
Joe McKendrick
Dig In contributorJoe McKendrick is an author, consultant, blogger and frequent Digital Insurance contributor specializing in information technology.

Joe McKendrick is an author, consultant, blogger and frequent Digital Insurance contributor specializing in information technology.
Developers and operations workers tend to come from two different worlds this has to change.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor predicts a 24 percent increase in demand for professionals with data analytics skills during the next eight years.
Three ways to assert IT's value and shift the perception among business leaders that IT is merely a cost center.
Some of the same data analysis technologies being used by Western governments are cheap enough to be employed by financial services companies as well.
In a new survey, most IT executives give their organizations failing marks for handling disruptions.
Cheap mainframe servers that support private cloud computing could change the way insurers think about enterprise architecture.
Half of marketers surveyed for a new report agree that data is the most underutilized asset in their organizations, according to a new survey.
Although it's a relatively new technology, SDDC could change the way data centers are funded, designed, provisioned and managed by extracting software and applications from hardware entanglements.
Data virtualization holds a lot of promise for minimizing data center woes, but it needs to be taken one step at a time.
Shouldn't digital be part of everyone's job description by now?
An insurer upgrades its data architecture and finds a competitive advantage through faster insights.
Five tips for developing an intelligent big data storage system.
Front-end systems and devices for customer engagement are getting more sophisticated, but back-end integration challenges are preventing insurers from taking advantage of them, survey shows.
Social media and digitization have made it easy to get closer to customers; the question is how to use that knowledge and access without becoming invasive.
Insurers in the Software Business: The line between software providers and consumers is blurring
Years of heavy reliance on vendors to deliver agency systems integration means less responsiveness to customers.
The hyper-connected consumer of the next generation will expect a highly tailored customer experience, and it can't hurt to start anticipating these needs now.
While big data operations based in the cloud are attractive, there is at least one voice out there urging executives to be wary of moving away from on-site data storage.
Advice on improving communication between business people and data professionals.
Recent estimates put the average hit a business takes as the result of a data breach at more than $4 million.