AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.
Create a link to this page
Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:
Few who were there, and still sober, can forget the sight of Hoovers Online marketing manager Raife Watson on the dancefloor of the Royal Lancaster Hotel's ballroom.
His incomparable air guitar solo was heartfelt, and the exuberance was justified - Hoovers had just won the award for Best Business Information Product against stiff competition, and Raife was raising the roof! As were all the other contenders - the awards are, first and foremost, the top industry party of the year.
The International Information Industry Awards is an unmissable event for many reasons. It takes place on the Wednesday of the Online Information Show (this year, 30 November). That means there are a lot of folk in town - such as top US brass coming to London to meet customers and colleagues from Europe and further afield - adding to the international dimension of the event.
Nominees (and winners) are also emerging from further afield, and the organisers are eager to encourage more entries from overseas. In 2004, winners included Norwegian vendor FAST Search and Transfer (Joint Winner, Best Search Product) and the South Australian Health Services Libraries Consortium, whose Chasing the Sun project, in conjunction with the NHS South Wales Information for Clinical Effectiveness, won the award for Best Team in a Public Sector Environment.
The roster of awards are wide ranging - from individual and team awards to project, product and technology categories, as well as customer service and other specialist categories (see box).
This year, three new awards are being added. Information World Review is introducing a Readers' Technology of the Year award, which will be voted for by readers completing the annual Reader Survey (see page 3). This award will honour either a generic technology or a specific innovative initiative that readers have deemed the most significant for the industry in 2005.
IWR also names an Information Professional of the Year (past winners have included Neil Infield of Hermes Pension Fund and Karen George of the Home Office), selected from nominations made to the Editor (email editor@iwr.co.uk). This award honours individuals from any type of organisation who have made a distinctive and outstanding contribution as an information professional.
Source: HighBeam Research, Call for nominations - Industry awards - Entrance qualifications....