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Belgium 13-11-25 Country Members Physical english
The Role of the Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) The role of the Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) is no longer confined to securing the network perimeter. As organisations become more digitally connected and data-driven, the CISO’s responsibilities have expanded far beyond traditional security measures. Today’s CISO must not only defend against cyber threats but also enable the business to innovate securely, manage complex regulatory environments, and instill a culture of trust across the organisation. This event will explore the evolving role of the CISO as a strategic leader who balances security with business enablement. As digital transformation accelerates, how can CISOs align their security strategies with organisational goals, ensure compliance, and lead their teams in the fight against increasingly sophisticated threats? Key Discussion Points: From Gatekeeper to Strategic Partner: How CISOs can shift from being seen as barriers to innovation to becoming key enablers of business agility and transformation through security. Balancing Risk and Innovation: Learn how top CISOs navigate the delicate balance between mitigating risk and supporting the organisation’s need to innovate and scale in a secure environment. Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC): Explore how CISOs are managing an increasingly complex regulatory landscape, ensuring compliance while still driving business objectives forward. Building a Security-First Culture: Practical strategies for CISOs to foster a culture where security is embedded into every part of the business, from boardroom discussions to frontline operations. CISO as Crisis Manager: How to prepare for and lead your organisation through major cybersecurity incidents. From ransomware attacks to data breaches, we’ll discuss how today’s CISO is as much a crisis manager as they are a strategist. Why You Should Attend: As a CISO, your role is evolving faster than ever before. This event is designed to provide you with actionable insights into how to embrace your expanded responsibilities while keeping your organisation safe and secure. Whether you’re focused on aligning security with business goals, navigating regulatory challenges, or leading in times of crisis, this event will equip you with the strategies to lead the next era of cybersecurity.
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Belgium 18-11-25 Squad Only Physical english
Too often, architecture is drawn top-down, neat boxes, elegant flows, and little connection to the way teams really work. But what if we flipped it? What if our systems evolved from the actual processes, pains, and needs that drive the business? If you’re tired of systems that look good on slides but frustrate in practice, this session will ground the conversation where value is created, at the process level.
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Belgium 18-11-25 Invitation Only Physical english
As businesses navigate increasing demands for agility and digital transformation, aligning IT strategies with business goals is essential for success. This roundtable will bring together CIOs, CTOs, and Digital Leaders to explore how to develop and manage IT Operating Models that effectively support business objectives. The discussion will focus on the key components of an IT Operating Model, including people, processes, technology, and governance, and the importance of agility in today’s fast-paced environment.
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November 18, 2025 Squad Session Squad Only Physical english
Too often, architecture is drawn top-down, neat boxes, elegant flows, and little connection to the way teams really work. But what if we flipped it? What if our systems evolved from the actual processes, pains, and needs that drive the business? If you’re tired of systems that look good on slides but frustrate in practice, this session will ground the conversation where value is created, at the process level.
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November 20, 2025 Squad Session Squad Only Virtual english
You can’t build a smart service without smart data. And you can’t access smart data without trust. Across Europe, industries are trying to make this work, through data spaces, standardisation, and new governance frameworks. But progress is slow. If you’re part of a sector with potential for shared intelligence, but stuck in silos, this session will challenge assumptions and explore practical pathways.
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November 25, 2025 Squad Session Squad Only Virtual english
Compliance is no longer about checklists. It’s about system design. With the EU AI Act approaching, and GDPR enforcement tightening, organisations must embed legal and ethical boundaries deep into how they build, deploy, and monitor technology. If your AI and data projects feel increasingly legal, this session will help you redesign the bridge between policy and platform.
Read MoreMcLaren Racing fast-tracks data analytics in the race to accelerate
McLaren Racing, a Formula 1 powerhouse, leverages Alteryx to transform vast datasets into actionable insights. By automating data processes and enabling rapid analysis, McLaren enhances car design, manufacturing, and race performance. Alteryx empowers data-driven decision-making, optimizing budgets and driving innovation across the organization.
Fifty years ago, Bruce McLaren hand-picked a small group of engineers to design and build racing cars. Today, McLaren Racing has achieved 20 Formula 1 World Championships, 182 Grand Prix victories, and now employs over 800 people. McLaren’s successful racing heritage has been driven by a relentless desire to innovate, and they have consistently led the way in the development of groundbreaking technologies by engaging in strategic technology partnerships to improve performance.
