From data transformations to practical implementations of generative AI, IT organizations are delivering innovative solutions the help their organizations break with the past and bridge to a brighter future,
Each year, the CIO 100 Awards highlight leading examples of IT innovation and leadership that illustrate the transformative power of technology.
The 100 projects recognized this year come from a range of industries and implement a wide variety of technologies to solve intractable problems, open up new possibilities, and give enterprises a leg up on their competition.
The following 10 award-winning projects showcase the impressive power of IT in the enterprise today and the ingenuity of modern CIOs and their teams, serving as representatives for the cohort of 2024 honorees.
TCS takes intelligent approach to mitigating threats
Organization: Tata Consultancy Services
Project: Machine-First Security Operations Center — Mitigating Cyber Threats
IT leader: Sukanya Santha, CIO at time of project deployment
The volume, velocity, and sophistication of cyberthreats has grown dramatically of late, and IT leaders at Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) — like leaders everywhere — have taken notice. To counter bad actors, TCS decided to deploy automation, artificial intelligence, and machine learning resulting in a more sophisticated, AI-assisted enterprise defense.
“This project represents a transformative initiative designed to address the evolving landscape of cyber threats,” says Kunal Krushev, head of cybersecurity automation and intelligence with the firm’s Corporate IT — Digital Infrastructure Services. “We recognized AI’s potential to revolutionize the digital landscape and understood that the conventional SOC model needed to evolve.”
This project used the Machine First Delivery Model (a digital transformation framework designed by TCS) and advanced AI/ML technologies to introduce bots and intelligent automation workflows that mimic human logic into the company’s security operations center (SOC).
The initiative brought multiple capabilities to the firm’s security operations. It automated and streamlined complex workflows, thereby reducing the risk of errors and enabling analysts to concentrate on more strategic tasks. Its AI/ML-driven predictive analysis enhanced proactive threat hunting and phishing investigations as well as automated case management for swift threat identification. And its intelligent threat learning enables the bot to continuously learn, so it can quickly detect and respond to threats and take mitigative actions independently.
Now fully deployed, TCS is seeing the benefits. The initiative has enhanced coordination, as automation APIs facilitate interaction with security tools as well as streamline coordination and enhance mitigation responses. It has also cut manual analysis time by 70% to 80%, and has reduced alert fatigue, because the automation workflows help prioritize alerts and minimize false positives, thereby enabling analysts focus on genuine security incidents.
Baptist Memorial embraces cloud to ensure resiliency
Organization: Baptist Memorial Health Care
Project: A Cloudy EMR Disaster Recovery Response
IT leader: Tom Barnett, Chief Information and Digital Officer
When Tom Barnett became CIDO at Baptist Memorial Health Care in Memphis, he identified a significant vulnerability: The healthcare system’s data center is located in high-risk fault, flood, and tornado zones.
Barnett recognized the need for a disaster recovery strategy to address that vulnerability and help prevent significant disruptions to the 4 million-plus patients Baptist Memorial serves.
But Barnett, who started work on a strategy in 2023, wanted to continue using Baptist Memorial’s on-premise data center for financial, security, and continuity reasons, so he and his team explored options that allowed for keeping that data center as part of the mix. Options included hosting a secondary data center, outsourcing business continuity to a vendor, and establishing private cloud solutions. Barnett, in collaboration with a consulting firm, ultimately landed on the winning strategy: a mirrored production electronic medical records (EMR) environment in a cloud-hosted infrastructure.
The project’s primary objectives were to maintain 100% functionality of the EMR during planned failover events; achieving a recovery point objective of less than one minute; and meet a recovery time objective of two hours for critical services.
To achieve those objectives, the consulting firm and Baptist Memorial landed on a solution that included full cloud-based infrastructure, 122 interface connections to support clinical data flows, a hybrid high-availability NetScaler infrastructure; dedicated direct-connect circuit/full redundancy; and a security-first model.
The end result, completed in early 2024 and now fully operational, is the data center EMR mirrored in cloud infrastructure. Data, Barnett explains, is “kept in synchronization between the two, so if I disrupt my data center on prem, I can cut over everything to the cloud.”
Homegrown framework revolutionizes API development at Equinix
Organization: Equinix
Project: Project Kernel
IT leader: Milind Wagle, CIO
Equinix, like digital organizations everywhere, recognizes that growth requires secure access to data — and that APIs are the key to enabling that access.
However, managing API implementations across multiple applications, custom solutions, and diverse development teams presents challenges. To address those, Equinix’s Digital Integration Business Services group established a dedicated four-member team to create Project Kernel.
The Project Kernel framework utilizes templates and AI augmentation to streamline coding processes, with the AI augmentation generating test cases using training models built on the organization’s data, use cases, and past test cases.
