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The magic “I” of CIO sparks many imaginations: Chief information officer, chief infrastructure officer , Chief Integration Officer, chief International officer, Chief Inspiration Officer, Chief Innovation Officer, Chief Influence Office etc. The future of CIO is entrepreneur driven, situation oriented, value-added,she or he will take many paradoxical roles: both as business strategist and technology visionary,talent master and effective communicator,savvy business enabler and relentless cost cutter, and transform the business into "Digital Master"!

The future of CIO is digital strategist, global thought leader, and talent master: leading IT to enlighten the customers; enable business success via influence.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Innovation

 Breakthrough innovation is the most important concept in innovation because it can demonstrate virtually all real economic growth or societal progress which is driven by disruptions.

Innovation is about figuring out alternative ways to do things. “Innovation breakthrough” isn’t just a technical event—it’s a boundary-crossing process where new value is created by integrating what usually stays separate: disciplines, incentives, timelines, and even cultures of thinking.


 Scientific breakthrough vs. engineered breakthrough: Science-oriented view: A breakthrough happens when a new explanation, method, or measurement makes the “possible” region expand.


Engineering/industrial view: A breakthrough happens when that new capability is made reliable, scalable, and manufacturable—turning insight into a repeatable system. Labs can be decisive; factories can be decisive later. Breakthrough often requires both, but each domain defines “success” differently.

Disruptive invention vs. sustaining improvement: “Breakthrough” is  the moment recognition happens, not the moment the work begins.

-Disruptive lens: Breakthroughs often arrive when a new approach doesn’t fit by incumbent standards, then improves quickly and escapes the old constraints.


-Sustaining lens: Many breakthroughs are incremental on the surface but transformative in accumulation—new architectures, better tooling, reduced failure modes, or new workflows.

Cognitive breakthrough vs. organizational breakthrough

-Individual cognition: A creative breakthrough can look like an aha moment—pattern recognition, reframing, or an unusual analogy.


-Collective systems: In reality, breakthroughs depend on team coordination: knowledge transfer, decision rights, risk tolerance, and feedback cycle.


-Cross-boundary takeaway: The mind may generate the hypothesis, but the organization determines whether the hypothesis becomes reality.

Tech feasibility vs. market value: A breakthrough often fails not because it can’t work, but because it can’t fit:

-usability and integration,

-procurement realities,

-incentives,

-trust, compliance, and liability,

distribution channels.
 

Boundary crossed: from “can we build it?” to “who choose it (and keep choosing it)?”

- Local optimization vs. ecosystem transformation

-Local optimization: teams improve one module, one product, one metric.

-Ecosystem transformation: breakthroughs reshape ecosystem—partners, platforms, standards, and even regulations.

True breakthroughs reconfigure constraints across the system, not just performance within a component. The pace of change is significantly increasing, innovation is the only path and the core activity of human evolution to change the environment for unlocking performance. Breakthrough innovation is the most important concept in innovation because it can demonstrate virtually all real economic growth or societal progress which is driven by disruptions.


Innerconnection of Real-Self & Real Value

 When you live as your real self, you stop pretending and start true understanding.

In the world full of truth and false, “real self” is who you are when you’re not trying to impress anyone. It’s your true identity—your thoughts, ideas, motives, values, and habits—especially the parts you don’t show for approval. The real self isn’t just a personality; it’s a pattern of choices and a set of principles and practices.

A real self is consistent. You act the same way in private and in public. You don’t compromise your principles when it becomes inconvenient. You also don’t pretend to be someone else—your strengths are real, your weaknesses are real, and you’re able to grow. It includes honesty with yourself:

-Knowing what you believe (not just what sounds good).

-Understanding what you want (not what you’re chasing for status).

-Accepting who you are today while choosing who you can become next.

Real character is not a performance. It is what keeps when nobody is watching—choices made in private that still show up in public. Real value is not measured by applause, status, or convenience; it is measured by integrity, responsibility, and the way we treat others when it costs us something. And real difference is not created by grand promises; it is built through consistent action, especially in hard moments.

