BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//ChamberMaster//Event Calendar 2.0//EN METHOD:PUBLISH X-PUBLISHED-TTL:P1H REFRESH-INTERVAL:P1H CALSCALE:GREGORIAN BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Denver BEGIN:DAYLIGHT RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=3;BYDAY=2SU DTSTART:20070101T000000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0600 TZNAME:Mountain Daylight Time END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=11;BYDAY=1SU DTSTART:20070101T000000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0600 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 TZNAME:Mountain Standard Time END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20131203T000000 DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20131203T000000 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-ALLDAYEVENT:FALSE SUMMARY:CTA CIO Forum-Making Change Work DESCRIPTION:Sponsors\nTicketsFREE Subscribing Members\n$94 Community Members\n$99 Non MembersMaking Change WorkIt’s possible that the more years one spends in an IT\nleadership role\, the less the major challenges are technical in nature. The need for CIOs to guide some organizational\,\npolitical and strategic changes disguised as technology initiatives causes us\nto frequently dust off some old change management theories and approaches\, and\nput them to good use. Getting\nindependent business leaders to coalesce and support a new direction is complex\nin many organizations\, even in non-profit\, cultural and educational\norganizations.Like many museums and libraries today\, the Los Angeles-based\nJ. Paul Getty Trust (home to the two Getty Museums and the Getty Research\nInstitute) embraces technology as a key means to connect with many audiences\,\nincluding museum visitors\, school-aged children\, teachers\, art historians\,\nresearchers\, conservationists\, scholars\, etc. \nInitiatives like the Google Art Project and the 20\,000\,000 digital\nimages freely available on Wikimedia Commons\, have drawn many museums and\nlibraries into active conversations about whether to continue to closely guard\ndigital images of their collections or to provide broader downloadable access\nto high-quality\, high-resolution images. \nThe Getty’s new Open Content Program clearly announced a new vision and\ncommitment to broad and unrestricted access to images of works owned by the\nGetty.\n\n\nSpeaker\nMarilyn Gillette\, CIO of the J. Paul Getty Trust\, Los Angeles An\ninformation technology executive with current CIO experience\, many years of\nsuccessful Partner-level information technology management consulting\nexperience in a "Big 4†firm\, and early career technical work as a programmer\nand designer of systems software and applications. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Sponsors Tickets FREE Subscribing Members | Making Change Work It’s possible that the more years one spends in an IT\nleadership role\, the less the major challenges are technical in nature.  \;The need for CIOs to guide some organizational\,\npolitical and strategic changes disguised as technology initiatives causes us\nto frequently dust off some old change management theories and approaches\, and\nput them to good use. \; Getting\nindependent business leaders to coalesce and support a new direction is complex\nin many organizations\, even in non-profit\, cultural and educational\norganizations.Like many museums and libraries today\, the Los Angeles-based\nJ. Paul Getty Trust (home to the two Getty Museums and the Getty Research\nInstitute) embraces technology as a key means to connect with many audiences\,\nincluding museum visitors\, school-aged children\, teachers\, art historians\,\nresearchers\, conservationists\, scholars\, etc. \;\nInitiatives like the Google Art Project and the 20\,000\,000 digital\nimages freely available on Wikimedia Commons\, have drawn many museums and\nlibraries into active conversations about whether to continue to closely guard\ndigital images of their collections or to provide broader downloadable access\nto high-quality\, high-resolution images. \;\nThe Getty’s new Open Content Program clearly announced a new vision and\ncommitment to broad and unrestricted access to images of works owned by the\nGetty. Speaker Marilyn Gillette\, CIO of the J. Paul Getty Trust\, Los Angeles  \; An\ninformation technology executive with current CIO experience\, many years of\nsuccessful Partner-level information technology management consulting\nexperience in a "Big 4†firm\, and early career technical work as a programmer\nand designer of systems software and applications. |