
http://biblioteca2.uclm.es/biblioteca/ceclm/ARTREVISTAS/ABCECO/ABC_405.pdf
desarrollo rural
http://www.mapama.gob.es/Desarrollo/pags/RedRural/presentacion_unidad/Programa_Almazan.pdf
TELEFONICA
http://www.computerworld.es/archive/santiago-jimenez-director-de-marketing-de-telefonica-servicios-avanzados-de-informacion-internet-esta-obligando-a-todas-las-empresas-a-cambiar-sus-procesos-de-gestion
http://www.elmundo.es/navegante/97/septiembre/24/nnetscape.html
UNION EUROPEA
http://cordis.europa.eu/project/rcn/86419_en.html
Periodistas - FAPE
http://www.expansion.com/2008/01/16/empresas/medios/1078815.html
http://studylib.es/doc/3620850/periodistas-----fape
http://docplayer.es/8473716-Fundacion-caja-rural-de-toledo-la-fundacion.html
http://www.computing.es/siteresources/files/0/45.pdf
http://www.indracompany.com/es/indra/alianzas
http://www.xbrl.es/downloads/libros/Memoria%20XBRL%202006.pdf
http://www.europapress.es/castilla-lamancha/innova-00234/noticia-innova-indra-maat-gknowledge-ofreceran-soluciones-salud-basadas-tecnologia-grid-tdt-20081112193857.html
https://www.estrategiasdeinversion.com/actualidad/noticias/bolsa-espana/indra-firma-acuerdo-con-maat-gknowledge-para-desarrollar-n-59022
http://www.elconfidencial.com/mercados/2007-08-16/indra-y-maat-desarrollan-una-plataforma-bancaria-para-caja-rural-de-toledo_874486/
http://www.eleconomistaamerica.co/mercados-cotizaciones/noticias/327657/12/07/Economia-Empresas-Indra-y-Maat-Gknowledge-crean-un-centro-de-servicios-bancarios-multicliente-e-internacional.html
https://indico.cern.ch/event/32220/contributions/1703536/attachments/623024/857311/MAAT_HealthcareICT_DM_v3.3.pdf
https://books.google.es/books?id=jPBWDgAAQBAJ&pg=PR15&lpg=PR15&dq=maatg+knowledge+CERN&source=bl&ots=aAOCKv6JhD&sig=VXanOv145DbKy9z68mQ0frZXTDU&hl=es&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjVyOz27tPTAhWEXhQKHcmDCp0Q6AEIOzAE#v=onepage&q=maatg%20knowledge%20CERN&f=false
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9783527687039.fmatter/pdf
https://books.google.es/books?id=9ZujyED41EMC&pg=PA312&lpg=PA312&dq=maatg+knowledge+CERN&source=bl&ots=K3uwrzlLeO&sig=0J_9Si9lvM7DBhe8moconO9tAsU&hl=es&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjVyOz27tPTAhWEXhQKHcmDCp0Q6AEIUTAI#v=onepage&q=maatg%20knowledge%20CERN&f=false
http://ippog.org/members/totem-collaboration
http://www.expansion.com/2008/05/30/empresas/tecnologia/1129760.html
https://sciencenode.org/feature/isgtw-feature-health-e-child-prepares-deployment.php
http://cordis.europa.eu/docs/projects/cnect/9/027749/080/publishing/readmore/020707-Brochure.pdf
http://canal.ugr.es/prensa-y-comunicacion/medios-digitales/universia-espana/creada-la-catedra-maat-de-economia-publica-y-la-sociedad-de-la-informacion/
http://www.toledo.es/el-presidente-de-la-asociacion-de-municipios-de-mexico-visita-el-ayuntamiento-de-toledo/
http://www.actv.info/fichanoticia.php?ID=9959
http://www.agro-alimentarias.coop/ficheros/doc/01271.pdf
sábado, 7 de noviembre de 2015
Knowledge is Power. The role of the cities
Just 10 years ago, cities were seen as vital contributors to the global economy. That's no longer true. Today, cities are the global economy. More than 50% of the world's population live in cities and the 40 largest cities, or mega-regions, account for two thirds of the world's output,according Professor Richard Florida, an urban studies theorist at the University of Toronto.
The Oil&Gas Industry Players Game
La situación del mercado de Petroleo y Gas Adaptado de un articulo de McKinsey Quarterly (Tim Fitzgibbon and others)
Capturing margin opportunities in oil and gas refining
Downstream oil and gas industry players are used to market shifts. The key is taking advantage when they occur.
