
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.
Here's what BPM can and should mean to your organization.
Implementing mobile can be an expedient process, but reaching mobile customers requires a completely distinct mindset from mobilizing field-service employees.
A new report outlines the incentives behind four stages of analytics implementation.
For insurers, evaluating elasticity requirements when looking into the cloud may lead them to hold back.
In the next couple years, social projects with clear business objectives that allow for quantifiable ROI will be an unavoidable goal.
Demand is outweighing supply for data experts who can connect the dots behind big data usage, but where will a growing supply come from?
Recent survey recognizes that security extends well beyond IT among best-practice companies.
Cloud is on everyone's radarbut not yet in everyone's data center.
Instead of trying to bunker your systems, Deutsche Bank's head of IT security urges open, frank discussions as the best resolution to security issues.
A well-grounded IT architectural approach provides the agility required to foster rapid growth.
Applications, data security, hidden costs; here are the pros and cons of engaging or resisting a cloud migration.
Cloud, mobility and analytics require a focused, enterprise approachhere's how to deliver.
Cloud storage and analytic capabilities could reassign the health insurance industry to the role of data intelligence intermediary.
For one insurance company, a hurricane inspired IT managers to build a better business continuity solution.
Three measures of a customers worth using analytics that might lead you to question age-old business paradigms.
These tools and methodologies, such as Hadoop and MapReduce, can help insurers unlock the real potential of Big Data.
The carrier's first foray into the cloud came with security concerns that lead to more in-house control over compliance solutions.
Apple's presence in the enterprise is expected to grow still more pervasive in 2012.
'Bring your own device' means more productivity and better service to customers, but are they secure enough?
Data security threats evolve even as organizations successfully lock down their systems.