Global Vision

"The road to success is always under construction; it's a never-ending progress, not a target to be reached"

Copyright

The texts, texts' fragments and images presented on this blog are copyrighted to their authors and protected by European and International laws starting from the publishing date. The texts, fragments of texts, and images may not be reproduced without prior written agreement from the authors. Failure to obtain the approval for reproducing the texts, fragments of texts and images is punishable under the law of the European Community and international treaties.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

"A far step beyond"


With these words Keith Andrews (www.rhmc.ca), the father of the Siebel ePlan methodology, has commented the work represented by my Ph.D. thesis "UML in CRM, a new pragmatic rule". On last 19th April I have in fact discussed my work for the final presentation that concludes these 3 years of parallel research activity and continued professional consultancy.
Keith, on my right in the picture, has come to Italy from Canada to attend my presentation and to discuss about methodologies in Packaged Applications and, more generally, in the Enterprise Architectures scenario. Actually I have also flought to Italy but from Copenhagen, where I am currently covering the role of Release Manager for a European wide Siebel CRM implementation.
As a former Director of Methodology and Quality Assurance for major software firms such as Scopus Technology, Siebel Systems and Oracle Corporation, Mr. Keith Andrews has ten years experience in the implementation of Customer Relationship Management systems, with a client list that spans the globe.
Keith is a very elegant and nice person and he's far from the "lights", but I would like to underline how he was the first actor introducing a methodology in the COTS implementation context. Siebel ePlan has represented in fact the first real professional attempt to put order in the chaos and anarchy of Siebel CRM implementations, just missing the final step: a proper support by proper Tools.
A warm greeting to my tutor, Prof. Alessandro Fantechi (www.dsi.unifi.it/~fantechi), on the left end side of the picture, who has supported me in these three years.

0 commenti: