Meet Amy

A third generation entrepreneur, Amy’s passion is to use her knowledge and enthusiasm to grow fellow entrepreneur’s ventures. She holds a Master of Science in Information Management from the W.P. Carey School at Arizona State University, as well as a Bachelor of Science in Computer Information Systems.

She has experience that ranges from computer programming during Y2K to a Director position for a Fortune 250 homebuilder. This broad range of experience means she understands the daily challenges many businesses face, as she has faced them herself. Her time spent programming for the State of Arizona taught her to quickly break down projects into individual tasks, allowing for analysis and business process improvement.

Due to the economic crisis, understanding our daily business lives is critical to survival. Employees who had all the knowledge are no longer there.  The existing staff are either new or completely overworked. Let’s face it. Our world has changed. What worked yesterday won’t necessarily work tomorrow.  Wise managers know that success hinges on adjusting to the changes of this crazy new era. Where to start though?

That’s where Amy’s expertise comes in.

As her coach and friend Stephanie Frank always says “People aren’t stupid. The systems are stupid.”

Amy utilizes her technical background and affable personality to identify and troubleshoot tasks and processes to determine where the bottleneck occurs or where the line of communication was broken. Then she works with everyone involved to implement more favorable approaches to solving those challenges.

In a 2007 article from CIOInsight.com, Business Process Improvement is considered the #1 priority of IT executives.  “Why? In part it’s because process improvement serves many masters. How else could you increase revenue, reduce costs and improve productivity, all at the same time?”  CIO Insight

Contact Amy now for a free consultation.


Personal reflections

As Chris Guillebeau said “Instead of trying to live a risk-free existence, let me tell you a few things that are truly worth worrying about:

The road not taken.
The destination not explored.
The adventure not pursued.
The life unlived.

If we’re going to lose sleep over something, it seems to me that those are the things that should keep us awake.”

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