Process innovation: reengineering work through information technology
Process innovation: reengineering work through information technology
Information Management for the Intelligent Organization
Information Management for the Intelligent Organization
Managing Information Strategically
Managing Information Strategically
An empirical assessment of the information resource management construct
Journal of Management Information Systems - Special section: Toward a theory of business process change management
The persistence of behavior and form in the organization of personal information
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
Personal knowledge and information management - conception and exemplification
Journal of Information Science
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Information management concerns the control over how information is created, acquired, organized, stored, distributed, and used as a means of promoting, efficient and effective information access, processing, and use by people and organizations. Various perspectives of information management exist. In this paper, three are presented: the organizational, library and personal perspectives. Each deals with the management of some or all of the processes involved in the information lifecycle. Each concerns itself with the management of different types of information resources. The purpose of this paper is to clearly describe what, ''information management'' is and to clarify how information management differs in regards to closely related terms.