We have a great lineup of guests, each with a different expertise. Each of these sessions will replay in the coming weeks so check back each Tuesday at 10 am eastern.
Thank you so much for posting these as I had work conflicts for the day. I took away a lot of information from each and every speaker. (Your Pink23 and Pink24 friend)
Key Bookmarks 2:38 Craig Guarente from Palisades Compliance 35:35 Pamela Fulmer, Attorney from Tactical Law Group 1:10:59 Rory Canavan: Machine Learning & SAM 1:38:54 Jeffery Tefertiller, The Building Blocks of an Effective Asset Management Program 2:05:32 Piara MacDonnell, Framework to Responding to an IBM License Audit 2:34:54 Alexander Golev, SAMexpert. I did not catch the title, but for my coworkers, this is the one has references to both VMWare and Microsoft These are rough estimations on when each speaker presents. All speakers are worth listening to at least once.
I really resonate with your discussion on software spend waste. ***Tech Leaders*** Stop spending and adding more software to your suite of software when you aren't currently at a resource count/capability/maturity to even leverage the benefits of your suite of products/services. It's simply not well thought out decision making. "Start where you are" (An ITIL Guiding Principle)... and work on maximizing the benefits and capabilities of the software you already have under license and pay a great deal of money for.
Many big, successful, and long lasting software providers are great at creating well thought out switching costs so that their customers remain their customers for the long run. Bill Gates and Microsoft showed the Corporate World mastery in this shifty kind of technique/retention tactic. I'm curious what others think about switching costs? Do you think it's savvy business tactics or should it be frowned upon? Does it fall within what is business ethical or is it unethical?
I believe that this particular area will be focused on more and more by global regulators. They are already doing this is Europe, and I hope to see more regulators looking into these issues in the U.S.
The voices of experience here. So many great tips on licensing
Thank you so much for posting these as I had work conflicts for the day. I took away a lot of information from each and every speaker. (Your Pink23 and Pink24 friend)
Thank you very much
Key Bookmarks
2:38 Craig Guarente from Palisades Compliance
35:35 Pamela Fulmer, Attorney from Tactical Law Group
1:10:59 Rory Canavan: Machine Learning & SAM
1:38:54 Jeffery Tefertiller, The Building Blocks of an Effective Asset Management Program
2:05:32 Piara MacDonnell, Framework to Responding to an IBM License Audit
2:34:54 Alexander Golev, SAMexpert. I did not catch the title, but for my coworkers, this is the one has references to both VMWare and Microsoft
These are rough estimations on when each speaker presents. All speakers are worth listening to at least once.
Thank you very much
I really resonate with your discussion on software spend waste.
***Tech Leaders*** Stop spending and adding more software to your suite of software when you aren't currently at a resource count/capability/maturity to even leverage the benefits of your suite of products/services.
It's simply not well thought out decision making.
"Start where you are" (An ITIL Guiding Principle)...
and work on maximizing the benefits and capabilities of the software you already have under license and pay a great deal of money for.
Great perspective, Jordan. Also, "keep it simple and practical"
Many big, successful, and long lasting software providers are great at creating well thought out switching costs so that their customers remain their customers for the long run. Bill Gates and Microsoft showed the Corporate World mastery in this shifty kind of technique/retention tactic. I'm curious what others think about switching costs? Do you think it's savvy business tactics or should it be frowned upon? Does it fall within what is business ethical or is it unethical?
I believe that this particular area will be focused on more and more by global regulators. They are already doing this is Europe, and I hope to see more regulators looking into these issues in the U.S.