Blog

Archive for October, 2010


HealthSpring

Posted by: tfetherling

HealthSpring is based in Nashville, Tennessee, and is one of the country’s largest and fastest-growing coordinated care plans whose primary focus is the Medicare Advantage market. HealthSpring currently owns and operates Medicare Advantage plans in Alabama, Florida, Illinois, Mississippi, Tennessee and Texas. We also offer a national stand-alone Medicare prescription drug plan.

HealthSpring is passionate about helping members get more from Medicare and more from life. We do this by offering affordable, well-coordinated quality care through strong partnerships with physicians and other healthcare providers. Our plan benefits are focused on preventive care, wellness, and better management of diseases to help our members stay healthy and active.

HMS

Posted by: tfetherling

Healthcare Management Systems, Inc.® (HMS) is a Nashville-based healthcare company that develops, sells and supports integrated clinical and financial hospital information systems and services designed to increase efficiency while improving patient safety. Founded in 1984, HMS currently serves nearly 650 community hospitals; behavioral, rehabilitation and long-term acute care facilities and multi-entity healthcare organizations nationwide. Our products and services help our customers improve care and deliver value by connecting hospitals, physicians and the community. We help hospitals address their toughest challenges and deliver care seamlessly and safely.

CoreBTS

Posted by: tfetherling

Core BTS, Inc. is a leading business transformation company, providing organizations comprehensive IT solutions through True Lifecycle Management. Across the breadth of Core’s competencies in Data Center, Collaboration, Application Development, Security and Video, lies a unique and consistent methodology that begins with business analysis, continues with scope and deployment, and closes with hands-on training and ongoing support. With offices in Nashville, TN, as well as 5 other states across the region, Core is a national consulting firm with a locally-focused approach.

CBTS

Posted by: tfetherling

CBTS provides Technology Solutions for Business, with solutions for emerging, midsize and enterprise customers ranging from data centers and managed services to voice systems and disaster recovery. We leverage our state-of-the-art data centers, best-of-breed technical talent and strategic vendor partnerships to deliver technology products and services that help you reduce costs, gain operational efficiencies and decrease risk.

Bradley Arant Boult Cummings

Posted by: tfetherling

Bradley Arant is a leading, technologically advanced law firm with more than 100 attorneys who serve clients throughout the United States. The firm has an active practice in the area of eCommerce & Technology and provides representation to companies on a broad range of online legal and business issues — from setting up a business and raising capital to the protection of intellectual property. Firm clients in this area include start-up companies at the earliest stages of development, as well as more traditional businesses in their transition to digital commerce, marketing and publishing.

Flood recovery design workshops to be held this Saturday, October 23rd

Posted by: tfetherling  /  Tags: , , , ,

We wanted to share this important information from the Mayor’s Flood Recovery Team:


Citizens Invited to Participate in Flood Recovery Design Workshops This Saturday

Discussion groups to explore planning for housing, jobs, sustainability and other topics

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The next opportunity for Metro residents to provide input for the city’s strategy for long term flood recovery will be Saturday, October 23, when a series of six community planning and design workshops will be held throughout Davidson County.


Three sessions are planned Saturday morning from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. in Antioch, Bellevue and the Delray/Charlotte Avenue area.  Another three will take place in Bordeaux, East Nashville and the Pennington Bend area on Saturday afternoon from 2-5 p.m.  All workshops are free and open to anyone who lives or works in Metro Nashville, whether or not they were directly impacted by the May flood.


At each workshop location, citizens will be able to participate in small, round-table group discussions in one of the following areas: housing; education; social services; jobs and economic development; and sustainability.  The intent is for each group to assess the needs of flood impacted neighborhoods and develop workable solutions that will help to stabilize and strengthen these communities.  Outcomes from the workshops will be included in the Long Term Recovery Plan (LTRP) for Nashville and Davidson County.


The LTRP is a transparent, community-wide process designed to identify lessons learned from the May flood and prioritize projects and activities to help the city recover with stronger neighborhoods, a more disaster-resistant infrastructure, more secure housing, a more resilient economy and sustainable future.


The Recovery Plan will be implemented by the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County in coordination with other government, nongovernment, civic, business and community partners.



WHO:              Mayor’s Flood Recovery Team

Long Term Recovery Plan Consultant Team


WHAT:            Six Community Planning and Design Workshops where citizens can participate in smaller group discussions to explore what’s needed to address the long-term revitalization of our city.


WHEN:            Saturday, October 23, 9 a.m.-12 p.m., and 2-5 p.m.


