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Abdul Jaludi is an American author, consultant, Command Center, Event Management, Monitoring, Incident Management, and Problem management adviser. Since 2012, he has written two books,〔("Author page" ) Amazon. Retrieved 25 March 2014.〕 many reports, and articles,〔("Abdul Jaludi's Blog" ) Smart Enterprise Exchange. Retrieved 25 March 2014.〕 most of them on IT leadership. In 2012 he was the winner of a global innovation contest looking for the best ideas for the future of banking 〔("Innovators of the year" ) American Banker. Retrieved 25 March 2014.〕 The writing and publishing of ''Command Center Handbook: Proactive IT Monitoring'' in 2014 established him as an expert in the field of command centers and operational efficiency in IT operations. In 2009 he founded a self-service application called WAIS (web automated information system) that performs automated user requests on mainframes and distributed systems including windows, unix and other operating systems. The application permits users to perform their own mainframe and distributed requests including requests for emergency access, temporary access to a limited environment, reports, scheduling requests and application stop, start and restart with full and automated validation without the need for calling a help-desk or other support team. He is the founder of Technology Advisory Group (TAG-MC) and has been featured in Smart Enterprise Exchange,〔("Does customer service begin with IT basics?" ) "Klein, Paula, Editor. Smart Enterprise Exchange editors note. Retrieved 25 March 2014.〕 including ''The Pocono Record'',〔Brown, Stacy M. ("Milford company seeks to cure other businesses' digital hiccups" ) 17 March 2014 ''The Pocono Record''. Retrieved 25 March 2014.〕 and ''Smart Enterprise Exchange documents''〔("Improving the IT experience, IT-Style" ) ''Smart Enterprise Exchange''. Retrieved 25 March 2014.〕 ==Career== He began his career in data center operations as an entry level tape librarian with Citicorp in 1985 on Wall Street in New York City, New York. Abdul was part of the team that helped the bank restore operations from the disaster recovery location in Secaucus, NJ when the UPS system kept failing after a power station failure resulted in an unstable utility feed. From there, he moved to Weehawken, New Jersey where he became a command center and proactive monitoring specialist. Abdul left Citicorp in 1985 for a performance management role with Lehman Brothers, but returned to the command center two years later. Abdul remained with Citigroup, where he rose to senior vice president managing the North America Enterprise Systems Management team, responsible for command center alerting and automation. During his tenure Abdul founded numerous applications, including WAIS, an automated service desk application for adhoc scheduling and emergency access management. WAIS was chosen by the Citigroup security standards committee as the global tool for emergency access requests. He left Citigroup in 2013 under questionable circumstances. An avid believer in the benefits of proactive monitoring and transparency within the field of information technology, he began writing about effective leadership and IT best practices. His blog in ''Smart Enterprise Exchange'' led him to writing books on process improvements from a leaders perspective 〔(The Art of Process Improvement ) Management guide to Process Improvement ''The Art of Process Improvement''. Retrieved 25 March 2014.〕 and command centers.〔("Command Center Handbook" ) Proactive IT Monitoring. Retrieved 25 March 2014.〕 In 2013, unable to find a book on command centers, he researched, drew from his experience as a command center manager, designer and builder, and wrote the first book on the subject. Abdul also publishes under the pen names Atticus Aristotle and O.M. Kiam. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Abdul Jaludi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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