The system complements preconfigured components, workflows, and libraries. It uses GitHub continuous integration pipelines to automate build and test processes, integrates OpenAPI for code generation, and simplifies deployment through container configurations compatible with Kubernetes, Docker, and Traefik.
Now fully deployed, Project Kernel provides the foundation for developing scalable, efficient microservices-based applications.
The framework “has revolutionized enterprise API development,” says CIO Milind Wagle, who cites several transformative benefits, including improved speed to market and a two- to threefold improvement in developer productivity when building APIs within industry and Equinix standards.
Wagle also says Project Kernel has helped foster a more collaborative and development-focused culture across teams, positively impacting overall organizational growth.
“It has significantly improved developer productivity and code quality, particularly security standards, accelerated time-to-market, and reduced costs while ensuring high code quality and service excellence,” Wagle says. “The framework has fostered innovation and collaboration through an enterprise-wide inner source initiative. Overall, Project Kernel has positioned Equinix for unparalleled success in scalable, efficient, secure, and microservice-based enterprise application development.”
Stanford School of Medicine enhances search experience with gen AI
Organization: Stanford University School of Medicine
Project: Transforming Site Search at Academic Medical Center
IT leader: Michael A. Pfeffer, SVP, CIDO, and Associate Dean of Technology and Digital Solutions
Academic medical institution Stanford University School of Medicine hosts more than 200,000 webpages covering the latest medical advances in conditions, treatments, clinical trials, and research. Doctors, researchers, policymakers, students, patients, and caregivers from around the world visit them.
Although those pages were well used and established, the school’s Technology and Digital Solutions function saw an opportunity to use AI to transform the search experience by employing a next-generation semantic search engine tailored to the needs of various user groups (personas).
The goal was to enable visitors to find what they need more quickly and accurately, improve their overall digital experience, help the institution achieve key digital objectives, and enable the institution to use visitor search to extract and deliver insights to the medical center.
The team opted to use retrieval augmented generation (RAG) in conjunction with a large language model (LLM) to bring more intelligence to the search function. RAG improves the relevance and accuracy of search results, while LLM enhanced the natural language processing capabilities of the search system.
Stanford University School of Medicine launched generative AI search in November 2023, becoming the first academic medical institute to provide such capability.
“This is a new way to interact with the web and search. It’s not just returning a list of webpages, but it’s [giving users] richer content, and the content that’s produced through the generative AI search results allows [users] to go to parts of the web property that is the genesis of that information so they can dig deeper if they want,” says Michael A. Pfeffer, SVP and chief information and digital officer, as well as associate dean and clinical professor of medicine. “It’s an exciting new way of finding information.”
Moderna’s own gen AI product democratizes use of AI across company
Organization: Moderna
Project: mChat (Moderna Chat)
IT leader: Brad Miller, CIO
Moderna quickly seized on the potential of generative AI with its creation mChat. Shorthand for Moderna Chat, mChat is a home-built generative AI client for large language models (LLMs) such as GPT, Claude, and Gemini.
Moderna launched mChat to offer employees access to gen AI models in a highly secure, private, user-friendly interface.
From the start of this initiative, Moderna’s IT leadership recognized the privacy concerns associated with using an external platform such as ChatGPT. So CIO Brad Miller along with head of AI engineering Andrew Giessel and others opted to create an alpha application using OpenAI’s backend API, with a zero data retention architecture to protect the company’s data.
This enabled the team to expose the technology to a small group of senior leaders to test. Following a strict data control and security review and that successful test with senior leaders, the company decided to roll out mChat to all employees just six weeks later.
To help ensure adoption, the company used its AI Academy and created a transformation team to train employees on its use and potential. Such efforts paid off, as nearly half of Moderna employees were actively using mChat within two months after its launch, and nearly 65% just months later. Moreover, that 65% represented nearly all employees who had access to devices that could use mChat.
Moderna, which continues to evolve the application, considers mChat transformational.
“Embedding AI into your workforce by upskilling all employees can lead to a dramatic increase in the value each employee brings, while allowing people to focus on the work that really matters, massively improving productivity,” says Brice Challamel, VP of AI products and platforms at Moderna.
Data transformation gives Neighborly competitive advantage
Organization: Neighborly
Project: A New Analytics Era — a Transformative Journey for the Home Services Industry
IT leader: Amer Waheed, CTO
After using experience and intuition to make decisions for most of its first 40-plus years of existence, Neighborly is embracing a new data platform that enables data-driven decision-making.
The company started its New Analytics Era initiative by migrating its data from outdated SQL servers to a modern AWS data lake. It then built a cutting-edge cloud-based analytics platform, designed with an innovative data architecture. It also crafted multiple machine learning and AI models to tackle business challenges. And it created a new dashboard portal in QuickSight to provide a comprehensive view to track the results of each implemented action. This democratized data and disseminated crucial business insights across the entire organization.
