A presentation conducted by Dr Ges Rosenberg, Systems Research Development Manager, University of Bristol
Presented on Thursday the 3rd of October 2013.
Current planning and appraisal processes treat infrastructure as discrete, sector-specific assets, and as a consequence fail to identify and exploit potentially valuable interdependencies. Similarly, these silo-based approaches are unable to identify potentially hazardous and costly interdependencies in a systematic manner. A major challenge then for providers of modern infrastructure, is to realise the innovative opportunities in interdependencies, and so increase value-for-money, sustainability and resilience.e. To achieve this it is necessary to recognise that real-world infrastructure systems’ are highly interconnected, both with each other and with the socio economic and natural systems in which they are located.
This paper presents the outcome from a research partnership between the University of Bristol and University College London, sponsored by HM Treasury in the UK.
It proposes an ‘open-systems’, cross-sectoral approach to create and manage infrastructure interdependencies, and comprises a framework of principles (‘stewardship’, ‘shared-governance’ and ‘interdiscipliniarity’), and associated organisational maturity measures, and systems-based tools.
The ISG Outsourcing Index (formerly the TPI Index) provides a quarterly review of the latest sourcing industry data and trends for clients, service providers, analysts and the media. For more than a decade, it has been the authoritative source for marketplace intelligence related to outsourcing transaction structures and terms, industry adoption, geographic prevalence and service provider performance.
This was a presentation slides for a webapp building workshop held at iCentre, Brunei. Learn how to build a simple web application with HTML, CSS and Javascript.
By Paul Reynolds. The 2015 ISG Advisor Relations Benchmark investigates how service providers fund and allocate their Advisor Relations budgets and how teams are changing in each region to engage with third-party advisors. Join this session and leave with the information you need to benchmark your own Advisor Relations program.
A presentation conducted by Dr Ges Rosenberg, Systems Research Development Manager, University of Bristol
Presented on Thursday the 3rd of October 2013.
Current planning and appraisal processes treat infrastructure as discrete, sector-specific assets, and as a consequence fail to identify and exploit potentially valuable interdependencies. Similarly, these silo-based approaches are unable to identify potentially hazardous and costly interdependencies in a systematic manner. A major challenge then for providers of modern infrastructure, is to realise the innovative opportunities in interdependencies, and so increase value-for-money, sustainability and resilience.e. To achieve this it is necessary to recognise that real-world infrastructure systems’ are highly interconnected, both with each other and with the socio economic and natural systems in which they are located.
This paper presents the outcome from a research partnership between the University of Bristol and University College London, sponsored by HM Treasury in the UK.
It proposes an ‘open-systems’, cross-sectoral approach to create and manage infrastructure interdependencies, and comprises a framework of principles (‘stewardship’, ‘shared-governance’ and ‘interdiscipliniarity’), and associated organisational maturity measures, and systems-based tools.
The ISG Outsourcing Index (formerly the TPI Index) provides a quarterly review of the latest sourcing industry data and trends for clients, service providers, analysts and the media. For more than a decade, it has been the authoritative source for marketplace intelligence related to outsourcing transaction structures and terms, industry adoption, geographic prevalence and service provider performance.
This was a presentation slides for a webapp building workshop held at iCentre, Brunei. Learn how to build a simple web application with HTML, CSS and Javascript.
By Paul Reynolds. The 2015 ISG Advisor Relations Benchmark investigates how service providers fund and allocate their Advisor Relations budgets and how teams are changing in each region to engage with third-party advisors. Join this session and leave with the information you need to benchmark your own Advisor Relations program.