Results

Review: Scaling Up Excellence by Sutton & Rao

Review: Scaling Up Excellence by Sutton & Rao

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I often reference Bob Sutton’s work here and in class, and Huggy Rao’s work on enthusiast organizations and innovation is a classic. When I heard that their book, Scaling Up Excellence: Getting to More Without Settling for Less, was due out I was thrilled, and rightly so. It’s wonderful.

Sutton and Rao offer a comprehensive guide to management in a package of enticing stories, subtly supported by references to high-end research. Their personal history in the Silicon Valley and their global access to interesting organizations provides the backdrop.

Main Theme & Who Should Read

The main theme is that, while many good practices exist in organizations, they either get lost or there are difficulties when attempts are made to spread them (scale them) across the organization. The breadth of this theme means that this book will provide value to anyone who would like to see organizations improve. The benefits are not limited by industry, functional area, or organizational size.

Key Ideas: The Seven Mantras

Sutton and Rao are far more direct than most academics; it often takes a lot to get a professor away from an “it depends” answer. In this instance they have enough background to be confident with the following:

We’ve identified reliable signs that scaling is going well or badly, and we’ve distilled these signals into seven mantras. If you are embarking on a scaling effort [I’ll add if you are doing anything to make your organization better], memorize them, teach them to others, and invent ways to keep them firmly in focus -- especially when the going gets rough.

  • Spread a mindset, not just a footprint. This first one is their, and your, protection against being labeled a fad.
  • Engage all the senses. From my perspective, this is where you consider how to weave together human, technical, and organizational practices such that they work together, not against your goals. It’s also where I realize that my presentation of these ideas is much less colorful, and perhaps less likely to scale.
  • Link short-term realities to long-term dreams. Organizations that can do this have mastered ambidexterity -- the ability to both get work done now, and not let that get in the way of great things in the future. (In my mind, this is a precursor to solving the The Innovator's Dilemma.)
  • Accelerate accountability. This one sings to me as a focus on transparency. I’ve asked in the past, “What evidence, tools, and techniques do people in mainstream organizations think they need to move in this direction?” The examples provided here may move us closer to my ideal.
  • Fear the clusterfug. Yes, they are using a euphemism, but it gets across that we can't allow even mundane bad things to get worse. Speak up. For those wanting to use their business research background: Don’t escalate commitments to bad situations. Think about the Denver baggage-handling fiasco and fear a similar outcome on your watch.
  • Scaling requires both addition and subtraction. This ties directly to the idea of managing for now and for the future. Sometimes activities that have worked to create excellence stop working as you scale. As Sutton and Rao note, having an all-hands meeting every week makes great sense for a small organization, but you are likely to have to shift the form of this activity as you grow. Information flow and commitment are still important, but you need to be willing to find new ways that fit your growth.
  • Slow down to scale faster--and better-- down the road. I completely agree. I am wondering why, in my writing, I start with this one (in the form of “Stop-Look-Listen”), and yet they end with it. Perhaps thinking of this as a list is the problem. It’s not a list, it’s a cycle or a weaving, which also goes along with their borrowing Michael Dearing’s image of whether this is Buddhism versus Catholicism (see Chapter 2).

Apply These Ideas

My goal with this review is to get you to read the book. You will benefit. Your organization will benefit. The next time I teach a general graduate management class, Scaling Up Excellence will be a required reading.

I’m still trying to decide how much experience in organizations you need to have to gain value from their ideas -- and I’d love your opinion. Is this a book to help undergraduates trying to understand the complexities of organizations? If you are a mentor, is this a book you would suggest to a person in their first full-time job? Without a doubt it’s a book I’d give to someone taking on a new leadership role at any level.

Disclosure: My review copy was provided by the publisher. I’ve also purchased a copy to gift to a colleague.

Future of Work Innovation & Product-led Growth Chief Executive Officer Chief People Officer

WeatherTech Ad in Super Bowl 48 Tells Americans More About Redefining Work than Just Jobs

WeatherTech Ad in Super Bowl 48 Tells Americans More About Redefining Work than Just Jobs

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Two things stood out last night as I watched the Denver Broncos sleep through an entire game.

