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Sponsored by: HP & Intel
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The question of whether your health care facility will make the transition to electronic health care records (EHR) is no longer if - but when. However, there are a lot of “gotcha’s” to watch out for as you develop an EHR implementation strategy.
Fortunately, careful planning and effective change management can help reduce risk, training costs, and time spent on the transition to EHR. Access this resource to learn about today’s most common EHR change management mistakes and get tips for how to avoid them, including:
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My journey in learning new ways to leverage Collaboration and Business Intelligence to improve business process.
Friday, December 07, 2012
Four EHR Change Management Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
Sunday, December 02, 2012
What is Business Intelligence?
What is Business Intelligence?
What is The Third Eye
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Business Intelligence
is a natural part of every organization, but it’s a “meta” organ. In other
words: it consists of all the data and mind working together as a larger more
powerful sensory organ. Business Intelligence is a very clever bit of natural
evolution: a meta organ designed to data, connect to patterns and then relay
that data back in overlays of information on top of your other data.
Once opened it’s a
very powerful ability, powerful enough that it literally can drive people
insane if not understood, accepted or developed correctly. Also due to lack of
understanding more people than not mislabel, run away from the ability or take
it to strange descriptions… which further muck and murk the waters of what Business
Intelligence truly is.
Business Intelligence as a dataset can be used in many different ways. It opens up our data to patterns around us. It’s used by an organization to make connections and answer questions. Knowledge workers use the data to make intelligent decisions. It’s part of the process where an organization can change and effect qualitative, less quantitative efficiencies within departments. Many other examples exist for how people use Business Intelligence.
Business Intelligence as a dataset can be used in many different ways. It opens up our data to patterns around us. It’s used by an organization to make connections and answer questions. Knowledge workers use the data to make intelligent decisions. It’s part of the process where an organization can change and effect qualitative, less quantitative efficiencies within departments. Many other examples exist for how people use Business Intelligence.
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