Profile of Anthony O'Donnell
Blog Posts: 2240
Anthony O'Donnell has covered technology in the insurance industry since 2000, when he joined the editorial staff of Insurance & Technology. As an editor and reporter for I&T and the InformationWeek Financial Services of TechWeb he has written on all areas of information technology in the property/casualty, life and health insurance industries, following the trends and issues faced by senior technology executives. In addition to reporting and editorial duties for I&T, O'Donnell also serves as a moderator and speaker at industry events and broadcasts. He began his editorial career in the healthcare industry where he reported and edited for medical publications with a variety of audiences, from the general public to physicians and researchers. He has also worked in the healthcare field as a media relations professional and Spanish/English interpreter/translator, and has taught English composition and conversation classes to native speakers of Spanish, both in the United States and in Latin America. O'Donnell lives in the Portland, Oregon area with his wife and two sons.
Articles by Anthony O'Donnell
posted in July 2002
7/31/2002
Having aggressively supported technology as president and CEO of UnumProvident subsidiary Colonial Life & Accident Ins. Co., Gary Kirkner says he will do the same in his new role as senior vice president of CIGNA Group Insurance, sales and account management.
7/29/2002
Efficiency focus, component-based tech answers industry appetite.
7/5/2002
NYL employee's community service involvement.
7/5/2002
Maximizing efficiency through process.
7/5/2002
Fireman's Fund uses Hire.com's Internet-based sourcing solutions to build its own "talent community."
7/3/2002
The next step in the turnaround of OneBeacon will be the implementation
of a Web-enabled policy administration system by Sapiens International. The solution is being built on an existing policy administration framework built by Sapiens for OneBeacon's commercial lines business.
7/1/2002
Streamlining processes and removing the programming "speed bump" can mean getting to market quicker.