(1) Freelancer.com surpassed 10 Million registered freelancers during Super Bowl 48, and (2) WeatherTech spent millions to simply tell America their weather protecting rubber mats made for automobiles are only manufactured by Americans workers.

Combining the message from the WeatherTech Ad above, and thinking about what is means to have 10 Million freelancers ready to work converges on a notion suggesting there is more going on with what it means to work in America than just having more jobs. Over the last decade, we have seen a redefinition of work itself. 

I put them in the following five categories.

1. Back from Bangalore to Boston.

Outsourcing means something different that it did five years ago. CIO.com suggests in 2014 20% to 30% of IT jobs will be coming back to American shores in models where it is more cost effective to hire American workers than hiring workers in other nations. Deloitte reported in 2012 of the 48% of US employment survey respondents that decided to sever offshoring contracts, 34% of said 48% are bringing work back either in house, or "insourcing" enabling catchy phrases such as "from Bangalore to Boston" to exist describing the move back to American shores. This means more Americans with jobs.

2. Pajamas instead of Pinned Stripes

Work is starting to mean something completely different; work is a thing that I do not longer a place that I go. This means the increase in remote workers, irrespective of the work of Marissa Mayer from Yahoo reprimanding Yahoo's employees taking advantage of work the from home policies to pull up their socks, more and more American can work remotely. The Wall Street Journal reported over 40% of management business and financial workers worked from home in 2010, and almost 10% of all U.S. workers work from home in Pajamas at least one day per week and this number is constantly rising. This means more American's can move to low cost of living areas flattening the supply and demand of American jobs, and we can work in our living rooms in pajamas instead of conference rooms in pinned striped suits.

3. Fancy jobs are in Factories

Manufacturing jobs are sexy again. As the Industrial Internet starts to take shape lead by GE and Cisco's Internet of Everything, we are seeing sexy returned to American manufacturing jobs. The New York Times reported in 2013, more than 50% of executives of manufacturing companies with more than 1 Billion in sales plan to return some production back to American from China and install modernization into the factories. This means that every aspect of the workforce will have a knowledge or (smart) component to it, and ergo educated and trained Americans can earn at their highest market rates in these "smart" jobs.

4. From Two Jobs, to a Thousand Tasks

Work itself is becoming insanely "taskified" - meaning more and more work is being broken up into small tasks, and the hyper connectivity that we enjoy is enabling a marketplace of buyers and sellers of tasks to be completed and completed tasks on sites like odesk.com, topcoder.com, taskrabbit.com, and freelancer.com. Just last night during Super Bowl 48, Freelancer.com surpassed the 10 Million registered freelancer mark. While all of the 10 million freelancers are not Americans, the lion's share of work is done by American freelancers "moon lighting" in the work world of tasks. This means more and more Americans can augment earnings on a global marketplace of tasks enabled by hyper connectivity and "taskification" choosing thousands of tasks over what was traditionally a second job.

5. Human as a Service over Stuck in a Role

The way human resource is looked at is changing. Now that we have clouded the capacity for computers to compute and store information creating liquid technology capacity, and we are on our way to software-defined networks. Infrastructure and Platform as a Service are starting to use resource liquidity in the design of a company where human capacity can be consumed as a service. Forbes covered Human as Service in 2012 suggesting teams in organizations will be built and dismantled based on the demand of individual projects. Meaning, no longer will the same 20 employees be stuck working for the same manager for years doing different projects. The design of a team will be specific to a project, and when the project is over the team of human resources (employees) will go back into a pool. This means the hierarchy and power relationships of work will change to one where human capacity will be seen more as a service and liquid than as a stateful and fixed resource unchaining employees from being stuck in a job.

I know, its going to be difficult to resist the memes of the Broncos that will ensue in the next few days can we get out from under Super Bowl 48.