WHERE:          MORNING SESSIONS, 9 a.m.-noon:


Area:  Antioch

Location:  Hickory Hollow Mall, 5252 Hickory Hollow Parkway

South Wing; Across from Electronic Express in the Mall

Area:  Bellevue

Location:  Cross Point Community Church, 7669 Hwy 70 South

(former Circuit City building, next door to Home Depot), Church Lobby


Area:  Delray/Charlotte Avenue/The Nations

Location:  St Luke’s Community House, 5601 New York Avenue, Rogers Center


AFTERNOON SESSIONS, 2-5 p.m.:



Area: Bordeaux/West Hamilton Area

Location: Temple Baptist Church, 3810 Kings Lane, Phillips Chapel


Area:  East Nashville

Location:  St Ann’s Episcopal Church, 419 Woodland Street, Martin Hall


Area:  Pennington Bend Community

Location:  Donelson Fellowship, 3210 McGavock Pike, Parquet Lobby



The Saturday workshops are part of a public input process that will continue through next month. Initial input about the city’s long term recovery was received at several Discovery Day Open House meetings held October 7-14.  In November, there will be a communitywide recovery public meeting to prioritize the projects that are emerging from the planning process.


The public can also post their ideas online through an interactive website provided by the Mayor’s Office of Flood Recovery.  The full website address is http://townhall.nashvillerecovery.com/ and can be accessed directly or through the Mayor’s Office of Flood Recovery at www.nashvillerecovery.com. The first 500 people to visit the site and post an idea will each generate a $5 donation to a flood recovery organization of their choice.  Comments will be accepted online through November 29, 2010.

Visit www.nashvillerecovery.com for more information about the LTRP and Nashville’s ongoing flood recovery efforts.

John Kepley Bio

Posted by: tfetherling  /  Tags: , ,

JOHN KEPLEY is CEO and Principal of Teknetex, Inc., a national technology talent acquisition firm headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee. As a successful serial entrepreneur and award-winning sales professional, Kepley is a recognized leader in human resources for information systems where he has assisted hundreds of companies and individuals over his 13+ year career.


Prior to starting Teknetex, Inc Kepley was a founder/non-principal with Sysgenix Resources.  As the Sr. Director of Business Development he helped lead the company to multi-year Nashville Chamber Music City Future 50 Award wins, ultimately putting the company in the Hall of Fame.  His satisfied clients have included some of the largest and most well know companies in the country but his passion is predominately assisting entrepreneurs get their business’s off the ground and tackling education challenges.  Kepley was also owner and franchisee of Small Cellars™ of Nashville, the first in the country outside of the corporate headquarters in Alabama.


Kepley is a proactive member of the local business community and serves on various boards and advisory committees, including the Nashville Technology Council, Co-Chair of the NTC Workforce and Education Committee, Chair of the NTC T3 initiative that assists students, both college and high school, understand how technology can be a career choice in Middle Tennessee, Tennessee Chapter of HiMSS where he is the Co-Chair of both the Student Engagement Committee and Membership Committee.  Kepley is an EO (Entrepreneur Organization) member which is a national organization made up of young CEO’s and Principals of aggressively growing companies.

T3 Spotlight: Vanderbilt’s Innovation Strategy Capstone Course could benefit your company

Posted by: tfetherling  /  Tags: , , , , , ,

About the innovation strategy capstone course:

In Spring 2011 the Engineering Management faculty will be offering a three credit-hour capstone project course for senior engineering students with a concentration in Engineering Management. Over the semester, teams of three students will work with the founders of six local seed-stage technology companies through the thinking, analysis, and planning processes needed to turn their concept into an innovation strategy that then could be executed on. This memo is to invite you to consider offering us your innovation concept as a project to tackle. If interested, please reply at your earliest convenience. The due date for submitting a project proposal is Dec. 15.

What kinds of innovations and companies would be good candidates for an innovation strategy project?

Innovation involves taking an invention or innovation concept to commercial reality. We are looking for technology entrepreneurs who are considering launching a company or have recently organized one for the purpose of commercializing an innovation concept that takes advantage of new or emerging technology. Since the student team projects do not involve the development of technology itself, we are looking for technical concepts that are for the most part developed – to the proof of concept stage or beyond. At the same time, we are looking for concepts where the business thinking (business models, business plans, marketing strategies) is at an early stage. The teams’ job is to help the entrepreneur through the thinking, experimentation, and rigorous research processes that will move the concept to the point of commercial launch, sale to an acquirer, or presentation to a new venture investor.

Who from Vanderbilt will be participating in the Innovation Strategy Project?

The students participating in the projects are carefully screened spring semester seniors who have concentrated their studies in engineering management and who have completed all the coursework requirements in the subject area. They will use the project as an opportunity to integrate and apply everything they’ve learned.

