
Announcing a hiatus
A short note to acknowledge that we haven't done an episode this year and to confirm that we are not sure when we will be back.
Hosted by Unknown Host · 🇺🇸 US · EN · 48 episodes
Established thought leaders with verified media credentials.
Every fortnight Karl, Judi and Michael get together to discuss topics in information management practice that are relevant for today and the future. We’ll bring in other industry insiders to talk about what they’re doing, and how their practice is changing.
Unknown Host hosts Information Revolution, a business show with 48 episodes published.

A short note to acknowledge that we haven't done an episode this year and to confirm that we are not sure when we will be back.

In our last episode before we take an end of year break, we had the pleasure of talking with taxonomy consultant Helen Lippell, editor of the book Taxonomies and programme chair of the Taxonomy Boot Camp. We talked about

What does it take to bring together a library of your organisation's valued information? Alison Jones tells her story with a focus on her current role at Atlassian. Go back to episode 43 to hear the conversation sparked

Welcome back to our guest Adrian Kearns! We thought last episode was fruitful enough that we should go another round. Testable strategy, learning how to influence, and more. A couple of bonus blog posts from Adrian you s

As part of an occasional series trying to join some dots between information management, information architecture, and other professions, we invited Adrian Kearns to come in and talk about what he does, the kinds of prob

A free-ranging* conversation about the value of establishing a library or knowledge base of authoritative information than people want to access and can trust! We touch on everything from shifting the focus of our practi

If we've got a thousand records to manage, what do we do? How about a million? How about a billion? We talk about the problem that records and information management practices don't seem to change in the face of scale, s

This episode Michael share three things he wishes he'd known sooner about how information is structured in Microsoft 365, compared to in an EDRMS: Microsoft 365 Groups change the way you manage access; there is no folder

Episode 40! Wow! Thank you to all who have been listening. For this one, we're back on the people stuff, thinking about when folks at work won't stick to the script. A couple of things that come up: Fundamental Attributi

It's been a minute! Is "information governance" just a rebrand, a way to get people to listen to us? Is it a thing you can get from a piece of software? Surely not. So, what is it? With your hosts: Karl Melrose Judi Vern

In the era of paper, records management hinged on a custodial model: get the things of value, describe them in order to take care of them, and help people to access them if they ask. How much is this still our practice i

Judi and Michael talk more about auto-classifying records with Judi describing her experiences and the two of them exploring the value of NOT using where something has been filed as the basis for deciding how long it sho

Michael takes us through how you can group information in Microsoft 365 and then trigger actions on it, looking at Microsoft Purview (f.k.a. the Compliance Center) and SharePoint Premium (f.k.a. Syntex). With your hosts:

If domain models and information asset registers are two ways of modelling your organisation's information, how about ontologies? Judi leads the conversation on what they're all about. A few notes: A snapshot of the Aust
Why does Michael get a sinking feeling when people talk about information asset registers? What are they for? What's worse, boiling the ocean or having to retrofit the information you didn't collect? Could tools help us?

Why limit yourself to functional classification? How could you think describe the whole domain of what your organisation cares about? ... and why would you do that? Judi mentions some work on an all-of-government ontolog

In this episode we reflect on the goodies we've gleaned since last November, when we first brought valuing information into focus. If you haven't gone back through the previous episodes, we've had great guests with a lot

We were thrilled to have Chicago-based innovation fellow, data management enthusiast, and author Doug Laney on the Information Revolution podcast. He touches on the concepts of his books, Infonomics and Data Juice, and d

Today's episode continues a conversation with Liz Wilson about data, documents, and the need for changes of practice to avoid data management cutting records management's lunch. Oh, and the nature of memory! With your ho

Our first episode of 2024! We're back after a bit of a break, with the first part of a conversation with Liz Wilson about data, documents, (not) managing the container and some ruminating on how financial institutions wo
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Information Revolution is hosted by Unknown Host. The show is categorised under business and has published 48 episodes.
Information Revolution has published 48 episodes.
Information Revolution regularly covers business. It sits in the business category.
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