Knowledge and Data Management White Papers
The Value of Real-Time Data in Human Service Delivery
Overview Government agencies that are responsible for the delivery of human services are plagued by a number of issues. Caseworkers typically collect information via paper and pen during a customer visit, completing forms which are then later entered into a computer in the office. The process is redundant and inefficient, reducing caseworker productivity. Mobile computing can enable the real-time communications required to address these issues. This white paper will take an in-depth look at the impact of manual data collection and disjointed systems on the delivery of human services and how mobility can greatly improve caseworker productivity, agency efficiency and cross-agency collaboration by providing the data needed for faster decision making and more customized services.
| Publisher | Motorola | File Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | March 2009 | ||
| Format | White Papers | ||
| Topics | |||
Accelerating Enterprise Data Governance Part 1
In the first of this series of three white papers, Mike Ferguson of Intelligent Business Strategies defines what data governance is and then looks at the requirements that need to...
Data Governance for Master Data Management and Beyond
There is growing interest on behalf of both data management professionals and senior business managers to understand the motivations, mechanics, and benefits of instituting data governance within an organization. This...
Getting Started with Master Data Management
Master data management forms part of an overall enterprise governance program that aims to establish trusted data throughout the enterprise. This white paper from Mike Ferguson of Intelligent Business Strategies...
Five Steps to More Valuable Enterprise Data
Companies worldwide struggle with inconsistent, inaccurate or unreliable data - and often don't know how to build more useful corporate information. This white paper examines a five-step method for...
The Evolution of Integration
Once upon a time life and information systems were simple. Then one day somebody let Pandora out of her box. Someone said -can't we add new requirements to these systems?...