But one this is for sure, we have gotten out from under offshoring and outsourcing realities in the last decade, and the promise of what it means to work in America is well on its way back to becoming awesome sauce.

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Future of Work Data to Decisions Innovation & Product-led Growth New C-Suite Tech Optimization Chief People Officer Chief Experience Officer

Facebook Lookback Provides A Personal Touch To Social Networking

Facebook Lookback Provides A Personal Touch To Social Networking

A few years ago I started to get frustrated with the way the market (vendors, press, analysts) was focusing primarily on how "social" could help teams and communities. While of course there are great benefits to this, I believe it leaves out the most important target, the individual. That's why I started my "Don't forget the ME in social MEdia" campaign.

 

I strongly believe that in order for people to learn to openly share and help their colleagues, they have to first come to grips with how they themselves can benefit from "being social". Once a person understands this, and more importantly appreciates it, they are then much more willing to "pay it forward" and help others. This is often referred to as the "What's In It For Me" (WIIFM) test.

This week in celebration of their 10th anniversary, Facebook launched a new feature called Lookback. Lookback creates a minute long video that showcases some of the highlights of the things you've shared on Facebook since you joined. While many people have become annoyed that their Facebook timeline is now filled with people sharing their Lookback videos, I think they're missing the point. While it may be nice to watch a few your friends and family's videos, the main benefit is that your own video should provide you with 60 seconds of joy. Almost every one I've spoken to said their video made them smile, sometimes even cry.

One of the areas I've been working with several enterprise software vendors on is how to help employees know which of their content is most effective and where they should (and should not) be spending their time. This is a topic I refer to as Personal Analytics. While Lookback isn't actually an analytics tool, it does highlight a few of your most popular posts. This is a good first step, and I'd love to see more enterprise software vendors provide a similar snapshot feature.

Kudos to you Facebook on not forgetting the ME in social MEdia.

 

 

Futher reading:

Don’t Like Your Facebook “Look Back”? You’ll Be Able To Edit It Soon on TechCrunch

How to download your Facebook Look Back by Willington Vega

Future of Work Marketing Transformation Data to Decisions Innovation & Product-led Growth New C-Suite Tech Optimization meta Marketing B2B B2C CX Customer Experience EX Employee Experience AI ML Generative AI Analytics Automation Cloud Digital Transformation Disruptive Technology Growth eCommerce Enterprise Software Next Gen Apps Social Customer Service Content Management Collaboration Chief Experience Officer

IT is in the Experience Business

IT is in the Experience Business

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MDM is dead and it’s been dead for a long time. It no longer makes sense as a product and businesses have begun to finally realize it and not buy into the hype. The fact that it has become the household name for the technology to manage mobile is just sad. The good news, at least if you like acronyms, is it’s now been replaced with a new acronym, EMM or Enterprise Mobility Management. It’s much simpler to talk about EMM than it is to say you’ve moved from MDM (Mobile Device Management) to MAM (Mobile Application Management). Let’s not leave out the other acronyms that have a place in this alphabet soup of technologies that companies are trying to sell you. MCM, MIM, TEM, DRM, IRM, if it has three letters in it, chances are someone has included it in this unending black hole called EMM.

blackholeThe problem with black holes though, is there’s no way to know what has been sucked up inside them. They are the black boxes of technology and you start to forget what they really do or how well they might actually do it. They also have this tendency to trap you and no matter how hard you struggle to break free, you’re stuck, both with the product and a mindset. To make matters worse, people still don’t really understand what they’re trying to do in the first place. We started this approach years ago and it was all about devices. How do we handle them and the fallback was to use the legacy thinking that’s been drilled in through years of practice. The organization had to own the device. It’s what they’ve done with PCs forever so why change if the smartphone or tablet is just a computer in your pocket. The heavy handedness of this approach was ignored until users, looking to get stuff done turned to BYOD and refused to have their own devices managed, looking to avoid the big brother of their company.

As easy as it is to talk about all the available solutions out there and where technology is going, yes application management is the next step and then there’s content management and expense management and the list just goes on, we don’t realize that we’re talking about the wrong things. The point of mobile isn’t to be managed; yet that’s where most companies start and then fail.