“We created a platform to ingest, process, and get value from the data, so we could understand what the data is telling us,” explains Neighborly CTO Amer Waheed.
Waheed says creating a data science team, led by Karen Nogueira, VP of data and analytics, was instrumental to success. So was articulating the business value the data platform could deliver.
Fully deployed after several years of work, the platform allows Neighborly, a home services company, to detail and understand a customer’s journey and expectations and, thus, enable the company to tailor services to better meet customer needs. Those benefits improve customer satisfaction, support franchise owners, and help Neighborly grow its business.
“The project is really about a whole new way of doing business,” Waheed says.
Nogueira says the new data platform gives Neighborly a competitive advantage, helping the company “increase efficiency, reduce costs, generate more revenue, and ultimately get results faster.”
Novva’s water-free cooling system improves data center sustainability, performance
Organization: Novva Data Centers
Project: Colorado Springs Data Center’s Innovative Water-Free Cooling System Saves Millions of Gallons of Water Annually
IT leader: Steve Boyce, Vice President of Mission Critical
Novva Data Centers struck success for sustainability at its Colorado Springs facility by implementing a proprietary water-free cooling system.
The company used elevated floors, surrounding air, and heat exchange coils to create a system that cools the facility’s servers without wasting water. The system recycles heated air through heat exchange coils or uses refrigerant in a closed loop to convert it back to cold air. It also takes advantage of cooler nighttime temperatures, utilizing ambient air cooling for 75% to 80% of the year; it uses a hybrid system that combines ambient air with the water-free cooling technology to optimize efficiency for the remaining 20% to 25% of the year.
Novva calculates that its system saves between 150 and 200 million gallons of water annually that would otherwise have been needed to cool its facility. The accomplishment is particularly significant given concerns about the rapid depletion of water in Colorado River and proposed cuts in water usage in that region.
“Water is a huge resource, and we want to do what we can to conserve it,” says Jared Coleman, automation and controls manager for Novva. He notes that the system not only saves resources but also has improved data center performance. “This project really exemplifies how we do business. You don’t have to exploit the environment for business, and business doesn’t have to suffer because of environmental conscience.”
Novva’s approach goes against conventional designs among data centers, which have — and usually still do — use water as part of their primary cooling method, a practice that often stresses local resources and has raised concerns among stakeholders who want to or are required to track their environmental footprints.
Novva had first deployed its water-free cooling system at its Utah campus. Coleman says it plans to implement this system at all of its data centers.
OHLA taps AI for insurance compliance to reduce risks, yield savings
Organization: OHLA USA
Project: Leveraging AI & Automation to Achieve Subcontractor Insurance Compliance
IT leader: Srivatsan Raghavan, CIO
OHLA USA, a $1.2B company specializing in infrastructure projects, manages dozens of projects with hundreds of subcontractors performing about a third of the work. The company handles 700-plus claims annually, and it relies on insurance to mitigate financial risks.
Despite the criticality of insurance in the industry, OHLA found its longstanding insurance tracking system and the manual input work it required created both efficiency and risk concerns. Executives estimated those issues could result in millions of dollars in noncompliance costs.
So OHLA set out to replace the custom-built software it used to manage its insurance tracking with a modernized process. It sought to re-engineer the workflow and integrate process automation with artificial intelligence to transform how it handles insurance compliance.
The new system, deployed in 2023, eliminates the need for project managers to manually enter insurance certificate details. Process automation extracts email attachments, and a custom AI model extracts and saves policy details in a database.
Additionally, it offers a UI that the risk department can use for storing policy requirements and baseline limits as well as for comparing policies against those baselines. This capability allows the department to promptly identify deviations and quickly alert stakeholders.
CIO Srivatsan Raghavan says his team leaned on its experience and learnings from prior AI-enabled projects to envision the significant improvements that AI could bring to the insurance compliance function.
“We are looking for good ROI use cases for AI, and we saw this as a worthy use case to chase,” he adds.
Indeed, the company has reaped big returns. The new system reduces administrative workload and minimizes the risk of errors and noncompliance, thereby enhancing operational efficiency and risk management. OHLA estimates the new system will reduce the subcontractor noncompliance rate from 10% to 2%, yielding a potential yearly savings of $4.4 million.
New Putnam platform accelerates application development
Organization: Putnam Investments, now Franklin Templeton
Project: Putnam Investments Cloud-First DevOps Test Data Management Platform to Deliver World-Class Digital Customer Experiences
IT leader: Sumedh Mehta, CIO at time of project
Digital leadership at Putnam Investments (which was acquired by Franklin Templeton in January 2024) recognized the need for development teams to deliver software at a speed that matched the changing needs of its customers.