When character is real, we become reliable. We keep our word, admit mistakes, and make committed to what is right even when it is uncomfortable. That kind of character creates trust—trust that cannot be faked for long. When value is real, we stop addiction to empty wins and start investing in what lasts: education, process, discipline, and service. Finally, when difference is real, it shows in outcomes—stronger relationships, better communities, and progress that outlives our own mood or moment.

“Real value” means the things that genuinely matter—not what merely looks impressive. It’s value that holds its meaning over time, not just in the moment. You can chase attention, followers, or praise, but those are often temporary. Real value is deeper: it shapes who you become and how you affect others. Here are key features of real value:

-It is internal, not performative. Real value is built on integrity, humility, and self-control. Someone with real value doesn’t only speak well—they live well, even when there’s no reward.

-It survives pressure. Incentive, power, and popularity can tempt people to compromise. Real value stays steady under stress—when it’s inconvenient, when others disagree, or when the outcome is uncertain.

-It benefits others, directly or indirectly. Real value doesn’t require harming people to succeed. It may be expressed through insightful words, fairness, craftsmanship, or care for humanity.

-It produces long-term results. Real value can be slow to show, but it compounds. Skills grow, reputations strengthen, and trust accumulates. Empty value fades quickly and leaves you empty too.

-It matches actions with words. Real value is consistent. If you say one thing but do another, your “value” is just an incoherent label.

When you live as your real self, you stop pretending and start real understanding. That doesn’t mean you never change—it means you change with truth, not disguise. In the end, real character gives us a foundation, real value gives us direction, and being real is crucial to shape fitting mindset and build unique competency.


Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Global Society

A cross-disciplinary approach clarifies that contemporary global society is a system of interacting dimensions: economic incentives, political impact, social value, cultural heritage, technological infrastructure, and environmental sustainability.

Contemporary global society is shaped by forces that no single discipline can fully explain. To understand it, we need cross-disciplinary perspectives that connect how economies function, how people are organized, how culture spreads, how technology reshapes everyday life, and how environments limit human choices. 
Together, these lenses reveal a world that is increasingly interconnected—but also uneven, contested, and fragile.

From a sociological perspective, The global society is experienced through everyday dynamics. Social stratification, identity formation, and social mobility are influenced by emerging technologies, global media, education systems, and labor markets. 


Even as people share information across countries, they do not share outcomes equally. Inequality often becomes cultural barriers, affecting trust, belonging, and perceptions of fairness.


Technology-focused discipline: It involves such as computer science, information studies, and engineering—help explain how power increasingly runs through infrastructure. 


Algorithms shape what people see, platforms mediate economic opportunity, and data flows influence both commerce and governance. This raises questions about privacy, bias, surveillance, and who benefits from innovation. Technological change also reshapes work, requiring new skills and transforming labor relations.


A cultural and communication lens: It shows how meaning travels globally through media, language, and social platforms. Cultural exchange can expand understanding and creativity, but it can also intensify conflict by misinterpretation, spreading stereotypes or amplifying misinformation. Digital communication creates new forms of community, while also bringing safety concerns 


From an economic viewpoint: The globalization has intensified flows of capital, goods, and labor, accelerating growth in some regions while causing inequality in others. Trade networks and financial systems can accelerate development, yet they perhaps also increase vulnerability to shocks—such as value-chain disruptions or sudden shifts in interest rates. 


Economics also highlights how incentives influence behavior at both national and corporate levels, shaping decisions on employment and investment.


A political science lens: It emphasizes that connectivity does not automatically produce cooperation. States manage borders, security, and sovereignty while navigating uncertainty and rival alliances. 


Domestic pressures—such as populism or polarization—often influence foreign policy, leading to tensions between global interdependence and national priorities. Migration, climate negotiations, and digital regulation all show how governance struggles to keep pace with fast-changing realities.


Finally, an environmental and public health perspective: It shows that ecological constraints are not separate from social systems. Climate change affects migration, food security, disease patterns, and disaster risk, turning environmental problems into social and political challenges. Sustainability therefore becomes not only a scientific goal but a governance and justice issue.