Mobile is about enablement. It’s enabling your people to get their work done when and where they need to with the right tools so that they can be more flexible and agile. It’s about them moving the business forward and helping the business meet its goals. Notice, we’re talking about executing on a business strategy. We’re not talking about an IT strategy yet. Even though the IT strategy is built from the business strategy to achieve the business goals. We’re also not talking about mobile either. We’re talking about giving people the right tools to get the job done in the best way possible. It could be a PC, a tablet, a smartphone, or even a wearable. We’re using those tools hooked into a back end that could be cloud or just a server, but it helps the people who need to do their job to get it done.

This means that we have to follow the FUN principle, the company has to Focus on the User Needs. We want productive employees who are happy and healthy and can give 110%. This means realizing that it’s not really a work / life balance but rather a work / life integration and one of the things that many of our users need is the ability to achieve that integration by getting their job done in the right place at the right time.

IT isn’t just in the solution business anymore. It can’t be reactive and spend months trying to build the perfect thing the business asked for but needed much sooner than IT could deliver. IT is in the experience business. Users need to have great interactions that lead to fantastic experiences that help them get stuff done and move the business towards its goal. This means developing apps based upon the FUN principle and the only way to do that is to talk to your employees and understand what they want/need to get done. It’s moving way from the monolithic application that has a thousand different features and becomes a crapplication when ported over to a smartphone or tablet and, instead, looking at the information the user needs to complete the experience.

When the focus turns to the user and the experience that you are trying to deliver, the device becomes just a tool, a means to an end. You start by looking at the data that they need to interact with. You construct an app that helps them turn that data into information that they can use and then turn into knowledge, either for them or the business. You build that app to run on the right tool for the right person, which may mean a smartphone for one person, a tablet for another and a desktop for a third. You provide an ecosystem so that the tool can run the app appropriately, it can connect to a network if it needs to, it can be secured properly and priced appropriately. Notice that we are building a hierarchy that starts with the need and works to the experience which is analogous to starting with the data and working through the app, then the device, and finally the connectivity and ecosystem supporting it.

Looked at this way, we aren’t talking about EMM, Enterprise Mobile Management; we’re talking about EM, experience management that incorporates enterprise management (EM)2. Mobile is just another set of tools like a laptop or PC. We worry less about securing the device and start with securing the data. After we have secured the data we move up to the app, then the device, and finally the ecosystem. We’re in the business of providing secure right time experiences that allow the user to (in the words of the army) be all they can be.

New C-Suite Innovation & Product-led Growth Chief Information Officer

Think Big, Act Big – Exploring the Future of Work

Think Big, Act Big – Exploring the Future of Work

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The cloud revolution has been in full swing for several years now. But there are still plenty of disbelievers out there.

 

One of the most common putdowns is that cloud software is “just an application running on a remote server”. This comment is often made by IT professionals and while true on a very basic level, it misses the bigger picture.

 

Cloud software is transforming how businesses operate because it gives them access to systems and tools normally afforded only by larger companies. Customer relationship management (CRM) software is a classic example of a program that took could take one or more servers to operate.

 

The risk of buying the software and the hardware and paying consultants to put it all together and customise it to operations pushed CRM beyond the grasp of many smaller businesses.

 

Although every business is built on its ability to make sales, mainly mid-size and large companies have invested in software to help them improve the way they sell.

 

But CRMs, like other enterprise technology, are a great fit for smaller businesses that often have the same problems at a reduced scale.

 

SMEs often lack a system for recording and following up on prospects and as a result opportunities fall through the cracks, losing potential revenue. Software can help track opportunities and make sure a salesperson has had a go at converting each one into a sale.

 

CRM software forces a business to put into writing all the steps in its sales process. Once the process has been defined, the business owner can experiment with reducing the number of steps to speed up the sales process, or use it to train new sales staff. A logical and clear list makes it easier to hold sales staff accountable and reveals where potential sales are in the pipeline.

