
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.
Internet marketing will be regulated by 2015, controlling more than $250 billion in Internet marketing spending worldwide. Outlandish? Maybe not.
Two insurers prove that SOA has finally reached a stage of maturity that allows it to address real business problems.
While still seen by many as a double-edged sword, social media helps insurers bring bring about new innovation.
Going forward, insurers will be employing their existing Web application platforms for all manner of devices.
It seems like a Millennium ago: it's been 10 years since the rollover to the new century, a time when many expected the greatest computer crash in history.
A McKinsey & Co. study finds 55% of execs say current performance in providing basic IT services is very or extremely effective, but only 21% are happy with IT's ability to add value to the business.
Survey results show younger generation more open to being approached via non-traditional channels.
Businesses need working solutions to their problems, and spending capital on all the latest bells and whistles is not the answer.
Fresh thinking and innovation is needed in the health care sector, and only then will IT improvements begin to have their desired impact.
A new Celent report concludes that the greatest challenge facing insurers is their siloed environments. Improving info sharing would help eliminate this problem.
While the law may eventually get watered down, the transparency and accountability of information will live on as perhaps insurers' most important corporate value.
Social media is invaluable in helping people find each other, share information, communicate and learn, but it's not without its pitfalls.
While Web apps are a critical part of many insurers business strategies, there needs to be better, more systematic approaches to addressing potential performance issues.
Experts say the answer might be a hybrid cloud and on-site computing model.
Experts believe insurers eventually will buy into the cloud hype, but in the form of "private clouds" contained within enterprises and close partners and agents.
There's been intense debate among insurance tech people lately over what SOA isor is notsupposed to accomplish. Fortunately, experts at last month's International SOA Symposium have answers.
What would it look like if Apple's I'm-a-Mac commercials were elevated to the enterprise level?
While the government continues to fumble with determining its oversight plan, insurers struggle with their own compliance efforts.
The challenge to insurance IT proponents is while they have the support of their companies, they need to do a better job of linking IT projects to actual business gains.
Zach McCoy, SVP at Kaplan Compliance, offers four recommendations for insurers currently seeking to adopt business process management.