They will be guided by Vanderbilt’s Engineering Management faculty, senior people with industry experience who bring wide-ranging skill sets, including expertise in intellectual property, enterprise development, finance, manufacturing, project management, marketing, technology strategy, and organizational development.

The project teams will apply a comprehensive, systematic approach to innovation commercialization known as Accelerated Radical Innovation (ARI). The ARI methodology is based on research and development involving innovation scholars and practitioners from several institutions and countries over the past seven years. It has been applied to a variety of early-stage technologies (for more information, see http://ari-institute.com/). The projects will aid in the further refinement and validation of the methodology in diverse settings.

What is expected of participating companies and teams?

Over the course of the semester, you should expect to meet with your team weekly for about one hour at a mutually agreeable time and place (usually either the client site or a conference room at Vanderbilt). The project will proceed along the following timeline over the course of the Spring semester (Jan. 12-May 5):

· Week 0: Three-person team forms, reviews project descriptions, and selects a project.

· Week 1. ARI methodology overview for teams and clients. Initial meeting with client. Client orients team to the innovation concept, the business objectives, and the associated technology, and provides any needed background information.

· Weeks 2-3. Team confirms and quantifies the business opportunity.

· Weeks 4-8. Team applies the ARI innovation scorecard to pinpoint, analyze, and priortize challenges and hurdles to commercialization.

· Weeks 9-11. Team applies co-develops with the innovator a business plan (system-level vision, business model, and commercialization roadmap).

· Weeks 12-14. Team develops implementation plan (innovation value network, prototyping plan, and commercialization and exit strategy).

· Week 14. Final client presentation, clarification of next steps, and handoff.


Other than your time and guidance to the team, you should not incur any expenses unless you authorize them.


Next Step…

If you’re interested in proceeding, the next step is to put together a project description to enable the students to select projects in their area of interest or training. The description should include:

· A description (or vision), in general terms, of the innovation concept (what it is, how it works, its current state of development)

· Commercialization objectives for the innovation concept (target market, application)

· Key commercialization challenges (technical, market, organizational, etc.)

· Contact information: name of project leader, title, organization, phone, e-mail, website (if one exists)

· Optional: If you feel it’s important for members of the team to have any particular interest, background, or prior course work, this would be helpful to include in your description.

Deadline for submission of project descriptions: Dec. 15


Contact Information

John A. Bers, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of the Practice

Engineering Management Program

http://engm.vuse.vanderbilt.edu/

Vanderbilt University School of Engineering

Featheringill Hall Room 336

P. O. Box 351518 Station B

Nashville, TN 37235 USA

Phone: (615) 343-4965; fax (615) 322-7062

E-mail: john.a.bers(at)vanderbilt.edu

What’s all the hype about?

Posted by: Tod Fetherling  /  Tags: , , , , , ,


Well, Gartner makes it easy for us to ascertain this in their latest hype cycle report or really product management curve. The real strategy is knowing why to get onto the next starting curve or bifurcation. For me, I like to focus on the technology trigger and plateau of productivity.  This is where the money is made.  Stars and Cash Cows from the Boston Consulting Group Matrix. In the technology trigger, Gartner sees growth in video search and human augmentation.  Two local plays in Predictive Analysis (Consensus Point) and Digital Speech Recognition (Entrada) are both in the productivity plateaus.  Of notable mention is the Tablet, as it is hitting the peak of inflated expectations as Walmart and Target fight over the consumer’s wallet at Christmas for the iPad.

“Gartner has examined the maturity of 1,800 technologies and trends in 75 technology, topic, and industry areas. Each of the 75 individual Hype Cycle reports provides a snapshot of a key area of IT or business. Senior executives, CIOs, strategists, business developers and technology planners should consider these technologies when developing emerging business and technology portfolios. The “Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies” is the longest-running annual Hype Cycle, providing a cross-industry perspective on the technologies and trends that IT managers should consider in developing emerging-technology portfolios (see Figure 1).”



Source: http://www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id=1447613

Technology Awards- Sponsors

Posted by: tfetherling

 

Platinum Sponsor

Sponsor of Company of the Year Award


Award Sponsors


Sponsor of Start-up IT Company of the Year Award


Sponsor of Software Programmer/Engineer of the Year Award

 

Sponsor of Lifetime Achievement Award


Sponsor of CISO of the Year Award


Sponsor of Innovator of the Year Award


Sponsor of the Green Award


Sponsor of the IT Student of the Year Award


Sponsor of Volunteer of the Year Award


Sponsor of CIO of the Year Award


Sponsor of Social Media/Blogger of the Year Award


Sponsor of CTO of the Year Award


After Party Sponsor

Page 3 of 41234