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Frédéric Lasnier
Title: President&Chief Executive Officer
Bio: After a quick passage in a national marketing service company, Frederic Lasnier founded Pentalog with four colleagues, academics like himself. During a period of economic stagnation (in 1993).
In 1995, he decided to open permanently the capital of Pentalog to the participation of his employees. This participation now has reached 56%. It was a political vision that he shared with the founding members. Starting from 1997, Pentalog exported their first services outside of France. The percentage of foreign activities subsequently reached 60% in 2006.
In 1999, as part of a large software project (10 000 man-days in J2EE), he made his first trip to Romania and laid the foundation for the Pentalog policy of European "low cost". In 2005, he initiated the creation of BPO services (Business Process Outsourcing) and offered a New Business Model to Pentalog High Tech. In 2006, with the help of Ausy, one of the 5 most important players in the French market of outsourced R&D services, he created Pentalog Technology, a joint venture between Ausy and Pentalog, co-owned equally by the two partners. The Joint Venture aims to provide low cost but high quality R & D to global players. Pentalog took operational control of this alliance.
In 2008, Pentalog Deutschland, the German subsidiary of the group was created.
In 2009, Frederic created Pentalog Vietnam.
In all these areas, the management is provided from Orleans and it is here where 70% of the consolidated value is held.
Frederic is the father of the adaptation of the "design to cost" for intellectual services in France.
Aymeric Libeau
Title: CIO - Vice President Infrastructure & R&D
Bio: The management of infrastructure and R&D Aymeric is supervising includes all the technical aspects (for the company as well as for our customers), whether they are related to corporate needs, resources to complete a project, R&D activities or quality control.
Aymeric is the one who defines the strategy of development of our infrastructure and information system.
This former peacekeeper has led several international operations, in particular in Eastern Europe. He remains operational for some of our customers, whether as an expert in architecture, a project director or consultant in the choice of technologies.


Monica Jiman
Title: COO - Vice President Business Development
Bio: Monica graduated in Marketing and Production from the University of Orleans, and joined Pentalog as a trainee.
She then became the Manager of the branch office in Bucharest, today employing 50 people in the field of outsourced software development on the offshore as well as local market in Romania.
In May 2009 she became Chief Operational Officer. Monica is now in charge of operations in Vietnam, Eastern Europe, France and Germany, involving over 300 employees. She manages sales and business lines, the creation of new branch offices, recruitment, human resources and the responsibility of contractual operations.

Alexandra Mondanel
Title: International Operations Officer
Bio: After a 4-month internship within the Pentalog Orleans Team, Alexandra was recruited to develop the company's international activities. She holds a postgraduate degree in International Business and foreign languages and she is European to the core: her mother is German and her father is French; she attended a British University, and used to work for the German subsidiary of a French company before joining Pentalog in 2005. Her ability to speak four languages will be determining to find partners all accross Europe.

Sophie Lelarge
Title: WW Sales and BL Director
Bio: Sophie is the group's Sales Director and manages the 3 Business Lines: Information Systems, Embedded Systems and BPO.
She ensures the dialogue with consultants and project managers, as well as the monitoring of our commitments, in coordination with the project managers.




Pierre Peutin
Title: Head of Business Line for Information Systems
Bio: Pierre entered Pentalog as a developer, in 1999. He has worked on web and client/servers projects, on missions of medium and long duration in both France and Belgium. After several years as a developer, Pierre oriented himself towards Business Intelligence by participating in various reporting projects for customers like PSA Peugeot Citroën, Loxam or the ACTICALL group. Later, Pierre became Project Leader for specific application developments, managing teams of 1 to 7 people based in France and offshore for Pentalog. Pierre then naturally served as an offshore Project Director before taking on the responsibility of the Business Line for Information Systems.
Pierre is presently responsible for writing business proposals, monitoring existing customers, commitment control vis-à-vis our customers on projects, compliance with Pentalog quality system procedures and control and optimization of expenses for the Business Line.
Mickaël Hiver
Title: Head of Business Lines for Embedded Systems & BPO
Bio: Mickaël entered Pentalog as a Network Administrator in February 1997 with the aim to gain global understanding of information technology in order to assist and guide users in meeting their real needs. For 8 years he was an in-house producer for Pentalog clients. With his acquired experience, Mickaël progressively left production to become first a Project Manager, then Project Director and finally the Head of Business Lines for Embedded Systems & BPO.
Mickaël is a hands-on and open person, with an acute sense of organization and priorities. Through his assistance and counseling he gives his clients and prospective clients the opportunity to focus calmly on their actual core business.
Eric Gouin
Title: Administrator
Bio: Eric graduated from a renown school of Physics and Chemistry in Paris. While he was a student he used to develop websites related to his student activities.
After two research internships within a French company producing mobile phone components in the Sophia-Antipolis Technopole, he joined the IT world in which he held several key positions.
He now is a finance and management control consultant.


