The entries are already coming in for this year’s
Computing Awards for Excellence
–and we can now announce the prestigious line-up of judges who will decide
the winners.
The awards are recognised as the Oscars of the IT industry. This year the
prizes will be handed out at the awards ceremony at Battersea Park Events Arena
in London on 7 November.
Deadline for entries is 6 July – for all the details of how to submit your
nomination and for more information about the ceremony, visit our web site at:
www.computing.co.uk/awards
John Suffolk
John was appointed Her Majesty’s government
chief information officer (CIO) on 5 June 2006. Prior to this he was
director general of criminal justice IT. John leads the work of the CIO Council
in delivering the government’s strategy for the transformation of public
services enabled by technology. He also provides leadership to the IT profession
across the public sector.
Peter Scargill
Peter is the national IT chairman of the
Federation of Small Businesses (FSB), the
UK’s largest business organisation, representing more than 185,000 member
companies and 1.25 million people. The federation promotes and protects the
interests of the self-employed and owners of small firms.
John Higgins
John has been director general of
Intellect, the trade association for the
UK hi-tech industry, since its launch in May 2002. He previously fulfilled
the same role at the CSSA. John is an executive member of many industry
taskforce teams, including the Intellect/OGC Senior IT Forum and the
Intellect/NHS Supplier Consultation Group.
Denise Plumpton
Since January 2005 Denise has been director of information at the Highways
Agency. She is a former chairwoman of blue-chip
IT user group The Corporate IT Forum (Tif). From 1989 to 1999 she was
commercial manager and IT director at Powergen, followed by four years as IT
director of TNT, and a year as IT director at UK mobile phone manufacturer
Sendo.
Jeremy Beale
Jeremy is responsible for e-business policy and member best-practice at
the CBI. He is a member of the Broadband
Stakeholder Group Executive, the Policy Advisory Board of Nominet, which is
responsible for UK internet country-code allocations, and the Board of tScheme,
the UK Digital Certificates Authority.
Ashley Braganza
Ashley is a senior lecturer in the innovation and process management
community at Cranfield School of
Management. He directs Nexus – The Knowledge Exchange, the IT Directors’
Forum and Achieving Strategy through Business Process Change, and advises
several organisations in the areas of process, change and knowledge management.
Sharm Manwani
Sharm is associate professor at Henley
Management College, where he is researching, mentoring, and lecturing in
information management. He held European IT director positions at Diageo and
Electrolux while obtaining his MBA and Doctorate at Henley, and joined the
faculty in 2000. Sharm consults with major firms on strategy, programme
management and IT capability development.
Julie Meyer
Julie is chief executive of
investment and advisory firm Ariadne
Capital. She founded First Tuesday, the global network of entrepreneurs
credited for igniting the internet generation in Europe. Ariadne Capital was an
advisor to Skype, and Julie also advises firms such as Carphone Warehouse,
Morse, BT and a portfolio of startups.
Mark Kobayashi-Hillary
Mark is a board member of the National
Outsourcing Association and founding member of the BCS working party on
offshoring. A member of the Parliamentary IT Committee, and a lecturer on the
MBA programme at London South Bank University, Mark is author of Outsourcing to
India: The Offshore Advantage and co-author of Global Services: Moving to a
Level Playing Field.
Julie Feest
Julie Feest joined e-Skills UK in May
2003 and is now the sector skills body’s IT sector engagement manager.
Previously Julie was the marketing alliance manager for HP’s services division.
At e-Skills UK Julie works with employers of IT professionals to raise awareness
of the importance of technology skills and to support professional development
for the workforce.
Nick Kirkland
Nick is managing director of IT
leaders’ user group CIO Connect. Former positions included group vice
president at Gartner Executive Programmes, information services director of
Penguin Books, and head of IT in the UK for Sony. He is a member of the IoD and
the Institute for the Management of Information Systems.
Rose Crozier
Rose is head of information services in Belfast City Council, and was elected
president of local authority user group
Socitm in April 2007. Rose holds an MSc in information systems management
and hopes this year to complete her PhD researching performance improvement
through effective deployment of technology.
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