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ISKO UK’s next afternoon event is again at the British Dental Association,
64 Wimpole Street, London, W1G 8YS, 13.30 – 18.00, followed by networking,
wine and nibbles

Information is critical to all businesses today, placing them at significant
risk if it is not managed and organized in such a way that it can easily and
quickly be found. Using case studies from the private and public sectors and
some highly experienced practitioners in the field, this latest ISKO UK
event examines the causes, threats and outcomes of poor information
management which put organizations at risk, why this is relevant to
knowledge organization and what mitigation measures can be put in place. 

Yasmin Merali, Associate Professor at Warwick Business School, will open the
first session by examining the complex nature of today’s information
network, the shift in user behaviour and the impact on organizational
resilience and robustness. Mark Merifield, Head of Information Management
Services at The National Archives looks at the disconnect between our IT
environment and business requirements and David Haynes, a highly experienced
information manager and PhD student at City University, will draw on recent
work within the charity sector to demonstrate some of the knowledge
organization approaches used to address information risk in the context of
overall organizational change.

In the second session, Roger Poole, currently Manager – Risk Consulting at
KPMG LLP and with considerable experience of Global Records Management
projects and programmes within the banking sector, describes some of the
recent significant changes in approach to information risk within the
Financial Services industry, a sector with a very high profile in the news
in recent years. He is followed by Christina Somovilla and Aynsley Taylor,
who will draw from their own experience at the Financial Ombudsman Service
to examine some of the difficulties faced when trying to set policies
appropriate to real business need, and to consider how organizing
information properly is the best way to mitigate risk. Finally, Noeleen
Schenk from Metataxis, a consultant with many years’ experience working with
clients to ensure effective information management structures are in place,
will explain how businesses can use the risk agenda to drive improvements to
their information management – from the identification of their information
assets, to their management and organization. The afternoon will end with
wine and nibbles and an opportunity to discuss the afternoon event with
speakers and colleagues.

You will find the programme and other details of the event, and can register
until October 20th via the ISKO site
<http://www.iskouk.org/events/risk_October2013.htm>
www.iskouk.org/events/risk_October2013.htm. The event is *free* to ISKO
members and to full-time students. The fee for non-members is just *£40*.
All fees must be paid in advance - there is no provision for payment on
arrival. Registration opens at *1.30* and we shall start promptly at 2 p.m.
Please pass this invitation on to any colleagues who may be interested.

 

Fran Huckle

Secretary, ISKO UK

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ISKO is a not-for-profit scientific/professional association with the
objective of promoting research and communication in the domain of knowledge
organization, within the broad field of information science and related
disciplines. Founded in 2007, our UK Chapter has been attracting lively and
steadily growing audiences to its afternoon meeting series as well as its
very successful biennial conferences (see slides and recordings at
<http://www.iskouk.org/events.htm> http://www.iskouk.org/events.htm) Its
third conference was held in July 2013 on the theme of "Knowledge
organization - pushing the boundaries" ( <http://www.iskouk.org/conf2013/>
http://www.iskouk.org/conf2013/.)