Leveraging real-time project insights and cross-functional collaboration, HGC aligned scattered teams and resources around strategic goals. The result: Faster decisions, full visibility across initiatives, and fewer internal silos, driving long-term impact with unified execution. All in one platform.
<text-weight-semibold>How can we ensure that the available financial and human resources in the area of ICT and innovation are used in a way that achieves the strategic goals?<text-weight-semibold>
We had an idea of how we wanted to implement this and, in the CIN platform, we found a possible tool that would make this possible.
Trends, issues, and project ideas are to be assessed and evaluated by the Enterprise Architecture Board in an ongoing cycle. Following a positive assessment, the projects to be developed are included in Enterprise Project Portfolio Management (EPPM), prioritized, and roughly scheduled.
Linked to strategic initiatives, this creates a network of interrelationships and dependencies.

<text-weight-xbold>Easy creation and evaluation:<text-weight-xbold>
Trends, questions, and project ideas can be easily mapped, filled with the most important aspects, and evaluated.
<text-weight-xbold>Impact mapping:<text-weight-xbold>
It can show which project ideas and projects have what impact on which strategic initiative. This also simplifies project prioritization.
<text-weight-xbold>Linking strategy and innovation:<text-weight-xbold>
Strategic work is linked to trends, which promotes a company's innovation and optimizes interdisciplinary collaboration.
<text-weight-xbold>Improved communication:<text-weight-xbold>
The CIN platform simplifies communication and understanding within management regarding strategic projects and EPPM projects.
HGC’s story isn’t unique. In a world where most companies fail to act on trends before competitors do, the difference between thriving and surviving boils down to 3 questions:
- Can you spot the right signals in the noise?
- Can your teams align on what matters?
- Can you pivot fast enough to matter?