 The digital transformation is really just beginning and it's a crime candidate for vast new growth. Like any great transformation, the costs are enormous but the benefits are enormous too. More value is out there for society than for industry. But the real costs in terms of jobs, in terms of identity are still to come. So the question we will have to address is how do we help the transformation for those that do not benefit and actually could be subject to changes that are going to be more painful and difficult for them. Every role is going to change. Some are repairing a windmill, some are managing a retail store and some are getting ready for customer meeting. All those roles are going to change because of how information technologies create that change. More and more of our work is being automated. Are we prepared as a society to give our children the skills that they will need to succeed, to thrive? The evolution of digital media on the ubiquitous axis of knowledge is creating a bifurcation between those that have the right skills versus those that have insufficient skills. They are at much greater risk of job replacement or automation. Data scientists are some of the most precious skills in the digital economy of educating and producing more people with the right skills to be data scientists. It requires a lot more collaboration across businesses and with businesses and government and universities and educational systems. It's not until information is brought together the more of it that you have, the more access, the more diversity that's going to make the heart of it some of these transformations that are occurring. You need a trust as a foundation, a trust worthy ecosystem with the consumer at the center of that ecosystem. At the moment you can delete your Facebook account it will still store data about you. I believe that will change. I believe citizens will demand that change in the government. The big data revolution doesn't inevitably destroy privacy. It depends on the business model. How can we reinvent the digital economy so that we aren't the products? The way to disrupt things is to go back to paying for services and products and platforms. One of the biggest challenges we see is for initiatives which are hugely valuable for society but have very low value for industry. Where there is a large value at stake for industry and society that's what we call the true north. The Digital India initiative that's being spearheaded by the local government they have over 200 million people who are joining the financial services sector that means that they have now bank accounts they have access to credit in the last year or so because of technology. We develop tools that enable business and government leaders to make the best decisions to affect health and social outcomes at a large scale. Tools that allow you to see whether you're doing your job creation programs where you actually have the most poverty. Innovation happens everywhere. We have to keep our eyes open and where is the innovation and what the citizens are actually expecting from us. Better, faster, cheaper services, more efficient, seamless. Any disruption that's happening in all the sectors will happen in government and it's happening in government.