| THE BOOK | THE AUTHOR | BUY | CONTACT THE AUTHOR | BLOG |
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Robert Hillard was an original founder of MIKE2.0 which provides a standard approach for Information and Data Management projects. He has held international consulting leadership roles and provided advice to government and private sector clients around the world. He is a Partner with Deloitte with more than twenty years experience in the discipline, focusing on standardised approaches to Information Management including being one of the first to use XBRL in government regulation and the promotion of information as a business asset rather than a technology problem. Read his article in Information Age: Agile on the rebound, helping sponsors of Information Management initiatives to make and argue the need for business investment. You can follow Robert on Twitter and also read his blogs: Information-Driven Business as well as his regular postings in Navigating the Information Maze and the MIKE2.0 blog. |
Robert Hillard and his book, Information-Driven Business, have received great coverage in the media. ![]() "The
question that any organization needs to ask itself is whether it is
using information to create the most dynamic, responsive, and adaptable
enterprise possible or is it using information to satisfy the need for
power by a privileged few?"
from Information-Driven Business:
How to Manage Data and Information for Maximum Advantage
Managing
information has become as vital to a business as managing financial
information is to its accounting functions. With information pervading
every aspect of your organization—from reporting and marketing to
product development and resource allocation—it only makes sense for
your business to turn its data into functional knowledge that powers
revenues, manages costs, and achieves a consistent level of
profitability.
Drawing from techniques that author Robert Hillard has applied in some of the world’s largest companies and government departments, Information-Driven Business reveals how business leaders can more effectively govern, manage, and exploit their company’s most important asset: information. |