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Business expectations of their IT departments are simple: Deliver
IT without fuss, get involved in achieving business results, and
provide leadership. But while business emphasis is on business
results and leadership, IT is focused on the technology.
How to get your IT Department to Add Real Value to Business
presents a practical framework that defines the roles and
activities for the CIO to meet business expectations. It introduces
a new approach to IT in large organizations, which shifts the focus
from day to day technological operations to three critical areas of
performance for IT: IT management, business results and information
leadership.
The concepts are simple and elegant but the implementation is
increasingly demanding. However, these changes are essential if
in-house IT functions are to survive and prosper in organizations.
The author's framework has already proven itself in changing
business and IT perspectives significantly. Large organisations
have commenced the implementation process, and are reporting
significant results. The book offers ground-breaking perspectives
on the role of IT in organisations. These perspectives are finding
favour with business and IT people alike. The book offers practical
and anecdotal examples and plans to assist in implementing the
framework.
*CIOs will benefit from a radically changed perspective on how they
can gain real alignment and add real value to their business
*Business management will benefit from a new understanding of what
they should expect from their IT functions
*Offers a new common language to talk meaningfully about IT and
business issues
"Reinventing the Information Technology Department" is both
anecdotal and informal but deals with a subject which is of
interest to chief information officers (CIOs) and IT Managers,
addressing questions such as: how does the IT department keep pace
with business change?; how do we provide stable and responsive IT
platforms?; how do we add recognized value to the organization?;
how do I reinvent my department?; how do I get onto the board?;This
text offers an alternative view of the new roles of the in-house IT
function and proposes a rethink about IT services within companies,
suggesting a self-help approach to redefining/reinventing in-house
IT for CIOs. The text explains that new modes of business thinking
and operation are essential if a company is to succeed in the near
future and in light of this, covers topics such as self-organizing
systems, knowledge management, multi-stakeholder perspectives and
empowerment initiatives in relation to the overall business and in
particular the IT function Each chapter of this text contains
implementation templates for readers to take themselves through the
repositioning or re-engineering of the IT function and their own
departments.
There is a fundamental mismatch between the way we organise our
senior management teams and the way modern commerce has evolved.
Wrapping finesse, technology, rules, bureaucracy, and "science"
around our C-Suite conventions, designed for nineteenth-century
businesses, is not nearly enough to meet the challenges of modern
business environments and practices. This book is for executives
who want to enable their C-Suite, and by extension their
organizations, to survive and thrive into the future. It will help
them to foresee future challenges and provide suggestions for new
working practices at executive level to successfully adapt to those
changes. How should executive teams organize themselves, reinvent
their roles, and work with stakeholders to evolve and innovate?
What is the role of the new C-grade executive - managers, leaders,
or something else? Executives and aspiring executives will find new
challenges for organizations and ways to deal with them.
Forward-thinking business students will find startling ideas and
practical tools for viewing business and its activities. What is
the next evolution of the executive function in organizations? This
book explores how we can predict it, shape it, and succeed in it.
White provides the most comprehensive scholarly compilation of
fictional work of legal suspense in existence. Primarily a
bibliography of novels, it also annotates plays, scripts for film
and television, novelizations, and short-story collections about
"lawyers and the law." The idea behind the principal of selection
is to disdain labels that reduce the variety of the legal thriller
to a subgenre of mystery fiction. Novels that range from suspense
thrillers through science fiction to the philosophical novel are
included if justice is thematically important. It is therefore an
eclectic reference source beyond a compilation of books about
lawyers as protagonists. Its biographical and scholarly information
about authors, major and minor, and their novels or works is
traditionally encyclopedic and objective regardless of whether the
work has been genre-defined, or worse--deified as a classic or
denigrated as a bestseller. Many novels included are long out of
print, but historically interesting for their contribution to the
lineage of the "courtroom drama," showing that the history of the
legal thriller is one of the major branches of modern literature
since the Age of Reason. The criterion of justice "denoted" moves
beyond the fact of lawyers and courtrooms to select seminal novels
like Robert Travers' Anatomy of a Murder as well as the romantic
potboiler. Among the more than 2,000 works are the Perry Mason
novels of Erle Stanley Gardner, John Mortimer's Rumpole series,
along with a staple of fiction by major authors of the genre like
John Lescroart, Lisa Scottoline, Margaret Maron, Scott Turow, and
John Grisham. There are also individual works by Shakespeare,
Goethe, Kafka, Camus, andTwain delineating humanity's obsession
with the law as its shining prop of civilization and, alternative,
bete-noire of the common individual caught up in its maw. The
appendices include comments by lawyer-novelist Michael A. Kahn, a
historical introduction to the legal thriller, craft notes by
writers and prominent trial lawyers responding to author and lawyer
questionnaires, bibliography of critical sources and articles,
series characters, and the legal terminology found in courtroom
dramas and novels. An essential reference tool for scholars,
researchers as well as the occasional reader of legal thrillers.
On September 14, 2001, Kent State University's Ashtabula campus
sponsored the David K. Shipler Colloquium on the Pulitzer
Prize-winning 1998 book cited above, A Country of Strangers. This
is a collection of 18 of the papers presented. They explore such
topics as blacks and whites in the performing arts; racial
profiling; racism in American baseball; race, work and wholeness;
musical style as a symbol of black cultural identity; the early
Newberry Library in Chicago; the use of the body by artists to
reveal the mind; Southern white ministers at mid-century; building
a diverse and respectful campus community; organizational changes
creating a new climate for racial equality; the missing voice of
the Spanish-speaking in the black-white dialogue; the concept of
equality of educational opportunity for African Americans; and
praises, criticism and comments for A Country of Strangers: Blacks
and Whites in America.
