Nonessential work byproduct is not only clogging your internal network, it's raising the risk of litigation and cyber attacks.
Everybody seems excited about the potential of huge datasets to turbo-charge their businesses. But do companies have the talent they’ll need?
Finance executives have no trouble imagining how new technologies will make their companies more competitive. So why can’t they make that vision a reality?
Some corporations are already jettisoning legacy databases and restrictive hardware setups and moving to the open-source framework for data analytics.
With the surging prominence of issues related to information technology, IT is gaining ground on the environment as part of the sustainability picture.
A divisional CFO at NYSE Euronext moves down in company size but eyes a giant growth opportunity.
Reality is swiftly outpacing the ability of accountants to embrace Big Data. How can they catch up?
Citing “widespread complaints of information overload in financial reporting,” reformers would allow companies to pick and choose what to disclose.
Buying information technology is easy. Harnessing it to its full potential is the hard part.
Internal auditors who incorporate data analytics will reap the benefits of real-time risk management.
Leadership-capacity constraints are undermining many companies’ efforts. New management structures can be part of the solution.
Finance departments will invest heavily in cloud computing and mobile technologies in the coming year.