Human Processes: On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.

Human Processes: On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.
Using Peter Steiner`s famous cartoon as a context for his argument, Keith Harrison-Broninski turns his attention to Identity Management (IM), which remains – for many organizations – as bewildering as ever. In this Column, Keith discusses one limitation of all current approaches to IM. He argues that typical IM implementations do not do enough to support the primary occupation of most knowledge workers – collaboration with colleagues—and he explains why this is an important problem. Read Keith`s Column to learn how to supplement any IM system to provide support for the knowledge workers.

Keith Harrison-Broninski

Keith Harrison-Broninski

Keith Harrison-Broninski FRSA is an author, speaker, and technology/business consultant specialising in collaboration across organisational boundaries as well as social technology for wellness, community, and finance. Keith's first book was "Human Interactions" (2005): "Set to produce the first fundamental advances in personal productivity since the arrival of the spreadsheet" (Information Age); "The breakthrough that changes the rules of business" (Peter Fingar, author of "Business Process Management: The Third Wave"); "The overarching framework for 21st century business technology" (BP Trends); "The next logical step in process-based technology" (Chair of the Workflow Management Coalition). Keith went on to develop these principles for cross-boundary collaboration in further books and research and lead award-winning social enterprises for healthcare innovation, wellness, and community finance. Keith's latest book "Supercommunities" brings together insights from recent academic research with original ideas about wellness, collaboration, and finance to explain how communities everywhere can become antifragile through social trading.
Share
Share
Share