External market shifts are not new to the downstream oil and gas industry. Changes in environmental regulations, fluctuating natural gas prices, and the recent sharp decline in crude oil prices have caused ripple effects for downstream players. These external shifts can generate major new opportunities, but require refiners to be nimble and proactive as they re-optimize to the “new normal.”
Consider how incentives have altered in the US gasoline and distillate markets during the past decade. These markets traditionally were well balanced with relatively similar gasoline and diesel pricing, with only seasonal swings toward one or the other being at a premium. However, in the past five years, the market has seen a structural shift, with diesel now significantly and consistently out-pricing gasoline. This change is part of a global adjustment driven by two primary factors:
- Accelerating diesel demand growth in developing markets. As global oil demand growth has shifted to developing economies in Asia and Latin America, it has biased growth toward distillates. Developing economies have a higher share of commercial (trucking demand), which tends to bias demand and demand growth toward diesel.
- Decreasing gasoline demand in developed markets. In developed markets, demand has been declining in the light-duty passenger sector due to increasing vehicle efficiency (largely driven by stricter fuel efficiency regulations) and growing penetration of alternative fuels. These trends have disproportionately hit gasoline demand since it is traditionally favored in the light-duty vehicle sector. This structural shift has caused refineries to focus year-round on optimizing for diesel and jet-fuel production at the expense of gasoline and naphtha. In addition, capital projects that capitalize on this price spread—which may not have made sense five to ten years ago—could be highly profitable in this new distillate market.
Incentives and opportunities can be large
While market shifts are not a surprise to refiners, finding the specific “margin levers” to capitalize on changes can be a challenge. For instance, a complex refinery may have 10 to 20 significant processing units, but typically we see the largest value created in crude units, FCCUs, hydrocrackers, and delayed cokers. For example, Exhibit 2 shows a hydrocracker unit that is running sub-optimally as a result of market shifts.So what can be done? In this example, we identified three main sources of value:
- The fractionator system was not fully optimized for diesel production. The unit experienced excessive low-value naphtha production due to its overhead temperature not being truly minimized, as well as higher-than-expected unconverted oil production due to a loss of feed preheat. Both of these factors caused sub-optimal diesel yields.
- Several streams of Vacuum Gasoil (VGO) feed were incorrectly routed to the FCCU instead of the hydrocracker. Given FCCU yields favor gasoline and hydrocracker yields favor diesel, this was indirectly overproducing gasoline at the expense of diesel.
- No ability existed to blend low value naphtha into diesel product. A simple “jump-over” piping project was identified years ago, when diesel margins were relatively low, and had not been re-evaluated since. Armed with updated margins and operating guidelines from the workshop, the company’s engineering staff followed a structured root-cause analysis to debottleneck diesel production in the three opportunity areas above to increase diesel production by 10 to 20 percent, and drive significant margin uplift.
Optimizing operations to capture and sustain value
In our experience, adopting a structured approach to delivering operations improvement means employing a series of rigorous margin-capture workshops to identify and size the full suite of margin opportunities in each of the main processing units.This margin tree approach quickly distills the highest priority areas to focus on and drive capital or operational improvements within weeks. To capture these opportunities, refineries can launch a series of “grade the shift” optimization cycles that utilize visual management and strong engagement from console and outside operators to drive hour-by-hour optimization across the refinery.
Optimizing at the front line requires a tailored approach to ensure good engagement from operators. Our experience is that refiners typically struggle to deeply engage operators on short-term optimization decisions, while hourly operations staff are also usually surprised and excited to be so explicitly involved in capturing margin every shift. There are several success factors to make “grade the shift” successful:
- Select a manageable, but real, list of margin drivers to optimize. There will typically be three to six margin drivers for a large process unit that are dynamic throughout a shift and provide a console operator the opportunity to (safely) deliver superior margin performance. For each driver, show the “size of the prize” in $/bbl margin uplift, and discuss with the unit managers how the number was calculated.
- Install clear visual management. Experience shows that white boards are superior to complex electronic displays, especially at the beginning of the journey. Anyone who enters the unit should know, from looking at the board, how much uplift/bbl is available for each driver, and how successful the last few shifts have been in capturing available margin.
- Create an atmosphere of friendly competition. With clear process safety guidelines, operators who believe they have the ability to impact the unit’s margin contribution can produce consistent, positive results. One operator at a recent engagement texted the transformation team “I just made $80,000 last shift! Can shift three match it?” This structured approach was recently employed with a USGC refiner and delivered over $2/bbl margin improvement on each barrel of crude over a six-month period.
- Do we have a clear view of the highest margin products, with a conversation on the “top five barriers” to increase production in a daily meeting?
