The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) can be a challenge for healthcare providers of all sizes, especially small and midsize ones that lack the in-house resources to dedicate to enforcing consistent HIPAA compliance.
Read MoreGeneral contractors and the construction industry in general have long been able to postpone the inevitable move to integrating advanced technology into its daily operations. However, the days of fabricating advanced structures without so much as a wheel or pulley to assist are long gone. Over the years material advancement, labor organization, planning, technology and collaboration have taken the construction industry to where it is today: busy, profitable and ready to embrace today’s information technology.
Read MoreAs a partner to healthcare organizations throughout Ohio for several decades, we thought we’d run through some of the important technologies set to shape 2019 and help our friends and partners in the healthcare industry understand how a managed security provider can help take advantage of them.
Read MoreIn some ways, commercial insurance companies are like other businesses, always looking for new ways to become more efficient and more profitable. Reliable technology that’s better aligned with your business strategy is an ideal starting point for achieving these goals, as it can make claim information easier to store and access, freeing staff to concentrate on more important tasks.
Read MoreCompeting in the legal services market has become an increasingly difficult affair. While the demand for legal services has stayed mostly flat since the Great Recession of 2008, an increasing number of non-traditional service providers are challenging long-held industry conventions and introducing uncertainty to an already competitive market.
Read MoreFinancial services firms have always been a top target of cybercrime, but today the threat is greater than ever. According to a report released by IBM X-Force, firms in the financial services industry are attacked at nearly twice the rate of companies in other industries. Why? Hackers are simply following the money.
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