Taxonomy for Digital Asset Management (DAM)
Taxonomy allows non-textual digital assets such as images, videos, and audio to be more consistently indexed for reporting, search, publishing, and lifecycle management purposes. To learn more about how WAND can apply its products and services, be sure to check out the applications and platforms listed below. If you'd like us to add another, please contact us with more information.
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Adobe Experience Manager
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Bynder
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Canto
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Widen Collective
Taxonomy for Digital Asset Management (DAM)
Taxonomy allows non-textual digital assets such as images, videos, and audio to be more consistently indexed for reporting, search, publishing, and lifecycle management purposes. To learn more about how WAND can apply its products and services, be sure to check out the applications and platforms listed below. If you'd like us to add another, please contact us with more information.
-
Adobe Experience Manager
-
Bynder
-
Canto
-
Widen Collective
Taxonomy for Digital Asset Management (DAM)
Taxonomy allows non-textual digital assets such as images, videos, and audio to be more consistently indexed for reporting, search, publishing, and lifecycle management purposes. To learn more about how WAND can apply its products and services, be sure to check out the applications and platforms listed below. If you'd like us to add another, please contact us with more information.
-
Adobe Experience Manager
-
Bynder
-
Canto
-
Widen Collective
Insurance Glossary
In the insurance industry, where protection and understanding are vital, a tool which deciphers the complexities of policy terms, coverage details, and industry-specific jargon is in valuable.
The WAND Insurance Glossary has 214 terms with definitions and 26 synonyms, standing as your definitive tool for unraveling insurance language.
Much like how a skilled agent can guide someone through policy selections, this glossary empowers its users to effortlessly comprehend and utilize insurance terminology. Documenting, understanding, and leveraging industry-specific terms becomes accessible and straightforward.
Tailored to accommodate the nuances within the insurance sector, this glossary seamlessly integrates specialized terms unique to your policies and operations, ensuring precision and relevance.
Experience enhanced clarity, smoother communication, and a deeper grasp of insurance coverage. Let this glossary be your beacon in navigating the intricacies of insurance, empowering decision-making and optimized protection.
Top Level Terms include:
• Insurance Claim Metrics (29)
• Insurance Claims Management (10)
• Insurance Claims Prediction (13)
• Insurance Customer Insights (13)
• Insurance Customer Segmentation Data (16)
• Insurance Fraud Detection (22)
• Insurance Policy Information (6)
• Insurance Policy Metrics (21)
• Insurance Premium Metrics (17)
• Insurance Provider Information (6)
• Insurance Underwriting (39)
• Insured’s Information (10)
More Business Glossary Information
Business Glossaries are a critical ingredient to any organization's data and knowledge management systems and processes. WAND's Business Glossaries provide your company with a list of business-specific terms and their definitions. These lists help with A.I. training, assigning semantic context, and analyzing data. Having one source for finding key business terms, concepts, definitions, and the relationships between them is a vital part of any organization.
Since it is becoming increasingly more difficult to make sense of complex data and govern it accordingly –– due largely to the fact that today's business world is an extremely complex environment –– having a well-managed, pre-defined business glossary is one of the best ways to make your business run efficiently and supply all workers with the same, relevant information and definitions in their day-to-day tasks. A business glossary takes the guessing out of certain terms which speeds up time to delivery within collaboration efforts.
Consider the word "customer". To some departments of the organization, this word may be used to refer to a company. Another department in the same organization may use the word "customer" to refer to an individual person. While there may be no issue with this word being defined in two separate manners, a problem arises when these two departments communicate and think they are referring to the same thing when in fact, they are talking about two completely difference aspects of the business with the use of one word.
A Business Glossary removes the room for error in multiple uses of a word by providing a company-wide definition for the terms used in everyday business at the organization. No longer are there communication issues between departments when talking about their customers –– both the companies they service and the individuals with which they work.