- Are daily margin performance dialogues around clear KPIs being used at each unit, each shift?
- How many unit operators could rattle off the current margins for each major product stream on their unit, and what their constraint is?
- Could every employee at the refinery tell whether we “won or lost” each day on margin, in simple financial terms?
- Does our leadership team have simplified yet detailed margin trees and schematics that are used on a daily basis to remove constraints?
- Is our LP updated weekly with current price sets, and does it clearly tie product streams and transfer prices across our refineries?
- Does the speed of execution (idea to on line) of our capital projects process allow us to react nimbly to the market?
- Does our refinery reliability program focus its efforts on the highest margin units?
Towards the Human Economy...
In economic terms, we’ve gone from an Industrial Economy – where we hired hands — to a Knowledge Economy – where we hired heads — to what is now a Global Human Economy – where we hire hearts.
(Adapted from Dov Seidman)
miércoles, 30 de noviembre de 2011
La Fragilidad de la Economía Española
Las claves de la crisis hay que buscarla en buena medida en las decisiones de los últimos años de inversiones en Infraestructuras caras e infrautilizadas -carreteras, ferroviarias, energeticas, telecomunicaciones...-
Decisiones y extraordinaria influencia en la regulación del Gobierno por parte de tres sectores clave de la economía -financiero, infraestructuras, energético,..- Aeropuertos sin aviones, Autovias sin coches -con menos de 3.000 vehiculos diarios con tasas de rentabilidad negativas-; y AVE sin pasajeros;
Las políticas energéticas se han basado más en las necesidades de las empresas energeticas que en las necesidades económicas del país -deficit tarifario versus venta de electricidad procedente de instalaciones amortizadas al mismo precio que la tecnología más cara-.
No regulación de las remuneraciones en el sector financiero ni de los sueldos de los directivos en muchos casos asociadas al riesgo.
Riesgo que se asume por el conjunto de la sociedad, socializando las perdidas siendo precedida por una privatización de las ganancias.
Los antiguos piromanos de la crisis ahora se convierten en su bomberos (Goldman Sachs,...)
Petit "El estado tiene el poder, precisamente, para que evitar que unos fuertes tomen como subditos a unos debiles".
Transparencia, control e independencia de la política respecto al Sector Financiero, grandes constructoras o el sector energético se ha convertido en una garantía de la supervivencia de la democracia y mejora económica del conjunto de la sociedad.
domingo, 17 de abril de 2011
martes, 29 de marzo de 2011
TV Melting Media
Other than multiscreen user experience and access to multi devices, hybrid TV will also be in focus. Hybrid TV is the ability to deliver services both on satellite and on IPTV simultaneously on a single set top box.
miércoles, 19 de enero de 2011
Business Model Innovation
Day-to-day Operations vs imagine your industry in five, 10 or 20 years
Forces of change your industry faces
- Technology
- Customer Demographics
- Regulation
- Globalization,...
Manage the Present - Preservation / selectively forget the past - Destruction / Create the Future - Creation
Creative Models
- strategy graffiti walls
-knowledge caffes
-jam sessions
-speed-geeking
Fast-paced roundtable meetings in which each participant has just one minute to give an imprompty response to key and provocative questions?
Optimize the way individuals collaborate.
Job specification
Organizational designs
Work processes
domingo, 9 de enero de 2011
viernes, 7 de enero de 2011
IBM - The New Next Five in Five - United States
At the end of each year, IBM examines market and societal trends expected to transform our lives, as well as emerging technologies from IBM's global labs, to develop a multi-year forecast called The Next 5 in 5.
IBM predicts that technology innovations will change our lives in the following ways:
You won't need to be a scientist to save the planet
While you may not be a scientist, you are a walking sensor. In five years, sensors in your phone, your car, your wallet and even your tweets will collect data that will give scientists a real-time picture of your environment. You'll be able to volunteer to contribute this data to fight global warming, save endangered species or track invasive plants or animals that threaten ecosystems around the world. In the next five years, a whole class of citizen scientists will emerge, using simple sensors that already exist to create massive data sets for research.
Simple observations—when the first thaw occurs in your town, when the mosquitoes first appear, if there's no water running where a stream should be—contain valuable data that scientists don't currently have in large sets. If connected to a network of other computers, your laptop can even be used to help map out the aftermath of an earthquake, speeding up the work of emergency responders and potentially saving lives.
