Posts Tagged information management
What Information Mode are you in Today?
Posted by Peter Zakrzewski in Enterprise Content Management (ECM) on January 4th, 2010
In any given day, we interact with information in a variety of different ways or modes. Take a moment to think about the ways you’ve interacted with information and then click on each image below to find out which information mode or combination of modes you might be in today.
What do Enterprise Content Managers and Environmentalists have in common?
Posted by Peter Zakrzewski in Enterprise Content Management (ECM) on December 29th, 2009
Recently, my colleagues and I have embarked on the expansive and at times mystical journey of Enterprise Content Management (ECM). “What is ECM?”, you may ask. ECM is about creating a work environment (technology, processes, and practices) that ensures all content within an organization completes a full life cycle from creation, storage and use, to archiving or deletion.
Organizations tend to be very passive when it comes to their information assets, which are usually created without a lot of forethought of what happens to them after they have served their immediate purpose. Content gets stored on shared drives, in email boxes, and servers, where stuff piles up almost indefinitely creating landfills that no one wants to sift through, putting unnecessary strains on people and systems. The enterprise content management approach has been offered as a solution to this problem.
Knowledge and Information: Children in the classroom
Posted by Peter Zakrzewski in Organizational Learning on February 11th, 2009
Whenever somebody asks about my previous work experience and my educational background, I can’t help but mention that at some point in my life I was an aspiring teacher. Summer camps, volunteering in elementary school classrooms, and even pursuing a Bachelor’s degree in education.
My colleague asked once, “How do you think those experiences influence the work that you’re doing now?” I answered bluntly, “I have no idea”.
Or at least I didn’t, until recently. Read the rest of this entry »
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