Outsourcing Everything But Your Core Competencies

Paul Harmon
OUTSOURCE EVERYTHING BUT YOUR CORE COMPETENCES 26 April 2000 by Paul Harmon

One of the ideas that Business Process Reengineering (BPR) people focused on was that some business processes are more important than others.


Those Darn, Uninformed Users!

Pamela Hollington
THOSE DARN, UNINFORMED USERS! 26 April 2000 by Pamela Hollington

I recently presented a session on project communication management to a room of systems people who are highly involved in project work.


Those Darn, Uninformed Users!

Pamela Hollington
THOSE DARN, UNINFORMED USERS! 26 April 2000 by Pamela Hollington

I recently presented a session on project communication management to a room of systems people who are highly involved in project work.


When a Member-Owned E-Business Is Superior to an IPO

William Ulrich

IPO mania is sweeping across industries like a tidal wave. High-school kids are launching new Internet businesses, while brick and mortar companies spin off e-business ventures. Revenue models may vary, but the goal is to achieve an initial public offering that turns founders and investors into billionaires.


Are You an e-Business?

Paul Harmon

I spent last week attending the Cutter Consortium Summit, which brings Cutter Consortium clients and Senior Consultants together to discuss key issues. One issue that was certainly discussed was the transition to e-business.


The Programmer Shortage: Deja Vu All Over Again

Ed Yourdon

At last week's Cutter Consortium Summit 2000 conference in Boston, Massachusetts, one of the sessions was devoted to recruiting, motivating, and retaining IT professionals. Obviously, the main reason IT managers are thinking about this subject is that the overall unemployment rate in the US is at a 20-year low, and the unemployment rate of IT professionals is nearly zero.


The Programmer Shortage: Deja Vu All Over Again

Ed Yourdon

At last week's Cutter Consortium Summit 2000 conference in Boston, Massachusetts, one of the sessions was devoted to recruiting, motivating, and retaining IT professionals. Obviously, the main reason IT managers are thinking about this subject is that the overall unemployment rate in the US is at a 20-year low, and the unemployment rate of IT professionals is nearly zero.


The Programmer Shortage: Deja Vu All Over Again

Ed Yourdon
THE PROGRAMMER SHORTAGE:

The Programmer Shortage: Deja Vu All Over Again

Ed Yourdon
THE PROGRAMMER SHORTAGE:

More than Half of Companies Using Java

Cutter Consortium, Cutter Consortium
MORE THAN HALF OF COMPANIES USING JAVA 18 April 2000 by Cutter Consortium

According to a recent e-business study from Cutter Consortium, 51% of companies surveyed are currently using Java. An additional 12% are planning to use Java.


More than Half of Companies Using Java

Cutter Consortium, Cutter Consortium
MORE THAN HALF OF COMPANIES USING JAVA 18 April 2000 by Cutter Consortium

According to a recent e-business study from Cutter Consortium, 51% of companies surveyed are currently using Java. An additional 12% are planning to use Java.


Requisites of Good Business Models, Part 1

Alexandre Rodrigues

We hear that effective business-IT alignment requires the development of business models. This is the way to ensure that the business drives the technology, not the other way around. The awareness of this requirement is an important step; the second step is to ensure that you develop proper business models. Good business models must comply with some core requisites.


Requisites of Good Business Models, Part 2

Alexandre Rodrigues

Last week, we discussed several important requirements for developing proper business models. Another crucial issue has to do with the specific modeling methodologies or techniques to use.


The E-Business Imperatives

Paul Harmon

I've been doing quite a bit of reading, thinking, and writing about e-business development recently. I've especially focused on the kinds of business process changes that typically occur when a large organization decides to transition to an e-business model. In this Advisor, I want to briefly summarize three of the five major drivers that I've observed.


Project Managers: Someone Has Moved Your Cheese

John Scott

During the last decade or so, as software engineers were required to master more complex technologies, our typical response was to know less and less about the business we supported. IT roles became stratified: programmers had to know the technical idiosyncrasies, systems analysts had to know the business idiosyncrasies, and for some period of your career you could be stuck between these two worlds as a programmer-analyst.