Beam your friends up in 3-D
In the next five years science fiction won't be so fiction anymore, as 3-D interfaces like those in the movies let you interact with 3-D holograms of your friends in real time. Movies and TVs are already moving to 3-D, and as 3-D and holographic cameras get more sophisticated and miniaturized to fit into cell phones, we'll be able to interact with our photos, browse the Web and chat with our friends in entirely new ways.
Scientists are working to improve video chat to become holography chat or 3-D telepresence. The technique uses light beams scattered from objects and reconstructs a picture of that object, a similar technique to the one our eyes use to visualize our surroundings.
IBM researchers are also working on new ways to visualize 3-D data, working on technology that would allow engineers to step inside of a designs of anything from buildings to software programs, running simulations of how diseases spread across an interactive 3-D globes, and visualizing Twitter trends that are happening around the world—all in real time and with little to no data distortion.
Batteries will breathe air to power our devices
Ever wish you could make your laptop battery last all day without needing a charge? Or what about a mobile device that charges itself while you carry it in your pocket?
In the next five years, scientific advances in transistors and battery technology will allow your devices to last about 10 times longer than they currently do. Scientists are working on batteries that use the air we breathe to react with energy-dense metal, leading to longer lasting batteries. If successful, the result will be a lightweight, powerful and rechargeable battery capable of powering for everything from electric cars to mobile devices.
Or, better yet, batteries may disappear altogether in smaller devices. The European Union is betting $5.5 million that we can do that by rethinking the basic building block of electronic devices—the transistor. The goal is simple—reduce the amount of energy per transistor to less than 0.5 volts. With energy demands that low, we might be able to eliminate the batteries in some devices.
The result would be battery-free electronic devices that can be charged using a technique called energy scavenging. Some wristwatches use this now—they do not require winding and charge based on the movement of the wearer's arm. The same concept could be used to charge mobile phones, for example—just shake and dial.
Computers will help energize your city
Innovations allow computers and data centers to do things like heat buildings in the winter and power air conditioners in the summer with the excessive heat and energy that they give off. Can you imagine if the energy poured into the world's data centers could, in turn, be recycled for a city's use?
Up to 50 percent of the energy consumed by a modern data center goes toward cooling the air. Most of the heat is then wasted because it is dumped into the atmosphere. Using new technologies, such as on-chip water-cooling systems developed by IBM, the thermal energy from a cluster of computer processors can be efficiently recycled to provide hot water for an office or a house.
A pilot project that involves a computer system fitted with the technology is expected to save up to 30 tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year, the equivalent of an 85 percent carbon footprint reduction. A novel network of microfluidic capillaries inside a heat sink is attached to the surface of each chip in the computer cluster, which allows water to be piped to within microns of the semiconductor material itself. By having water flow so close to each chip, heat can be removed more efficiently. Water heated to 60§ C is then passed through a heat exchanger to provide heat that is delivered elsewhere.
Your commute will be personalized
Imagine your commute with no jam-packed highways, no crowded subways and no construction delays. In the next five years, advanced analytics technologies will provide personalized recommendations that get commuters where they need to go in the fastest time. Adaptive traffic systems will intuitively learn traveler patterns and behavior to provide more dynamic travel safety and route information to travelers than is currently available.
IBM researchers are developing new models that will provide information that goes well beyond traditional traffic reports, after-the fact information that only indicates where you are already located in a traffic jam.
Using new mathematical models and IBM's predictive analytics technologies, researchers will analyze and combine multiple possible scenarios that can affect commuters to deliver the best routes for daily travel, including traffic accidents, road construction, most traveled days of the week, expected work start times, local events that may affect traffic, alternate options of transportation such as rail or ferries, parking availability and weather.
Combining these predictive analytics with real-time information about current travel congestion from sensors and other data, the system could recommend better ways to get to a destination, such as how to get to a nearby mass transit hub, whether the train is predicted to be on time, and whether parking is predicted to be available at the train station. New systems can learn from regular travel patterns where you are likely to go and then integrate all available data and prediction models to pinpoint the best route.
domingo, 2 de enero de 2011
For Apps, Profit Focus Is Blurry - WSJ.com
The Order of Time. An Excerpt for the Business Landscape..
There is a time to be born and a time to die, a time to weep and a time to dance, a time to kill and a time to heal. A time to destroy and a...
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There is a time to be born and a time to die, a time to weep and a time to dance, a time to kill and a time to heal. A time to destroy and a...
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Es interesante revisitar las profecias de escasamente hace 3 años sobre la situación en el mundo -Rusia,...-. Extraigamos conclusiones... ...
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La situación del mercado de Petroleo y Gas Adaptado de un articulo de McKinsey Quarterly (Tim Fitzgibbon and others) Capturing m...