With over 20 race weekends in the Formula 1 calendar, each generating 1.5 TB of data, the ability to collect, process, and act on that data is crucial. The team at McLaren Racing uses the Alteryx Analytics Automation Platform to accelerate strategic decision-making both on and off the track.
“IT plays a huge role in how we operate as a standard commercial entity and how we compete,” says Dan Keyworth, Director of Business Technology at McLaren Racing. “Everything we do across the three key verticals of design, build, and race is completely data-driven. Taking data parameters from something that is moving at high speed and figuring out how to engineer it to be better or go faster provides a competitive edge. Advanced analytics with Alteryx underpin this.”
With 80,000 components on a Formula 1 car and 90% of the car changing over the course of the race season, the ability to analyze effectively across the three verticals of design, build, and race is hugely important.
An average of 30 million race simulations are run to test every scenario of how each race will play out. The data to produce these simulations comes from multiple sources, including high-performance compute, the wind tunnel, computational fluid dynamics (CFD), and even data on the drivers themselves. As Edward Green, Head of Commercial Technology at McLaren Racing explains, “Alteryx allows the fast combination and correlation of those data sets so the teams can focus on what changes they can make that will improve performance iteratively across the course of the season.”
In the production phase, data on each car part is generated from the McLaren factory floor or from multiple external suppliers. The data will often be in differing formats, making it a challenge to understand and track costs. Alteryx automates the collection and processing of these varied data sets to accurately track production inventory and performance of parts.
Operating under a cost-cap does restrict the decision to move forward with the production of a part. To help inform build decisions, the McLaren team simulates the part virtually and uses computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to model the air flow through a virtual part on a car. The Formula 1 governing body regulates CFD run-times, so this process must be as efficient as possible. If a part passes through these testing processes, McLaren will produce the part and put that into the wind tunnel phase for more testing. Yet more data is generated, and if the part performs well in testing, the decision will be made to manufacture.
“On a race weekend, the data collected from that part will be combined with the other sensor parameters to test how it performed at scale,” says Green. “With Alteryx, we can combine the physical, virtual, and race world data to create optimal efficiency and build the most performant race-car possible.”
At the start of a race weekend, each race car has 300 telemetry sensors on board generating 100,000 parameters of information, including engine levels, fuel capacity, temperature, or even the amount of G-force the drivers will feel going into corners. This data is processed track-side using Alteryx and surfaced in real time to the driver engineers (speaking directly to the driver), and to the pit wall, where the leadership team and race strategy team sit. Allowing this data to flow seamlessly enables near real-time decision-making from a team that continues to challenge for podium positions, as demonstrated by their P1 and P2 finishes the Italian Grand Prix in September 2021.
The data analysis does not stop at the track. There are 30 people based at the McLaren Racing HQ in Surrey, England, performing more analysis on parts tested in the practice races on the Friday before race day and correlating this with the data that was collected during digital testing of the car. The McLaren team uses aero model correlation with Alteryx to analyze the delta between how a part performed on the track versus how it was expected to perform. Decisions are then made on the level of trackside tuning to get the best performance from a part.
When operating under a stringent cost-cap, every opportunity to control operating costs and streamline efficiencies is crucial. Keyworth is particularly impressed with the predictive analytics capabilities in Alteryx. “We can use the analytics tools to form a predictive picture on how much attrition we are likely to incur under certain conditions or on certain types of tracks. The insight is then used to decide how many spares to manufacture. Rather than go and manufacture ten, we can build what we are likely to use, which is also important from a sustainability perspective.”
From 2021, all Formula 1 teams are operating under a strict budget cap of $145M enforced by the governing body for world motor sport, the FIA. Such changes tend to either challenge organizations or bring out a competitive edge. For McLaren, the budget cap was an opportunity to assess innovative technologies that would help them control operating costs while driving performance enhancements. Green saw the potential for the Alteryx Platform to consolidate data from multiple disparate sources and enable data-led decision making at scale.“My job is to provide IT tools and platforms that make our business more efficient. By implementing a low-code analytics platform, we can free all our business users from the pain of data-wrangling and enable them to focus on outputs that drive our ultimate goal of winning races.”