So it tasked the engineering team with developing a new technology architecture, with tools and processes to enable innovation and change at speed. The company sought to use higher levels of automation to develop and release software in a continuous improvement and continuous delivery (CI/CD) cycle.
The result: a cloud DevOps test data management platform that enables teams to rapidly stand up new data environments.
“We were after a quick and cost-effective way to provide quality testing data to investment users and technology associates,” says Joseph Gaffney, who sponsored and directed this project at Putnam Investments and is now VP of IT at Franklin Templeton.
“This project was transformative because we were able to give our business users and agile technology teams access to quality data in a matter of minutes versus days,” he adds. “The biggest benefit is the agility it provides our business users and technology teams to continually improve and move fast. There is no more waiting around for quality data. So, from a software development perspective, the ROI is huge. Developers get access to production quality data whenever they need it. This greatly increases our time to market. From a cloud cost perspective, the Delphix data virtualization has helped us realize significant cost savings in way of storage. We no longer need physical databases with storage attached in our test environment.”
Gaffney says Franklin Templeton now uses the platform to help with its integration projects.
Regeneron turns to data to accelerate drug discovery and development
Organization: Regeneron Pharmaceuticals
Project: Centralized Data Platform: Using Data to Uplift Science
IT leader: Bob McCowan, SVP and CIO
Data is critical for drug discovery, development, and commercialization. As such, Regeneron employees need to access and analyze data from multiple sources to help them reduce experiments, streamline workflows, and improve process understanding and control.
However, data silos, data integration, limitations in data findability, a lack of common data vocabulary, variation in data management practices, and other issues presented challenges for employees looking to access and use data to advance their work and the company’s objectives.
Consequently, Regeneron saw the need to overhaul its data management practices to better allow workers to derive actionable insights and make data-driven decisions more efficiently in near real-time.
“Our data was in the jail and we needed to liberate it,” says Hussain Tameem, associate director, solution partner, with Regeneron Research & Preclinical Development IT (RAPD-IT). “We wanted to bring in data from diverse sources and make it available consistently to all users so that it can support their work.”
To do that, Regeneron created the Centralized Data Platform (CDP), a cloud solution that leverages data lake and data catalog technologies as well as AI and machine learning to enable a unified approach to data access, governance, integration, and analytics across the company’s Preclinical Manufacturing & Process Development and Good Manufacturing Practicing teams.
The platform automates lengthy data processing steps, enables scientists to analyze data efficiently, and increases process insights. It also supports process development, technology transfer, and manufacturing process improvement — all of which supports the company’s mission of bringing new medicines to patients.
And it dramatically reduces the time and effort that data scientists spend requesting and organizing data, giving them more time to actually analyze it.
“This platform makes high-quality data available in a way that people could start interrogating it,” says SVP and CIO Bob McCowan. “Information that we weren’t able to see is now very visible, and now we can drive significant value from it.”
More US CIO 100 Award winners
The following articles provide an in-depth look at these and more of our 2024 US CIO 100 Award winning projects:
- The AES Corp.: “AES enlists AI to boost its sustainable energy business”
Alejandro Reyes, AES Clean Energy Chief Digital Officer - Chipotle: “Robots make a smash in Chipotle kitchens”
Curt Garner, Chief Technology & Consumer Officer - Dow: “Data literacy, governance keys to transformation at Dow”
Melanie Kalmar, CIO - Expion Health: “Expion Health revamps its RFP process with AI”
Suresh Kumar, Chief Transformation Officer, Mergers & Acquisitions - King County: “King County enlists AI to reduce drug overdose deaths”
Megan Clarke, CIO - Marine Depot Maintenance Command: “Marine Corps enlists RPA, 5G, and AR/VR to retool fighting force”
George Lamkin, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-6 - The MITRE Group: “Going ‘AI native’ with in-house ChatGPT the MITRE way”
Deborah Youmans, Vice President and CIO - The Mosaic Company: “Mosaic builds a global IT foundation for growth”
Jeff Wysocki, CIO and Vice President - TIAA: “TIAA modernizes the customer journey with AI”
Sastry Durvasula, Chief Information & Client Services Officer - Tractor Supply Co.: “Tractor Supply enlists AI to deliver ‘legendary’ customer service”
Rob Mills, EVP, CTO, Digital Strategy - UPS: “UPS delivers customer wins with generative AI”
Bala Subramanian, Chief Digital and Technology Officer - US Med-Equip: “US Med-Equip eases hospital pain point with AI, RPA”
Antonio Marin, CIO - Full list of 2024 CIO 100 Award Winners
Read More from This Article: CIO 100 Award winners drive business results with IT
Source: News