 

And a CRM can win more sales from existing customers in two ways. It uses reports to show which customers have purchased the most or which are due to buy again. A salesperson can run through this list and hope for a high strike rate.

 

A CRM can also help you provide much better service to existing customers by tracking all interactions between your staff and the customer. Happy customers are more likely to be repeat customers.

 

So SMEs have never had the option of professionalising their sales. Now, thanks to pay-by-the-month, cloud-based CRM, they can. But how do you explain the value of this approach?

 

The mechanics of CRM can be broken down into three components vital to business. Many people struggle to control their email, which has become the primary communications medium for prospects and customers. Mastering the inbox is essential to capturing all the opportunities passing through it.

 

Maintaining a solid set of contacts is another challenge which must be overcome in the quest to maximise sales from opportunities. Customers’ details can be spread across several programs, Excel sheets, drawers full of business cards. Creating a single database may be a challenge but it brings greater cohesiveness and rewards.

 

The third area, less understood by SMEs, are workflows. Knowing what is a workflow and how it can improve operations is hugely valuable not just to sales but to every aspect of a business.

Thanks to the cloud revolution, all companies now have the tools to tackle common business problems. The sooner they understand how to use these tools, the faster they can change the way they work.

Future of Work

Going into Orbit with Constellation Research

Going into Orbit with Constellation Research

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“Constellation Orbits is comprised of twenty thought leaders dedicated to the analysis of a range of disruptive technologies, thus enabling Constellation to provide its audience with the industry’s most comprehensive analysis of developments in disruptive technology. Constellation Orbits analysis will be available to the public on the Constellation blog.” Constellation Research, Press Release, Feb 5 2014

I’ve known Ray Wang for quite while and he has always been an inspiration. He combines serious substance with tremendous insight and somehow manages to keep it all fun and light. It was no surprise to me when he founded his own research company, Constellation, to provide insight into the technology disruption that was crashing into businesses on a daily basis.  Larger analyst firms typically exploit the fact that their customers are sloooooooow and they can provide predictions using a rear view mirror, but he recognized that there was a real need for guidance by early adopters and fast followers who hoped to make the most of the opportunities and avoid the rocks. So, with that mission he assembled some of the smartest people in the industry and continues to provide the best insights into the future of work.

Knowing that, you can imagine what a tremendous honor it is to be included in Constellation Research’s disruptive technology influencer network, Constellation Orbits. You can read my analyses along with analyses from nineteen other thought leaders on the Constellation blog: https://www.constellationr.com/blog-news The launch of Constellation Orbits establishes the Constellation Blog as the enterprise’s authoritative source for disruptive technology analysis.

I’m excited for the opportunity to contribute alongside and get to know a group who are helping to pull forward an exciting future.  It’s humbling to be in their company, and I have no doubt that I am going to learn a lot.  One thing that becomes clear when you work at the front end of new technologies waves is that some great ideas fail, some horrible ideas stick, but the great people you get to keep and it is awesome to have great people around you on any journey.

Constellation Orbits Members Include:

• Bob Berkman • Louis Columbus • Richie Etwaru • Sam Fiorella

• Terri Griffith • Gavin Heaton • Esteban Kolsky • Brent Leary

• Sholto MacPherson • Chris Meyer • Trevor Miles • Chris Morace

• Dr. Janice Presser • Theo Priestly • Dux Raymond Sy • Paul Van Essche

• Phil Hassey • Brian Katz • Zachary Jeans

See ConstellationOrbits, and the full press release.

Future of Work Next-Generation Customer Experience Innovation & Product-led Growth Chief Customer Officer Chief Executive Officer Chief People Officer

Rahul Sachdev Named CEO of Get Satisfaction

Rahul Sachdev Named CEO of Get Satisfaction

Rahul-Sachdev

Siebel veteran Rahul Sachdev has been named new chief executive officer and president of Get Satisfaction.  Sachdev succeeds  Siebel alumni Wendy Lea, who will join Get Satisfaction’s board of directors as executive chairman. At Siebel Systems Sachdev was General Manager, Communications, Media & Energy, and Lea was Vice President of eBusiness Consulting.  Most recently, Sachdev served as the head of content sharing and workplace engagement products at LinkedIn. Previously, Sachdev was vice president of product and marketing at Intelliden, a software start-up acquired by IBM in 2010. 

