Collaborative virtual teams evolve at CERN

Some of the world's largest collaborative virtual teams work at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, straddling the French-Swiss border. The research groups, involving thousands of scientists and students from dozens of countries, use a massive particle accelerator to look for the components of dark matter.

How to deploy collaborative virtual teams

"If a global perspective isn't everywhere in the company, you're holding yourself back," says Chris Satchell, chief technology officer of U.S.-based $2.1 billion International Game Technology (IGT). For IGT, which has facilities on every continent but Antarctica, that perspective involves more than knowing overseas sales projections.

Sharing information—the payer’s perspective

In 2001 Humana, a health insurer headquartered in Kentucky with revenues of US$31bn in 2009, was looking into ways of automating its interactions with physicians’ offices. But it faced a quandary.

Going mobile at Methodist

When Methodist Hospital, a 460-bed facility serving the San Gabriel Valley near Los Angeles, wanted to create a computerised provider order entry system and digitise patient records, the IT department faced a number of challenges in coming up with a solution that would appeal to the doctors and nurses that had to use the new technology.

Virtua goes paperless

In late 2005 when Virtua, a diversified health-services company that operates four hospitals in the US state of New Jersey, decided to open a new hospital, the board decreed that it would be a paperless facility. By the time the IT department completed an assessment of what would be needed to make one facility paperless, the board decided that if the organisation was going to invest the money and human resources to do it in one facility, it may as well roll out the same technology in all its locations.

The CIO as innovation leader

This research programme, sponsored by Fujitsu, features a video webcast and Executive insight. The webcast brings together an expert panel of practitioners:

Andrew Abboud, Chief Information Officer, City University London

Under pressure

  • The CIO’s role is expected to become increasingly strategic as IT adoption accelerates… Many healthcare CIOs already occupy “dramatically more strategic” positions within their organisations than a decade ago: “We create solutions that speak to key business issues such as competitiveness and patient safety—many more areas that we previously did not get actively involved in,” says one interviewee. Currently, however, the survey shows only a minority are involved in boardroom discussions on any major strategic initiative.

Next-Generation CIOs

For several years, chief executive officers (CIOs) have championed business efficiency. Their focus has been largely on operational goals, such as keeping IT and operations running smoothly and reducing related costs, while enabling business processes to support their company’s strategy for growth and profitability.

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