Best Places spotlight: Nationwide arms IT pros for new tech challenges
IT staffers get plenty of training, teamwork and encouragement at the No. 28-ranked company on our 2013 Best Places to Work in IT list.
IT staffers get plenty of training, teamwork and encouragement at the No. 28-ranked company on our 2013 Best Places to Work in IT list.
Staffers stick around for the varied projects and career opportunities at the No. 52-ranked company on our 2013 Best Places to Work in IT list.
Employee and team achievements are well rewarded at the No. 62-ranked company on our 2013 Best Places to Work in IT list.
A culture that prizes innovation, agility and fun reigns at the No. 91-ranked company on our 2013 Best Places to Work in IT list.
If you've ever had to hire someone in IT, this drill might sound familiar:
The Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation is on the front lines in the fight against HIV and tuberculosis in South Africa, whose population has been hit hard by both diseases.
The statistics are staggering: Worldwide in 2011, 6.9 million children died before their fifth birthday and nearly 300,000 women died during pregnancy or childbirth.
Community Plates' job is straightforward: move surplus food from supermarkets, grocers and restaurants to agencies that help feed the hungry.
The Web promises to deliver information to all, but those with disabilities are often unable to access the content on many websites.
This may be the Information Age, but there are 750 million illiterate adults worldwide who can't take advantage of today's wealth of data to better their lives. In fact, illiteracy, poverty and a lack of electricity impede millions from learning and benefitting from the technology advances that have marked our era.
The Commercial Bank of Africa (CBA) wanted to reach millions of potential customers in Kenya, but most of those potential customers didn't have access to traditional brick-and-mortar banking facilities.
Paul Lucidi, CIO at Insulet, focuses on assessing and developing his employees, and giving them the tools to be successful.
Jim Turnbull, CIO at University of Utah Health Care, says mobile technology as the next big opportunity for getting patients more involved in managing their healthcare.
Just about anyone in the office can introduce open-source code into the company's IT infrastructure. Yet CIOs face real dangers if they're not properly managing their open-source assets.
Working as an interim 'retained' CIO for multiple clients, Laura Pettit Rusick leads IT departments at various small and midsize companies, and that experience gives her insight into the technology challenges and opportunities that exist in a wide swath of U.S. businesses. Insider (registration required)