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Computing Business For IT Leaders - November 2007 issue

Computing Business Issue 21

Agenda Setters
Terminal 5

Five star

Wilson James’ finance director Mark Abraham tells of the tribulations of building T5
Mark Samuels

Reducing the risks

Do not allow risk management to become risk aversion: concentrate on proactive control
A crowd of people

People power

How can Web 2.0 work for business, and which social software tools will help CIOs?
> More Agenda Setters
Best practice

Do it yourself

The rise of end user development will bring further innovation in the future

Merger moves for chief information officers

Nick Kirkland looks at the role IT plays during mergers and acquisitions and how IT leaders can prepare for M&A activity

Which CIO are you?

Guy Lidbetter and Sue German show you the type of CIO you are and provide helpful tips
> More Best Practice
Computing News
EU flags

Microsoft to appeal EU fine

Commissions says it is confident the fine is legally sound
> More News from Computing
Cover Story
Roulette wheel

Risky business

From hackers to natural disasters, risk management is a vital tool for protecting your organisation
Boardroom

All change

CIOs must adapt if they want to achieve successful business transformation

Encourage chief executive talent

Venture capital firms are not giving company leaders enough chance to prove their worth, says Ashley Ward

The next big thing in outsourcing?

Gone are the days when management was simple. Outsourcing now breeds new ideas that just complicate things, says Mark Samuels
> More from the Boardroom
Leadership
Piggy bank

Project success

How to secure project funding in a climate of financial caution
Picture of Sharm Manwani

Deal in data

Sharm Manwani reveals the challenge posed to CIOs by the increase in unstructured data on IT systems
Picture of waste PCs

Escape the cull

Cath Everett investigates why 25 per cent of IT projects fail and shares some tips on how to makes yours a success story
> More Leadership
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How much is the social networking site Facebook worth?
I agree with Microsoft - $10bn
Lots of potential - $5bn+
Big but not that big - $1bn
Will get there one day - $500m
You must be joking - less than $500m
What's Facebook?
Resources
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