Andy Aicklen, Managing Director, Peoplesoft Canada
Number 13: Among other things Andy Aicklen had to worry about this year was who would be his bossrn
Number 13: Among other things Andy Aicklen had to worry about this year was who would be his bossrn
Number 11: A guy named Snow is executing a brush fire strategy
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Mers Kutt developed the first key edit system for punchcard machines, then built the personal computer. Now he’s taking on Intel over what’s really inside those pentium chipsrn
Number 9: With soaring income, sales to the U.S. government and a foothold in Europe, Softchoice is becoming many buyers’ top choice
Number 7: As president of Bell Canada’s Enterprise Group, Isabelle Courville rules over the utility’s latest Canadian VAR acquisition. But the channel shouldn’t be worried, she says. There’s lots of room for more playersrn
Number 1: Last year he was number three on our list for buying a competitor. This year Jim Estill tops the chart for being acquired by Synnex Canada, vaulting him into the distributors’s big leaguern
A software company founded by Oracle chief Larry Ellison hopes to grow its number of channel partners here tenfold with its recent expansion into the Canadian market.
Number 6: This year Alan Schweitzer appointed a new president of the RAM Group following the death of his brother. The former court stenographer has come a long wayrn
Number 5: For the beleaguered head of Nortel, 2004 has been a perfect storm: A confluence of bad news from accountants and regulators. So far, partners and customers haven’t abandoned shiprn
Number 4: Would you have wanted this year? An accounting scandal, corporate resignations, and a channel shake-up – Joanne Moretti faced it allrn
Number 3: Taking time off to be with his family after shepherding the Microsoft Partners Conference here is a just reward. But Clegg will be backrn
Number 2: The year started with Tidd in a staff role, testifying at a trial and then becoming a vice-president. The frequent flyer points are nice, but he admits 2004 has been exhaustingrn
The president of a Canadian laptop maker has some no-nonsense words for resellers:rn Stop waiting for customers to walk into your office
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This group’s questions are as interesting as the answersrn
Can you hurt someone by calling them an ‘information lifecyle manager?’rn