“Without a doubt, we have found a leader in Rahul. His experience creating  software products—along with his track record in building and managing teams—is exactly the one-two punch we need ,” said Lea. 

“I’m excited to build on the company’s incredible foundation of success created under Wendy’s leadership, grow our exceptional team, and make good on our vision," said Sachdev.

On Thursday, February 27th at 10 am pacific Sachdev will be hosting a Fireside Chat to discuss his plans and vision. He has already outlined some of them on the company blog.

Lea will be focusing on customer relationships and building strategic relationships with companies like Oracle, Adobe, Salesforce, and Microsoft. She will also be one of  the company’s evangelists and a key spokesperson.

The company has some current openings for a Director, Product Marketing, Senior Platform Engineer, and Enterprise Account Executive. More information can found on the careers page of the company's web site.

Get Satisfaction helps organizations engage millions of consumers conversations about their products and services. The Get Satisfaction community platform transforms these conversations into customer-generated marketing content and insights. Headquartered in San Francisco, Calif., Get Satisfaction's customers include Citrix, HootSuite, Intuit, and Kellogg’s.

Raul can be reached at 877-339-3997.

Next-Generation Customer Experience Chief Customer Officer Chief Executive Officer

Roundup Of Free Cloud Computing Online Courses

Roundup Of Free Cloud Computing Online Courses

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career-start1One of the best ways to capitalize on cloud computing’s growth from a career standpoint is to constantly be learning and gaining new knowledge.

Being able to apply the technological aspects of cloud computing to business problems quickly, combined with constantly developing expertise on how to manage legacy systems and cloud platforms is a very valuable, marketable skill.

Many manufacturers I meet with are grappling with the high maintenance costs and time latency of legacy systems when their business models are accelerating faster than ever.   Helping these enterprises bridge the gap between legacy systems and the urgent need for more accurate customer, supplier, pricing, and quality data creates many opportunities for career growth.

Free Cloud Computing Courses

The number and quality of free online cloud computing courses continues to grow, and lately the prices of fee-based online programs are dropping.  Not across the board, but clearly the competition of online education programs is changing in favor of the student.

The table below profiles free online cloud computing certificate and degree programs.  You can download a PDF of the full roundup of cloud computing courses here that also includes fee-based online programs.  Please click on the graphic to expand it for easier reading.

Roundup of cloud computing courses

Key take-aways from the roundup of cloud computing courses include the following:

  • edX & UC BerkeleyX are offering a series of courses on Engineering Software as a Service.  The first of two sessions offered by edX and UC Berkeley concentrate on engineering solid high performance cloud applications using agile techniques to design then code a Software as a Service (SaaS) application using Ruby on Rails.  The second session concentrates on deploying the application in the cloud and enhancing its performance using JavaScript.
  • Coursera and Vanderbilt University are offering Programming Cloud Services for Android Handheld Systems.  This class signifies a broader trend by Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC) where cloud computing and mobility are often being included in the same course.  This course includes instruction on how to apply patterns and frameworks to develop scalable and secure cloud services.  Included is coverage of mobile and cloud communication, data persistence, concurrency and synchronization, synchronous and asynchronous event handling, and security. The bulk of the examples are in Java using the Spring Framework and Jetty middleware platform. The examples will be run on Google App Engine and Amazon EC2.  This course is free. 
  • Google Developer Academy – Self-based e-learning site that has an excellent overview of Google AppEngine, Python App Engine and Google+ APIs.
  • Microsoft Research Windows Azure for Research Training – An innovative training program aimed at academicians and researchers, this is going to be an excellent learning platform regarding the Microsoft Windows Azure Platform.  Best of all, the course sessions and eventual online content are free.
  • MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) - One of the most comprehensive collections of courseware available globally today, OCW  is a web-based publication of virtually all MIT course content. OCW is open and available to the world and is a permanent MIT activity.
New C-Suite Tech Optimization Innovation & Product-led Growth Future of Work SaaS PaaS IaaS Cloud Digital Transformation Disruptive Technology Enterprise IT Enterprise Acceleration Enterprise Software Next Gen Apps IoT Blockchain CRM ERP CCaaS UCaaS Collaboration Enterprise Service Chief Information Officer Chief Supply Chain Officer Chief Technology Officer Chief Digital Officer Chief Data Officer Chief Analytics Officer Chief Information Security Officer Chief Executive Officer Chief Operating Officer

