|
Tom Koulopoulos is the founder of Delphi Group,
a 20-year-old Boston-based thought leadership firm providing advice on
leading edge technologies to global 2000 organizations and
government. He sold Delphi to Perot
Systems in 2004 and today serves as Managing Director of a global innovation lab.
Named one of the industry's most influential information management
consultants by InformationWeek magazine he is recognized as
an authority on the implications of information technology
on global organizations, with articles and market insights
appearing frequently in national and international print and
broadcast media such as BusinessWeek, the Wall Street Journal,
Forbes, The Economist, CNBC, CNN and NPR.
His seven books include: Smartsourcing, Corporate Instinct, Smart Companies,
Smart Tools and The X-economy. During the past two decades
mr. Koulopoulos' works have introduced core industry concepts,
frameworks and vernacular such as Single Point of Access,
Touch Points, Digital Control Rooms, Business Operating Systems,
Corporate IQ, Information Value Chains, and Smartsourcing
that are widely used today in describing the impact of technology
on business. His insights have received wide
|
|
| Tom Koulopoulos'
current book, Smartsourcing:
How to Drive Innovation, Jobs, and Growth in the
age of Globalization has been released
to rave reviews. |
|
 |
praise from luminaries such as Peter Drucker,
dee Hock, and Tom Peters who called his writing, "a brilliant
vision of where we must take our enterprises to survive and
thrive." According to Peter Drucker, Tom's writing "makes
you question not only the way you run your business but the
way you run yourself." He is also editor of the Delphi
Report, a quarterly journal for business and technology leaders.
His current book, Smartsourcing: How to
Drive Innovation, Jobs, and Growth in the age of Globalization
(to be released in the Fall of 2005) looks at the core drivers
and broad implications of outsourcing and globalization.
Mr. Koulopoulos has also been an adjunct
professor at the Boston College Wallace E. Carroll Graduate
School of Management and a guest lecturer at the Boston University
School of management and Harvard University.
His philanthropic interests include being
a founding advisor to the non-profit Tech Foundation, which
makes technology accessible to the non-profit sector in an
attempt to bridge the widening digital divide.
|