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A peek into some Canadian firms’ IT projects

A peek into some Canadian firms’ IT projects

By:  Briony Smith  On: 14 Jan 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

At a round table event in Toronto, managers from companies such as Tridel and EnWise revealed some of their plans for 2008. Find out how a condo developer is saving $130,000 per year.

Microsoft Canada Co. yesterday released the results of survey indicating mid-size and large Canadian companies are using technology to their advantage and are confident about their future.

At a round table event in Toronto, the software maker gathered executives from several prominent Canadian companies to discuss their recent IT successes and their upcoming plans for IT spending. Upcoming projects rnage from collaborative software to geographic information systems projects, plus customer relationship management improvements and service-oriented architecture.

Jill Schoolenberg, general manager for Microsoft Canada’s small and medium business unit, said that the results—culled from a survey conducted by the London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group of 200 Canadian business executives in December 2007—showed that technology was the number-one growth enabler, according to the respondents.

Business was also looking good for the respondents, two-thirds of whom said that they expected to expand their operations in the coming year. The majority of both mid-size and large business respondents plan, however, to concentrate on getting this growth from existing business.

Several Canadian companies present at the roundtable have been solidly building their existing business for decades, while the other is an up-and-comer who is doing rather well right out of the gate.

The latter is EnWise Power Solutions, a Toronto-based home energy solutions provider. Headed by CEO Peter Hwang, the company has been expanding rapidly, courtesy of technology. Sales field staff are all equipped with personal digital assistants that allow them to keep up with appointments in real time. His goals are to work on CRM database integrity and robustness, along with an implementation of Windows Server’s Terminal Services, so that everything can be reported back to a centralized hub and improve dispatch services.

One of the more established companies present was Tridel, the Toronto-based condo developer; its CIO, Ted Maulucci, shared some of the company’s strategies at staying on top over the years, which included standardizing on a Microsoft platform and custom development of software that would break down departmental barriers and allow remote offices and departments to tap into a centralized hub.

“We’ve also started automating some of our partners,” Maulucci said. “We have a law firm and we had to send them boxes and boxes of information and they had to process these packages into closing documents. So, instead, we put this process on top of our network; using a document server, we could digitize the format, post to the Web site, and then do overnight thousands of documents. We cut twice the deals in half the time. We’re saving $130,000 per year because of this,” he said.


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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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