Jessica Liu Named President of Spear Group

Jessica Liu Named President of Spear Group

SPARUS-logo

Siebel veteran Jessica Liu has been named by Sparus Holdings  to be president of its Spear Group subsidiary. At Siebel Systems Liu was a director of marketing. She was a principal in Booz Allen & Hamilton’s energy practice and has held key leadership positions in PwC  and Yahoo! She also previously worked for Goldman Sachs and Bain & Co.

Her areas of expertise include leading clients through major business transformational efforts, implementing state-of-the-art operations, technology, and program management improvements. She holds an MBA from Stanford’s Graduate School of Business and a B.S. in Biochemistry, cum laude, from Harvard College. 

“Jessica brings a proven track record and a broad background in professional services that will help The Spear Group grow," said Sparus Holdings CEO Ron Bertasi. 

Since 1981, The Spear Group has provided qualified professionals for complex engineering, estimating, and project management projects. The company provides project management, engineering and business transformational services.

The company has some current openings for a IT project manager, data analyst, and consultant sales manager. More information can found on the careers page of the company's web site.

 In addition to The Spear Group, Sparus Holdings also holds subsidiary Southern Cross, a technical services and technology products company serving energy utilities. Its chief product is EZ TechTM, a GPS-enabled mobile workforce management and compliance reporting system developed especially for utility field service compliance reporting.

Jessica can be reached at 770-447-0267.

New C-Suite Oracle

Introducing Constellation Orbits

Introducing Constellation Orbits

Orbits LogoI'm happy to announce the launch of Constellation Orbits, Constellation's influencer network designed to extend Constellation’s coverage of digital disruption in technology, business models, and society.  We've hand picked some of the most fearless, influential thought leaders to share their unfettered views on the digital disruption ahead of us.

Read analyses from our Constellation Orbits thought leaders right here on the Constellation Blog.

The launch of Constellation Orbits solidifies the Constellation Blog's position as the enterprise's authoritative source for disruptive technology analysis. Adding these twenty Constellation Orbits members to the Constellation ecosystem means that Constellation can provide our early adopter audience with even more comprehensive coverage of the latest developments in disruptive technology.

View all Constellation Orbits thought leaders: https://www.constellationr.com/constellation-orbits

Constellation Orbits:

  • Guest blogs authored by Orbits members
  • Expands Constellation’s coverage areas, and establishes the Constellation Blog as the enterprise’s most comprehensive source for analysis of the latest developments in disruptive technology
  • Constellation Orbits content accessible on the Constellation Blog
  • Provides potential pathways to analyst status
  • Expands Constellation’s coverage to include business models, society, and technology
  • Twenty members

Orbits Members:

What to Expect

  • A broadened scope of disruptive technology analysis
  • Check back often for blog posts, webinars, and workshops with Constellation Orbits thought leaders
  • Constellation Orbits establishes the Constellation Blog as the authoritative source for disruptive technology analysis

 

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Data to Decisions Future of Work Marketing Transformation Matrix Commerce New C-Suite Next-Generation Customer Experience Tech Optimization Innovation & Product-led Growth Leadership Chief Customer Officer Chief Executive Officer Chief Financial Officer Chief Information Officer Chief Marketing Officer Chief People Officer Chief Procurement Officer Chief Supply Chain Officer Chief Experience Officer