- Business Intelligence (5)
- Education (1)
- INFORMS (2)
- Intechné (4)
- Methodology (4)
- Operations Research (14)
- optimization (1)
- Probability Management (2)
- Risk (5)
- software (1)
- Teaching (1)
- Vision (4)
- 25 April 2010: Progress in Probability Management
- 8 March 2009: Searching for Answers to Life’s Persistent Questions
- 6 March 2009: INFORMS 1.5
- 27 February 2009: Orthogonal Skills
- 18 February 2009: The Science of Better Search
- 13 February 2009: Living in Interesting Times
- 4 February 2009: Remembering the Master of All Trades
- 30 January 2009: Less is More
- 16 January 2009: Certifiably Analytic
- 9 January 2009: Whom the Gods Wish to Destroy, they First Call Risk-Protected
INFORMS 1.5
The primary professional society for advanced analytics – INFORMS – has a distinguished history and an impressive membership. But like most volunteer-driven groups, INFORMS operates on the basis of consensus and professional fellowship. It is emphatically not an opportunity-driven enterprise akin to a private company or even a lobbying-savvy professional group such as the American Medical Association.
This sort of self-branding – as an agency for the advancement of a specialized kind of knowledge rather than as a guild devoted to nurturing and expanding professional hegemony – affects both the operation of INFORMS and the development of the profession. An interesting manifestation of this phenomenon is the slow adoption of information technology by INFORMS. Things are, however, improving: As of today, INFORMS boasts an official blog!
This official blog doesn’t quite get us to INFORMS 2.0; it’s still one-way communication. The society has supported blogging at previous national-level meetings through the efforts of individual INFORMS Computing Society (ICS) members (see here). And the very nifty eNews Daily, which debuted at last year’s Washington, DC meeting, looks to me like a keeper.
I anticipate that these efforts will take a more definite form over time, to the point that non-attendee members (as well as the interested public) can feel connected to events as they occur. The nominal goal, of course, is to increase the dispersion and penetration of the profession’s message. But more interestingly, proliferating Web 2.0 technologies should increase the engagement of INFORMS members in the society’s affairs and the attractiveness of its scheduled events.
A milestone of the development of Web 2.0 ideas within INFORMS should appear in late April, from the 2009 Practice Meeting in Phoenix, AZ. The Marketing folks at the society are mulling over what should and could be done. Let them know! Are you planning to attend? If so, does the prospect of (you) blogging from the meeting grab you? Does it seem like unnecessary work when you’d rather be schmoozing with grad school friends? Does it raise the question, “would anyone want to read my impressions?”
And if you are not planning to attend, what might most make you keenly regret your decision not to? Would blogposts help you better stay in touch with goings-on at the meeting? Or is something like the aforementioned eNews Daily already too much information? Or perhaps, going for a diametrically opposed extreme point, do you wish someone would set up an INFORMS Twitter feed?
7 March 2009 at 04:16
When I go there, I first get a “Possible Service Violation” page. And, for some reason, I can’t subscribe to it via google reader.
Why I bothered installing the multi-user wordpress at INFORMS (see http://blog.informs.org ) when not even INFORMS will use it, I do not understand! But perhaps this is another sign of issues with volunteer driven efforts.
But good luck to the blog: once I can subscribe to it, I’ll link it at my page.
7 March 2009 at 09:12
Mike - Getting to the blog is a matter of clicking through the ominous service violation warning. The first few posts make a good start. As for your neglected Wordpress installation, perhaps it’s a left-hand/right-hand issue.
7 March 2009 at 09:29
And the attempt to read the atom feed comes back with a “User does not have permission to read this blog.” which is presumably why I can’t subscribe through google reader. I wish there was an email contact but perhaps you know who is handling this and can pass along the comments.
It is a good start!
7 March 2009 at 12:15
As an FYI: INFORMS is planning a major upgrade to its “INFORMS Online” web presence (IOL). I am on the Membership Committee, and I would like to push for more member-generated content on the website. Let me know your ideas, and help me make the value proposition.
-Alan
alerera@isye.gatech.edu