A cross-disciplinary approach clarifies that contemporary global society is a system of interacting dimensions: economic incentives, political impact, social inequality, cultural communication, technological infrastructure, and environmental sustainability. When viewed together, these perspectives move beyond single-cause explanations and provide a more realistic picture of why global change is uneven, why conflict persists, and why solutions require coordination across fields. 


Understanding global society today means understanding the interconnections—between people, institutions, and the planet in order to harness cross boundary collaboration and overcome common challenges.



Truth, Trust, Technology

Truth and trust can be discovered, understood, tested and applied by technology.

Truth is an idea we want to reach, trust is the relationship that helps us act on it, and technology is the system that increasingly mediates both. In earlier eras, most information moved through relatively slow channels—newspapers, conversations, letters—so verification happened over time and within communities. 


Today, information arrives instantly, can be transmitted almost realtime, and spreads globally before many people can check it. That speed and scale do not automatically diminish truth, but they do change the conditions under which truth becomes believable and useful.


So the real question is not whether technology can deliver truth. It can clarify and refine truth, setting it as a governance principle. The deeper question is: What must we build so that technology helps society maintain trust in truthful information—and protects us from false certainty?


Truth-What It Means When Everything Is Shareable: Truth can be understood in different ways—scientific truth as testable knowledge, moral truth as principles we aim to live by, historical truth as evidence-based accounts of what happened. Regardless of type, truth has something in common: it must be grounded.


Trust-The Bridge Between Information and Action: Trust is not the same thing as truth, but it is how we operate around truth. We often cannot independently verify everything. In daily life we trust engineers, policemen, doctors, farmers, librarians, researchers, etc—ideally because they have earned it through competence, ethics, and accountability.


Technology: Neutral Tools That Change the Game: Technology is often described as neutral: “it depends how you use it.” That is partially true. But technology is also structuring: it shapes incentives, behaviors, and what becomes easy versus difficult.


Truth and trust can be discovered, understood, tested and applied by technology. Modern tools can magnify misinformation and speed up persuasion. But they can also improve verification, transparency, and access to credible knowledge—if we design and govern them with truth as a real priority.


Broad or Narrow: Which Path Is the Best Fit?

 The most insightful career advice isn’t about choosing a perfect path—it’s about choosing a path you can revise and thrive.

People have different innate talents and receive different training. They also have different perspectives of the career journey.  Many like certainty—especially about careers. But some have a strong drive to take adventure. So people need to ask themselves by understanding their strength and preference:
Do I go straight or cursive? broad or narrow? 

As real professional life rarely behaves like a tidy checklist. Career paths are better understood as a set of compatible choices rather than a single “best” format. The most useful question isn’t which style is superior, but which style fits your strengths, learning habits, risk tolerance, and the kind of life you want to build.

The straight vs. cursive, broad vs. narrow: Straight” suggests linearity: clear milestones, step-by-step advancement, and a path that can be followed with less ambiguity. 

-“Cursive” suggests fluidity: movement between skills, improvisation, and building a recognizable shape through iteration rather than a straight line.

-“Broad” suggests exploration and versatility—developing wide competence across domains. “Narrow” suggests depth—mastering a specific craft or niche so thoroughly that you become hard to replace.

Most careers are not purely one thing. Like calligraphy, they mix shapes: sometimes straight lines for precision, sometimes curves for expression. The best fit is the mix that matches both your temperament and the realities of your field.

When a straight path is the best fit: A straight-line career often works best when:

-The field is structured. Some traditional paths reward credentials and staged progression more than experimentation.

-You prefer clarity. If you feel calmer with defined goals, standardized training, and predictable feedback loops, a straight path reduces anxiety.

-Your advantage compounds over time. In professions where experience builds on experience, early alignment can be a major asset.

-You can tolerate fewer detours. Straight paths require commitment. If you dislike prolonged uncertainty, choose fewer variables early.