A new edition of the definitive bibliography of the modern
spy-adventure-intrigue novel. First published in 1976, this edition
has been thoroughly revised and updated. After a discussion of
early spy fiction, Smith and White provide a detailed listing of
novels from 1940 onward. The bibliography is organized
alphabetically, with entries providing brief content annotations.
Access is enhanced by cross references as well as appendixes and
author and title indexes.
Among the new features provided with this edition are a
bibliography of articles and books which reflect recent popular
scholarship; an appendix, Craft Notes, in which writers themselves
speak to concerns of their own choosing; and a glossary of terms on
the fascinating and sometimes semantically bizarre language of
espionage and spies. As Julian Rathbone writes in his foreword, "I
am delighted that the Editors have given me this opportunity to
recommend this new edition of Cloak and Dagger to all aficionados
of that branch of fiction which has more to say about the way we
live now than any other." An important reference tool for public
and research libraries and their patrons interested in modern
fiction and the spy novel.
Reinventing the Information Technology Department' is both
anecdotal and informal but deals with a subject which is of vital
interest to Chief Information Officers and IT Managers, addressing
questions such as: How does the IT department keep pace with
business change? How do we provide stable and responsive IT
platforms? How do we add recognised value to the organisation? How
do I reinvent my department? How do I get onto the board? It offers
an alternative view of the new roles of the in-house IT function
and proposes a rethink about IT services within companies,
suggesting a self-help approach to redefining/reinventing in-house
IT for CIOs.The author explains that new modes of business thinking
and operation are essential if a company is to succeed in the near
future and in light of this covers topics such as self-organising
systems, knowledge management, multi-stakeholder perspectives, and
empowerment initiatives in relation to the overall business and in
particular the IT function.Each chapter contains implementation
templates for the readers to take themselves through the
repositioning or reengineering of the IT function and their own
departments.
'BREATHTAKING' Dolly Alderton, 'REMARKABLE' Marian Keyes,
'LIFE-CHANGING' Emma Jane Unsworth, 'COMPELLING' Amy Liptrot,
'EXTRAORDINARY' Sali Hughes To everyone else, Terri White appeared
to be living the dream - living in New York City, with a top job
editing a major magazine. In reality, she was struggling with the
trauma of an abusive childhood and rapidly skidding towards a
mental health crisis that would land her in a psychiatric ward.
Coming Undone is Terri's story of her unravelling, and her
precarious journey back from a life in pieces.
There is a fundamental mismatch between the way we organise our
senior management teams and the way modern commerce has evolved.
Wrapping finesse, technology, rules, bureaucracy, and "science"
around our C-Suite conventions, designed for nineteenth-century
businesses, is not nearly enough to meet the challenges of modern
business environments and practices. This book is for executives
who want to enable their C-Suite, and by extension their
organizations, to survive and thrive into the future. It will help
them to foresee future challenges and provide suggestions for new
working practices at executive level to successfully adapt to those
changes. How should executive teams organize themselves, reinvent
their roles, and work with stakeholders to evolve and innovate?
What is the role of the new C-grade executive - managers, leaders,
or something else? Executives and aspiring executives will find new
challenges for organizations and ways to deal with them.
Forward-thinking business students will find startling ideas and
practical tools for viewing business and its activities. What is
the next evolution of the executive function in organizations? This
book explores how we can predict it, shape it, and succeed in it.
What we teach and the way we teach is being hotly debated within
countries and between continents. Planning Learning Spaces
demonstrates cutting-edge approaches to educational space design,
from primary to college studies, and explains how these spaces
support education and enhance learning experiences. With
contributions from leading professionals, including Herman
Hertzberger and Sir Kenneth Robinson, Planning Learning Spaces is
an invaluable resource for architects, interior designers and
educators.
Business expectations of their IT departments are simple: Deliver
IT without fuss, get involved in achieving business results, and
provide leadership. But while business emphasis is on business
results and leadership, IT is focused on the technology.How to get
your IT Department to Add Real Value to Business presents a
practical framework that defines the roles and activities for the
CIO to meet business expectations. It introduces a new approach to
IT in large organizations, which shifts the focus from day to day
technological operations to three critical areas of performance for
IT: IT management, business results and information leadership.The
concepts are simple and elegant but the implementation is
increasingly demanding. However, these changes are essential if
in-house IT functions are to survive and prosper in
organizations.The author's framework has already proven itself in
changing business and IT perspectives significantly. Large
organisations have commenced the implementation process, and are
reporting significant results. The book offers ground-breaking
perspectives on the role of IT in organisations. These perspectives
are finding favour with business and IT people alike. The book
offers practical and anecdotal examples and plans to assist in
implementing the framework.
'BREATHTAKING' Dolly Alderton, 'REMARKABLE' Marian Keyes,
'LIFE-CHANGING' Emma Jane Unsworth, 'COMPELLING' Amy Liptrot,
'STUNNING' Cathy Rentzenbrink, 'EXTRAORDINARY' Sali Hughes To
everyone else, Terri White appeared to be living the dream, named
one of Folio's Top Women in US Media and accruing further awards
for the magazines she was editing. In reality, she was rapidly
skidding towards a mental health crisis that would land her in a
locked psychiatric ward as her past caught up with her. Coming
Undone is Terri's documentation of her unravelling, and her
precarious navigation back from a life in pieces.
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