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VP of Professional Services Delivery, GTSI
1982 Cadillac Cimarron - which sounds impressive but it was basically a Chevy Cavalier with a nice hood ornament.
Thep Phanom, Thai Restaurant - San Francisco, CA
What are three things most people don't know about you?

1. I once held a Ham Radio license
2. I love English Bulldogs
3. I started playing piano at age 5

What's been your greatest adventure in life?

Being a mother - I have two beautiful young boys that keep me very busy and challenge me every moment of every day.

What's your best childhood memory?

Fishing with my mom and dad when I was 4 and catching a catfish that was bigger than me!

If you could have a conversation with a person of your choice, past, present or future, who would that person be and why?

Abigail Adams - I would love to hear from her first hand about the challenges she faced as a women raising a family during the American Revolution and a wife to one of the most influential Founding Fathers of the United States.

What's the hardest thing you've ever done in your life?

I was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes and Thyroid cancer in the same year.

Tell us about your favorite hobby.

Household “do-it-yourself” projects - I love Home Depot more than my husband.

What are you currently reading? What is your favorite book?

Unfortunately I’m not reading anything at the moment but children’s books - of those, my favorites are the Magic Tree House series and Stop that Pickle! 

Is there a particular place or thing you want to see?

I want to visit Egypt and see the pyramids.

If you could give $10,000 to a charity, what would that charity be and why?

Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) - I was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes 2 years ago.  This is not typically an adult disease but in rare cases, me being one of them, I had late onset of this disease.  I know first-hand how scary it is and how crippling it can be and I can’t imagine having this disease as a child and having to cope with all the complications and daily rituals that are required.  I would do anything to help find a cure.

If you weren't on the professional services career track, what would you be doing?

I’d be doing research to help find a cure for Type 1 Diabetes.

What is the path that led you to Professional Services/Consulting?

I’ve always loved network engineering, I have a passion for fixing things and I get bored doing the same thing for any length of time.  I need a constant influx of new problems and challenges and Professional Services was the perfect fit.

What advice would you give to a recent graduate who just took a job in professional services?

Understand that making mistakes are a part of the process.  A graduate must understand that they will make mistakes - big ones, but they shouldn’t give up just because they screw a few things up.  Admit your mistakes, learn from them, correct them and teach others about them.

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PSVillage Hosts Executive Breakfast Series on
Cloud Computing and Compensation Trends
Compuware Launches New Initiative to Help Technology Firms Improve Operational Visibility and Control
Ironworks Consulting Selects Tenrox On-Demand Software to Streamline its Project and Resource Management Processes
Tenrox Project Workforce User Base Surpasses 100,000 Users Worldwide
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Discussion Forum
Seeking Opinion on When to Bill and When Not to Bill?

We are a professional services organization within a software product
company.  Our products are all large scale applications in the electronic
payments field.  Every implementation is heavily customized to suit the
business needs of the client.  We are having internal discussions on
what activities should or should not be billed to the customer; mostly
surrounding project management but the discussion extends to all PS
staff as well. 

For example, our delivery methodology specifies that we have weekly
meetings with our senior management to review the status of projects. 
Project Managers prepare for and conduct a portion of the senior
review.  Should that PM time be logged against the customer project
and billed to the customer? 

Another example:  PMs spend time preparing invoices, addressing
billing questions, entering/checking/verifying/editing data in our
Oracle financial and project accounting systems.  Do other companies
bill the customer for this administrative time logged by PMs? 

Another example:  Since our applications are customized for every
implementation, there are inevitably software bugs.  Those software
bugs lead to internal review meetings, delays in delivery, and rework.
Although we would not bill for rework, should the time the PM spends
coordinating all the internal activities be charged to the customer? 

One last example:  our delivery methodology calls out specific
activities & deliverables such as Quality Gates, Quality Audits, Post
Mortem analysis, Executive Review sessions with customer execs,
weekly status reports and many more.  Where do other companies
draw the line between when an activity is billed to a customer because
it is part of the customer project, and when the activity is not billed
because it is an internal action that the company elects to perform that
is only tangentially part of the customer project?

This may seem like a simple question but it is really quite complicated. 
We are finding that making the transition from a pure software vendor
(our old model) to a services company (the new model) is not that
easy.  Maybe you have experienced the same thing. 

People are lining up on both sides of the aisle.  On one side are the
people who think we should bill every hour of time that we think about,
do something about, talk about or work on a project.  On the other side
are those who think that some of the things we do are driven by our
own internal desire for process, methodology and data, and, if an
activity is internally driven, we should not bill the customer as it is a
‘cost of doing business’. 

I’d be interested in any opinions or examples you have on the topic.

Thanks.

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