
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.
Amazon's recently unveiled NoSQL offering promises to pack a lot of capabilities into the cloud, but does this mean anything to insurers?
While others have spent millions and billions selling into the enterprise, Apple is almost as ubiquitous as Windows PCs in corporate offices without even trying to be.
New studies confirm many teenagers and 20-somethings prefer keyboards to dashboards.
The potential commoditization of insurance products means companies need to focus on self-service Web presences.
Insurance companies are now competing with start-ups and tech-savvy companies for a shrinking pool of IT talent.
CIO stress, a Big Data mess and cloud trustworthiness: Five predictions for IT in 2012 and the years beyond.
Cheaper, more powerful tools and a new breed of specialists will help insurers better understand their customers and markets in the year ahead.
Off-the-shelf consumer devices present conveniences for IT staffs and employees alike, but the list of potential risks they present warrants concern.
New survey shows savings from cloud computing are barely making a dent in corporate IT budgets. Is it time to rethink the approach?
New survey puts insurance companies at the bottom of the list in terms of consumer-friendliness on the Web.
Many companies still operate in the dark while unknown numbers of customers are turned away by websites suffering slow or tedious processes.
10 years after the original call for agile business philosophies, where are insurers prevailing and what do they have yet to learn?
Where do you draw the line between distributed servers and mainframes? Is there even a line anymore?
The conveniences of small size outweigh certain impracticalities as tablets and smartphones enamor insurance executives and agents.
Outsourcing is still a multi-billion dollar industry, but the future is getting cloudy as the market braces for a transitional phase.
Business necessity or perceived lack thereof holds back many modernization efforts.
Growth of spending on risk management tools projected to outpace the growth of overall IT spending, making it the hottest corner of the IT market.
Insurance executives downplay their service delivery and mobile capabilities so far, which is promising.
Carriers need to strike a balance between standardization and customization when writing policies and paying claims.
As the industry becomes increasingly digitized, marketing and IT must inevitably learn to utilize the integral skill sets they can offer each other.