However, straight paths come with a hidden cost: you may become efficient at the path, bit you feel tedious about what you do, and lack passion for the work. The risk isn’t only “missing out,” but also becoming too locked-in to notice a better fit before it’s too late.

When cursive is the best fit: Cursive- style careers fit people who thrive on:

-Transferable learning. If you learn quickly from variety—projects, collaboration, and shifting contexts—you may benefit from moving between roles.

-Creative problem-solving. Many modern careers reward the ability to connect ideas rather than to follow a single script.

-Analysis and synthesis. Cursive careers often rely on relationships and the ability to reinvent your role inside a changing environment.

-Iterative identity-building. If you enjoy discovering who you are through work, the dynamic career is not a flaw—it’s a journey to pursue life purpose.

Yet cursive paths can also blur into drift. Without intentional direction, exploration becomes permanent uncertainty. Cursive requires navigation: you need anchors (values, capabilities, and goals) so your career doesn’t become a series of interesting detours that never accumulate into momentum.

Broad paths: the power of agility: A broad career can be a powerful advantage in unpredictable times. It’s often best when:

-You’re still learning what you love. Breadth is a way to gather evidence.

-Your field changes quickly. Technology, strategy, and interdisciplinary work reward flexibility.

-You want options. Broad skills help you pivot when industries shift or personal priorities change.

-You enjoy connecting the dots. Some of the best professionals are versatile —people who can operate across boundaries.

The downside of broadness is that depth may lag. Without deliberate skill-building, broad career paths can lead to being “okay at many things,” but not undeniable at one.

Narrow paths: depth as leverage: A narrow career path can create strong leverage because deep expertise:

Become a reputation. People trust specialists who are consistently excellent.

Compound skill. Professionalism grows through repeated practice, feedback, and problem-solving in one domain.

Improve influence. Depth often earns credibility, and better access to specific problems. The risk is over-identification. Narrow paths might trap you in a niche that shrinks, changes, or gets disrupted. If you choose narrow too early—before you truly understand what you want and what the market needs—you perhaps become deeply skilled in something that no longer sustains your goals.

The real question: which combination fits you? Think of “straight vs. cursive” as about how you move, and “broad vs. narrow” as about what you accumulate. The best fit often depends on four factors:

-Your learning style: Do you learn best through structured progression (straight, narrow) or through exploration and iteration (cursive, broad)?

-Your tolerance for uncertainty: If uncertainty drains motivation, start with clearer scaffolding. If uncertainty energizes you, you may tolerate cursive and breadth longer.

-Your time horizon: Short-term stability often favors straight + narrow. Long-term reinvention may favor cursive + broad—especially early on.

-Your values: If meaning and autonomy matter most, breadth and fluid movement can preserve choice. If impact through specialism matters most, depth and specialization can deliver it.

A practical framework: “explore broadly, specialize gradually” Many people overcorrect into extremes: they either commit too soon or chase endless variety. A more resilient approach is:

-Start broad to build evidence. Try related roles, learn fundamentals, and pay attention to what energizes you.

-Keep a straight spine while you explore. Even in a cursive career, you need an anchor: a core interest, skill, or mission.

-Specialize based on proof, not pressure. Narrow down when you have data—feedback, results, and genuine curiosity—not just fear or social expectation.

Stay flexible in how you apply depth. Once you’re specialized, it’s still possible to connect your niche to adjacent problems. This approach uses breadth to discover and depth to create leverage, while keeping your career both stable enough to progress and flexible enough to evolve.

In fact, there is no single best path—only the best fit: Straight or cursive, broad or narrow” is not a competition between good and bad. It’s a question of matching career design to your strengths and the dynamics of your world.

-Choose straight when clarity, structure, and compounding experience will empower you.

-Choose cursive when discovery, iteration, and reinvention will help you grow.

-Choose broad when you need options and cross-domain competence to find your niche.

-Choose narrow when depth will turn effort into recognition and influence.

The most insightful career advice isn’t about choosing a perfect path—it’s about choosing a path you can revise and thrive. Careers that last are the ones that combine direction with agility, go broad and dig deep dynamically.