With a wealth of wisdom and decades of experience in the world of organizational research and strategy development, Tudor Williams and Ryan Williams have written extensively on many topics and are frequent speakers. This resource section gives you unlimited access to their knowledge bank. And it's an easy way to learn more.
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- Content Management - The Cool Tool (00/0000)
In January, CIO magazine dubbed content management software the ‘cool tool’. As with any new tool that catches people’s attention, CIO noted, “It (content management) gets to hang out with the popular crowd and bask in newfound glory”.
- Magnificent Obsession? (07/2001)
We are obsessed with technology. We spend more than a trillion dollars a year on information technology. Yet, as Thomas Davenport writes in a recent feature in the National Post (Canada's national newspaper), economists have found very little correlation between companies' IT expenditures and financial performance, while managers complain that the information they receive is little better than before.
- The Power of Blogs (04/2005)
Do blogs have the extraordinary power to help bring down governments as some Canadian observers are claiming? In the past week a Canadian court imposed and then lifted publication bans on sensitive political enquiry testimony. This month’s newsletter, comments on the role blogs played in this issue and looks at the impact new tools like blogs might have on the future of communication.
- Partnering with IT - A Matter of Vision and Accountability (06/2002)
In the good old days (five years ago?), I would never think of having my printer plan and design my annual report. So why would I consider handing over these critical parts of production to the IT department for my online annual reports?
- Wireless Communication - Learning From Teenagers (10/2002)
Want to know where technology is taking us – watch the ways in which our teenagers and pre-teens exploit it. My colleague Shel Holtz claims to learn much more about our technology future by consulting with his teenage daughter than from most technology futurists.
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