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Gabor George Burt
In addition to a bachelor's degree in psychology from Amherst College and an MBA from INSEAD in France, Burt has broad business development and strategy-formation expertise in working with a wide range of companies throughout the US, the EU and Eastern Europe. An engaging and dynamic presenter, Burt is a frequent lecturer and adviser to numerous companies on innovation and strategies that lead to uncontested market space. In his engagements, Burt draws on his close association with the two strategic gurus who founded Value Innovation and authored Blue Ocean Strategy, Professors W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne, as well as on his wealth of practical and diverse business experience. Jim Davis
Davis helped lead the transformation of SAS from a tools vendor to the software solutions provider it is today. He has done so by building industry-specific expertise into SAS' product management and product marketing teams, which research the marketplace and partner with R&D to hone customized solutions for each industry. He has overseen a dramatic increase in SAS' profile. Also known for his industry leadership, Davis has helped develop the Information Evolution Model, a means for companies to assess how effectively they use information to build their business. He also co-authored the newly published book Information Revolution: Using the Information Evolution Model to Grow Your Business, which outlines how companies manage and use information as an asset. Steve Forbes
During the 1980s and 1990s, US Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush appointed Forbes Chairman of the bipartisan Board for International Broadcasting, where he oversaw the operation of Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty. In 1996 and 2000, he campaigned for the Republican nomination for president, and he is a four-time winner of the Crystal Owl Award for his economic forecasts. Forbes is the author of two books, A New Birth of Freedom and Flat Tax Revolution: Using a Postcard to Abolish the IRS, both published by Regnery.
SAS software was originally created by Goodnight and North Carolina State University colleagues to analyze agricultural-research data. Three decades later, it's doing things Goodnight never imagined in his days as a doctoral student in statistics. Today, SAS is best known for sifting massive mountains of data for FORTUNE 500 companies and other organizations most people have heard of. With its unique business model (software licensed annually) and solid reputation for innovation (24 percent of 2006 revenues reinvested in R&D), SAS is among the world's largest privately owned software companies. SAS is also renowned for its corporate culture, which has made it a fixture on "Best Places to Work" lists (including Goodnight has also been an active speaker and participant at the World Economic Forum, where business and world leaders discuss such cross-boundary issues such as international standards, regulations and the global economic issues. In 2004, Harvard Business School named James H. Goodnight one of the "20th Century's Great American Business Leaders" for his three decades of leading a business that has changed the way Americans have lived, worked and interacted in the 20th century. Mikael Hagström
An 18-year SAS veteran, Hagström has been responsible for most of the sales and operations for EMEA since he was named vice president of EMEA Sales in January 2005. His experience in growing business in emerging markets and identifying strong leadership to run the local operations has contributed to the consistent strong growth of the region. From 1998 to 2000, as country manager of SAS Norway, Hagström restructured the office and led SAS Norway to record growth, doubling new sales each year for three years. Over the next few years, additional geographies and P&Ls were consistently added to his growing level of responsibilities. Hagström, who joined SAS Sweden in 1989, moved to the company's European headquarters in Heidelberg in 1993 where he was the head of sales support. He currently works from SAS Worldwide Headquarters in Cary, North Carolina. Hagström is a member of the American Chamber of Commerce to the European Union (AmCham EU) Executive Council. He is a board member or head officer of 17 SAS subsidiaries, including SAS Software Limited, UK; SAS Institute Computer Software S.A., Greece; SAS Institute Sp. z.o.o., Poland; SAS Institute GmbH, Germany; and SAS Institute A/S, Denmark. He holds a Master of Science degree in Industrial Automation Engineering and Administration. Gary Hamel
Since 1983, Hamel has been on the faculty of the London Business School, where he is currently Visiting Professor of Strategic and International Management. For 10 years, Hamel served as Chairman of Strategos, a company that helps its clients make innovation a way of life. With the goal of helping companies drive "innovation to the core," Strategos has trained tens of thousands of individuals around the world in the art of business innovation. As a consultant and management educator, Hamel has worked for companies as diverse as General Electric, Nokia, Nestle, Shell, Best Buy, Procter & Gamble, 3M, IBM and Microsoft. His pioneering concepts such as strategic intent, core competence, industry revolution and corporate resilience have changed the practice of management in companies around the world. As one of the world's most sought-after management speakers, Hamel has addressed the World Economic Forum, the FORTUNE 500 Global Summit and many other similarly prestigious gatherings. At present, Hamel is leading an effort at the London Business School to build the world's first Management Innovation Lab. The lab is a pioneering attempt to create a setting in which progressive companies and world-renowned management scholars work together to co-create "tomorrow's best practices" today. The goal: dramatically accelerating the evolution of management knowledge and practice. Hamel received his PhD from the University of Michigan and has held faculty appointments at the University of Michigan and Harvard Business School. He is a fellow of the World Economic Forum and serves on the editorial board of the Strategic Management Journal. Hamel lives in Northern California. Jeanne G. Harris
Ms. Harris earned her master's degree in information science from the University of Illinois and a BA from Washington University in St. Louis. She has authored numerous book chapters and articles in leading management publications, including MIT Sloan Management Review, California Management Review, and Optimize. Her research has been quoted extensively by the international business press, including the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, and Nihon Keizai Shimbun. S. RamadoraiCEO and Managing Director
He is a member of the Corporate Advisory Board at the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business and is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and of the Indian National Academy of Engineering. In November 2006 Ernst & Young awarded Ramadorai the Entrepreneur Manager of the Year award. Computer Business Review recognized him as the sixth-most influential IT leader in the world in July 2006. In recognition of his commitment and dedication to the IT industry, he was awarded the Padma Bhushan, one of India's highest civilian honors, in January 2006. British Prime Minister Tony Blair presented Ramadorai with the UK Trade and Investment Special Recognition Award in September 2005 for TCS' exemplary contribution to India-UK economic ties. His academic credentials include a bachelor's degree in physics from Delhi University and a bachelor's degree in electronics and telecommunications from the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India. He has a master's degree in computer science from the University of California, Los Angeles. In 1993, Ramadorai attended the highly-rated Senior Executive Development Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management. |
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