Case Studies

Scyllogis Consulting have been helping customers within the Insurance sector continue to achieve significantly higher levels of business performance from their data management programmes and information systems since 2001. Read how we have worked with some of these customers to achieve significant business results across the world, in our case studies.

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Consulting Expertise
Insurance organisations today are no more effective at delivering on large-scale data management initiatives than they were 10 years ago. In a recent survey, 70% of the companies said their data management initiatives did not deliver the expected results. That success rate was unchanged from similar surveys conducted in the 1990's. And the environment for data management is only getting more complex.....

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Our People
At Scyllogis Consulting all of our consultants have significant experience gained from within the Insurance market. Our people and our culture are our greatest assets. We only select people with relevant experience, intelligence, integrity, passion and the ambition to make a mark and deliver to our Customers the Scyllogis brand values of practical, results based consultancy. Our Consultants are pragmatic and open minded. That is why we deliver solutions that others dont.....  Read More
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Scyllogis is committed to ensuring our website is accessible to all, including disabled users. Not only does it make good business sense, but it is also a legal requirement for businesses and organisations to make reasonable adjustments to provide accessible services or information.

Committment to accessibility

We acknowledge the importance of the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) of 1995, the World Wide Web Consortiums’ (W3C) Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) and Section 508 of the U.S.A Federal Electronic Rehabilitation Act all of which state that provision must be made to ensure  the web is accessible to all by promoting technologies that take into account the vast differences in culture, languages, education, ability, material resources, access devices, and physical limitations of users on all continents.

One of the main goals of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is many users may be operating in contexts very different from our own:
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W3C has a set of guidelines, to promote accessibility, these are:
1. Provide equivalent alternatives to auditory and visual content
Provide content that, when presented to the user, conveys essentially the same function or purpose as auditory or visual content.
2. Don't rely on colour alone
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Mark up documents with the proper structural elements. Control presentation with style sheets rather than with presentation elements and attributes
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Ensure that moving, blinking, scrolling, or auto-updating objects or pages may be paused or stopped.
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Ensure that the user interface follows principles of accessible design: device-independent access to functionality, keyboard operability, self-voicing, etc.
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Use features that enable activation of page elements via a variety of input devices.
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Use interim accessibility solutions so that assistive technologies and older browsers will operate correctly.
11. Use W3C technologies and guidelines
Use W3C technologies (according to specification) and follow accessibility guidelines. Where it is not possible to use a W3C technology, or doing so results in material that does not transform gracefully, provide an alternative version of the content that is accessible.


Last Updated ( Monday, 05 December 2011 )
 
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