“What impressed me with Alteryx was the speed of deployment and the ‘bring your own data’ upskilling model,” says Green. “Instead of sitting in hours of workshops working on dummy data, our teams were able to show up with live scenarios and test the capabilities of the Platform straight away.”
The “co-piloting” method of upskilling puts the technology into the hands of users early on and, with the support of the Alteryx solutions engineers, it was easy to identify use cases across the McLaren Racing business functions. The code-friendly interface allowed deployment into the digital transformation team, along with marketing, software and IT, and aerodynamics.
“Alteryx is changing mindsets around how our people use data to solve problems. With the implications of the cost-cap, this change is super important,” says Green.
Taking data parameters from something that is moving at high speed and figuring out how to engineer it to be better or go faster provides a competitive edge. Advanced analytics with Alteryx underpin this.
Dan Keyworth
Director of Business Technology, McLaren Racing
McLaren
The capabilities of Alteryx go beyond the sport of motor racing, and McLaren is also using the Alteryx Platform to enhance efficiencies and strengthen insights operationally in the finance and marketing departments.
Formula 1 fans are renowned for being the most loyal and passionate in the sports industry. The geospatial capabilities in Alteryx provide a deeper layer of understanding to fan data. By correlating fan and lifestyle partner location data, the marketing teams can create new engagement opportunities.
“If a lifestyle partner has a location in a city which happens to be near where many of our fans are based, we may decide to hold an event at that facility,” explains Keyworth. “It is meaningful to be able to innovate and bring our fans closer to the sport, especially in the wake of a global pandemic.”
For their finance teams, the Alteryx Platform is creating deeper alignments with the business from a regulatory and commercial point of view. “We are a standard commercial entity heavily driven by financial and legal processes, and there is a lot of data involved in all of those things,” says Keyworth. “Alteryx not only has a large customer base in the financial industry, but a raft of strategic partners who can assist with very specific financial problems. We are excited to see the Alteryx capabilities continue to strengthen alignment and agility across the McLaren Racing organization.”
With Alteryx, the physical, virtual, and race world data can be combined to create optimal efficiency and build the most performant race car possible.
Edward Green
Head of Commercial Technology at McLaren Racing
McLaren
The team can track performance at every stage and make fast data-led enhancements
Teams across the business can use data to make an impact regardless of coding background
Advanced analytics enables performance and compliance in a new era of racing
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Digital Transformation is redefining the future of health care and health delivery. All stakeholders are convinced that these innovations will create value for patients, healthcare practitioners, hospitals, and governments along the patient pathway. The benefits are starting from prevention and awareness to diagnosis, treatment, short- and long-term follow-up, and ultimately survival. But how do you make sure that your working towards an architecturally sound, secure and interoperable health IT ecosystem for your hospital and avoid implementing a hodgepodge of spot solutions? How does your IT department work together with the other stakeholders, such as the doctors and other healthcare practitioners, Life Sciences companies, Tech companies, regulators and your internal governance and administrative bodies?
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The Telenet Business Leadership Circle powered by CIONET, offers a platform where IT executives and thought leaders can meet to inspire each other and share best practices. We want to be a facilitator who helps you optimise the performance of your IT function and your business by embracing the endless opportunities that digital change brings.
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Découvrez la dynamique du leadership numérique aux Rencontres de CIONET, le programme francophone exclusif de CIONET pour les leaders numériques en Belgique, rendu possible grâce au soutien et à l'engagement de nos partenaires de programme : Deloitte, Denodo et Red Hat. Rejoignez trois événements inspirants par an à Liège, Namur et en Brabant Wallon, où des CIOs et des experts numériques francophones de premier plan partagent leurs perspectives et expériences sur des thèmes d'affaires et de IT actuels. Laissez-vous inspirer et apprenez des meilleurs du secteur lors de sessions captivantes conçues spécialement pour soutenir et enrichir votre rôle en tant que CIO pair. Ne manquez pas cette opportunité de faire partie d'un réseau exceptionnel d'innovateurs numériques !
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CIONET is committed to highlighting and celebrating female role models in IT, Tech & Digital, creating a leadership programme that empowers and elevates women within the tech industry. This initiative is dedicated to showcasing the achievements and successes of leading women, fostering an environment where female role models are recognised, and their contributions can ignite progress and inspire the next generation of women in IT. Our mission is to shine the spotlight a little brighter on female role models in IT, Tech & Digital, and to empower each other through this inner network community.
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