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Networked information: dealing with overload.

Hall, Hazel

Authors

Hazel Hall



Abstract

In support of peak performance all organisations require optimal information: information that arrives at the right time and in the right format, matching the quality requirements of its potential users (Marcusohn, 1995). In contrast to this, a superabundance of information, some of which may be irrelevant or of dubious quality, that arrives too quickly, can be damaging to employees and their business in the form of information overload. Two decades ago this concept was dismissed as a "phantom" that did "not exist for most people in most circumstances" [1] (Wilson, 1976). However, recent research conducted in industrialised nations of Europe, the United States and Asia Pacific demonstrates that the problems associated with information overload are now much more tangible: 49% of managers feel that quite often or very frequently they are unable to handle the information they receive and two thirds of them believe that information in their organisations is under-utilised. Some managers are even "reluctant to admit personally such sufferance for fear of being seen to fail in their job responsibilities...

Citation

Hall, H. (1997, November). Networked information: dealing with overload. Presented at LACIG Scotland

Conference Name LACIG Scotland
Start Date Nov 4, 1997
End Date Nov 4, 1997
Publication Date 1998
Deposit Date Sep 6, 2010
Publicly Available Date Jun 22, 2017
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Pages 37-44
Book Title Information for Scotland IV : proceedings of a conference organised by the Cataloguing and Indexing Group in Scotland, the Library Association Information Services Group (Scottish Branch) and the National Library of Scotland, and held at the Strathclyde G
ISBN 0904391566 9780904391565
Keywords information;
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/3169
Contract Date May 16, 2017

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