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Information operations in a digital environment

January 19, 2021 by Rahel Bailie

What happens when you start working in an area that has no real name to it? When it involves content and data, but it’s not “content strategy” exactly, and it’s not “content operations” exactly, and it’s certainly not “data operations”? You adopt a label that is the closest term to what you want to describe. In this case, that term is “information operations” or InfoOps.

What and why of information operations

Most of what we do as practitioners is in response to a business problem, or perhaps a business aspiration. In the case of information operations, it is often a double-barrelled approach to achieving a particular outcome. These outcomes can be stated in several ways; your organisation may choose to go down the path.

Some ways of expressing the what and why:

  • We want to get information out there faster, so we need to automate things at the content production end.
  • Our data is changing more often than ever, and the guy managing the spreadsheet can’t keep up with the dozens of places that the data has to be changed.
  • We can to commoditise information – that is, automate the publication – so that we have less of a bottleneck in our call centre, giving one-on-one information.
  • We don’t have enough resources to handle all the work manually, so we want to build more efficiently into production.
  • We want to deliver a personalised customer experience, which means creating more specific content, marrying it with specific data, and delivering it to the right audience segment at the right time. Oh, and automating as much of that as we can.
  • We want to stop entering data points into our content manually when we know there’s a way to automate that function.
  • We want to democratise our knowledge by making it available across our client base on a self-serve basis.

The common themes here are efficiency at the creation end, and automation at the delivery end.

For some organisations, the impetus may be to provide a better user experience. For other organisations, the impetus may be to control internal costs. Either way, success depends on the working on both sides, and meeting in the middle.

Building on the DIWK framework of knowledge management

Looking at a traditional knowledge management pyramid, the base is data, building up to information, and resulting in knowledge and wisdom. While this is a useful model within knowledge management to understand the cognitive transformation of raw material (data) into meaningful conclusions, the model needs to be updated to be helpful in explaining the mechanics of delivering information.

To understand the operational side of DWIK, we need to stand the pyramid on its head. First of all, content is a missing element from the entire equation. It may be co-opted into the category of data, but content is inherently different than data and needs its own category. And secondly, in information operations, we cannot strive to create wisdom. Information can be combined and delivered in ways that create a form of knowledge; it’s up to the consumer of that information to contextualise their findings into something more.

The information operations pyramid

The word “operations” is the key to the interpretation of the practice. The explanation of information operations is firmly rooted in the production and delivery sides of the equation, as an operational model that leads to a range of potential outcomes that are varied as the organisations that adopt it.

InfoOps Inverted Pyramid

Let’s look at each layer of the inverted pyramid separately.

  • Data. For InfoOps to work, data needs to operationalised. For purposes of explaining the need behind information operations, the data sets must be maintained in a usable state to be available on demand, to enable dynamic delivery of data. The data can be used to create analyses, data visualisations, or simply to populate data points within content objects. An simple example is “Our company was founded in [year] and has [number] employees. Revenues have grown at a steady rate over the past 5 years [trend over time graph].” Those data points can be dynamically updated on an ongoing basis, with no intervention from the content developer. There is a lot more to data operations that indirectly benefit information operations, which you can have explained by people much closer to data than me.
    Data operations
  • Content. For InfoOps to work, content needs to be operationalised. Operationalising content is very different from how it’s done in the data world. What differentiates content from data is context. Content is human-usable, contextualised data. My usual example is to tell me whether the data point “12” is good or bad. You don’t have enough context to make an informed decision. If it’s a £12 pencil, it’s probably not a good investment; if it’s £12 for a case of pencils, you’re probably getting a better deal. If 12 is a dozen, then you might think eggs, while a baker’s dozen is actually 13. If I tell you that 12 = month, then generally, 12 equals December. There are some explanations about content operations freely available, including this one.
    Content Operations
  • Information. If content is contextualised data, then you can consider information to be contextualised content. Unfortunately the term “information operations” seems to have been adopted in the USA to mean “support for military operations”. Outside of that very specific definition, operationalising information can take many forms. Here are two examples.
    • In the first example, we look at embedding data parameters into a piece of content, as follows. “How many countries are in the world? The UN recognises [number] countries and territories. The USA officially recognizes fewer than [number] nations. Ultimately, the most recognised answer is that there are [number] countries in the world.” The numbers on their own would be meaningless without the context provided by the text surrounding them. Automating the insertion of data into the content in real time allows us to update the data points from time to time without intervention by the writer.
    • In the second example, the data does the heavy lifting. The image shows a dynamically-generated with up-to-the-minute analysis of a financial investment, supplemented by enough content to explain what the chart means.

You can read about commoditising information in a few places, though the most accessible article insists on calling content “data” all the way through it.

Commoditisation of Information

Output of information operations

Information is the input; knowledge is the outcome. It is fitting that knowledge is at the top of the InfoOps pyramid, as the combined outcome of a number of content and data inputs can result in many different combination of results. In the earlier example of 12 = December, a person in Europe may conclude that it might be a nice time to travel in Thailand, whereas Thai residents may conclude that they need to know how to brave an onslaught of European tourists or stock up on merchandise for their souvenir shop.

When it comes to enhancing a user experience with that information, some of the process can be automated – recommendation engines deliver different information to different audiences all the time, sometimes with hilariously inappropriate results – and other aspects require the recipient to consider their own contexts. We can provide information, but the rest is up to the information consumers to draw their own conclusions, and make knowledge out of the information.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rahel Anne Bailie, Content, Seriously

Rahel is a results-driven, seasoned consultant with extensive experience in digital transformation. She has a strong track record of delivering end-to-end content systems in the context of digital strategy projects, often in environments with complex content delivery requirements. A professional who delivers the hard truths and sometimes difficult prescriptions that help organisations leverage their content as a business asset.

More by Rahel…

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