5 resultados para Strategic information management
em Universidad de Alicante
Resumo:
The construction industry has long been considered as highly fragmented and non-collaborative industry. This fragmentation sprouted from complex and unstructured traditional coordination processes and information exchanges amongst all parties involved in a construction project. This nature coupled with risk and uncertainty has pushed clients and their supply chain to search for new ways of improving their business process to deliver better quality and high performing product. This research will closely investigate the need to implement a Digital Nervous System (DNS), analogous to a biological nervous system, on the flow and management of digital information across the project lifecycle. This will be through direct examination of the key processes and information produced in a construction project and how a DNS can provide a well-integrated flow of digital information throughout the project lifecycle. This research will also investigate how a DNS can create a tight digital feedback loop that enables the organisation to sense, react and adapt to changing project conditions. A Digital Nervous System is a digital infrastructure that provides a well-integrated flow of digital information to the right part of the organisation at the right time. It provides the organisation with the relevant and up-to-date information it needs, for critical project issues, to aid in near real-time decision-making. Previous literature review and survey questionnaires were used in this research to collect and analyse data about information management problems of the industry – e.g. disruption and discontinuity of digital information flow due to interoperability issues, disintegration/fragmentation of the adopted digital solutions and paper-based transactions. Results analysis revealed efficient and effective information management requires the creation and implementation of a DNS.
Resumo:
The history of books, libraries, catalogues and the first archives. Typology of information resources and retrieval methods associated to them. A recollection of resources especially meant for students and professionals in the area of Advertising and Public Relations.
Resumo:
Actualmente, el sector hotelero está inmerso en un entorno de alta incertidumbre y muy competitivo por lo que necesita información estratégica para la correcta gestión de sus establecimientos. Dicha información puede obtenerse a partir de la clasificación de los hoteles en grupos estratégicos. Esta investigación empírica presenta los grupos estratégicos en el sector hotelero como una herramienta muy útil para la planificación y la implantación de estrategias de los hoteles ya que permiten identificar las estrategias y las ventajas competitivas de este sector. Además, se analiza si existen diferencias de desempeño entre los distintos grupos estratégicos hoteleros obtenidos. Para la identificación y la caracterización de los grupos se emplean las dimensiones compromiso de recursos y alcance de las actividades hoteleras.
Resumo:
En el presente artículo abordamos la utilización de un Entorno Virtual de Aprendizaje para optimizar la gestión de la información y comunicación de la información entre los agentes implicados en la asignatura Practicum. Inicialmente presentamos una revisión sobre el tratamiento que dicha asignatura ha tenido desde mediados del siglo pasado hasta la actualidad en el estado español. Finalmente presentamos los resultados de un estudio piloto realizado con los estudiantes de Magisterio de la especialidad de Educación Física, que ponen de manifiesto las actitudes positivas del alumnado hacia el uso de las TIC y la percepción de la importancia que las mismas tienen dentro de los contenidos curriculares, por lo que, éstos elementos promueven el desarrollo de competencias no solo genéricas, sino también transversales, favoreciendo de este modo el desarrollo socio-personal y profesional.
Resumo:
The Internet has changed the way in which organizations communicate with their publics, and museums are not an exception. The consolidation of Web 2.0 has not only given museums access to a powerful new tool for disseminating information, but has involved significant changes in the relationship between institutions and their publics, facilitating and enhancing the interaction between them. The overall objective of this paper is to analyze the degree of interactivity implemented in the websites of major international art museums, in order to assess if museums are evolving towards more dialogic systems with relation to their publics. The results indicate that museums still have a low level of interactivity on their websites, both in the tools used to present information and the resources available for interaction with virtual visitors. But it has also observed that museums are progressively implementing interactive and dialogic sources, suggesting a clear trend towards new ways of managing these platforms in order to establish more participatory and collaborative communication systems with virtual users.