Summary

Will Fletcher, Zasio general counsel, will present “Information Governance and Cybersecurity: Speaking the Language of Information Security” during the three-day conference in Savannah, Georgia.

Zasio has been selected to speak at the upcoming ARMA InfoNEXT conference in April.

Will Fletcher, Zasio general counsel, will present “Information Governance and Cybersecurity: Speaking the Language of Information Security” during the three-day conference in Savannah, Georgia.

“Information security is not just IT’s responsibility—it’s a crucial component of effective information governance,” his session states. “While records and information management (RIM) and cybersecurity teams may seem to speak different languages, they share a fundamental mission: protecting information’s confidentiality, integrity, and availability (the CIA triad).”

Fletcher will be joined at the conference by Warren Bean, Vice President of Technology and Product Development, who will be on hand to discuss Zasio’s software solutions and consulting services with other information governance leaders.

ARMA International describes InfoNEXT as “where esteemed Information Governance professionals, visionary leaders, and innovative solution providers come together.”

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Recent Blogs from Will Fletcher

Successful RIM Initiatives Invest in Project and Change Management

Creating—and many times just updating—an enterprise records and information management program represents considerable organizational change.

From the CEO to the front desk assistant, most roles spend large parts of each day interacting in some way with the organization’s records and information. Altering how they collect, process, store, and dispose of this takes more than RIM subject matter expertise—it also takes project and people smarts.

This article discusses project and change management fundamentals that should be amply applied to any RIM initiative—whether you’re launching a new program or updating an existing one.

Navigating Retention of Data Privacy Compliance Records

Data privacy law compliance is in large measure about showing your work. Five years into the swell of new comprehensive data privacy laws, privacy teams are getting used to ensuring their organization’s personal data activities are well documented. This means creating records—often lots of them. And for records managers, this means sorting out retention practices for all these new records.