Aleth Delcenserie
Title: Quality Manager
Bio: Associate-founder of Pentalog and board member, Aleth Delcenserie first evolved in the graphics department of the company. Gifted with a strong sense of organization and a taste for detail, she conducted with rigorous methodology publishing projects and electronic media for over ten years, and launched the Pentalog BPO-DTP sector at the end of 2005.
From September 2007, Aleth has been responsible for the definition and for the implementation of the Pentalog Quality Policy, leading to the ISO 9001:2008 certification of the group, on December 24, 2008.
As the Director of Quality Control, Aleth is now based in Moldova since 1 January 2009, where she now shares her time between coaching project managers in implementing effectiveness control and the progress of Pentalog Quality.
Tuan Nguyenquoc
Title: Office Manager Hanoi
Bio: Tuan holds a Master's Degree in Information Systems and New Technologies from the Paris-Dauphine University, and gained some professional experience in France before returning to Vietnam to start his offshore adventure. He became a team leader in a Datawarehouse deployment project in Africa for a telecom provider, and witnessed violent riots in Kinshasa during a couple of days.
Following this project, Tuan turned to a Marcom position as the offshore business development manager of a big Vietnamese IT services company.
While reading the Pentalog blog Tuan became acquainted with Frederic and they met during Frederic's first visit in Vietnam. He was immediately convinced by Pentalog's business model and now manages the development of the first Pentalog office in Vietnam.

Big, old and…

Wherever I go in the world, and see the different offshore IT structures, the more I realize they are better in every way than their Western counterparts. Whatever the point of view I take, the comparisons always turn to their advantage.

The idea of this article came to me while visiting St Petersburg when Alex and I visited a very promising local IT company. What did we see? A company, having a structure of 160 employees completely centered on the Scandinavian countries with work groups organized in competence centres dedicated to clients, having teams of 5 to 50 employees, just as we do in Pentalog. At Pentalog, we have 5 teams with over 20 employees, including two of 50. These large projects, let’s not deceive ourselves, is the dream of every large French IT company who often struggle to sell their solutions, then implement them and exploit them. Meanwhile, more and more middleweight offshore companies, comprising 100 to 1,000 employees, sign these projects, that fear, the lack of ambition and investment prevent older IT companies from signing.

We have not lost a SINGLE deal against the leaders in this sector in France for years, even when we were opposed by their best offshore centers. Why is this? Very often their sales force imagines that question is who has the lowest prices. This is totally false. The client is not looking at -42 instead of -39%. It makes no sense. Instead, we often had the opportunity to justify the slightly higher prices from those of our competitors by demonstrating proven, systematic quality systems and the importance of a management who is extremely involved in the production unit. Finally, we demonstrate that all the Pentalog actors behave as entrepreneurs. When I think about all these middleweight structures, often locally owned, they share these same qualities as we do. So yes, I do not really see the agility or the strength of these major French companies. They are big and do not take advantage of their weight when preparing a very big contract. And when comparing them to the giant Indian companies… only Cap could possible resist, and perhaps Steria?

Old? In regards to their offers, first of all. Competence centres, dedicated teams, fixed price packages are not a standard practice and this is felt commercially. The businesses that we are in competition with, usually do not have the legs for those matches of 5 sets or a dozens points, even a hundred or more. Their offers and their talk of quality is generally not sufficient to reassure a client that is sending offshore the maintenance or development of their owner applications. Most are too prosaic, glued to the price and technology, when it is a complete business model that they have to sell. The business method of these structures has not been reviewed in a long time. What about their means of steering and project management? They usually are completely non-existent in comparison with the smaller structures I spoke of; the NATIVES they offer complete outsourcing and a full line of tools to steer the project but also the contract. They have the methods, tools and the discourse. They are young and do not need to renew the old methodology.

Perhaps the picture I have painted is quite black but this is reality of the situation and I just cannot justify the “dreadful” reality that comes to mind. But, these companies end up seducing no one. Their employees do not adhere to the company’s project, which remains absolutely illegible most of the time and concerns only the investment and pension funds. Their customers post pitiful rates of satisfaction in quality surveys. Yet, as a result of industrialization policies, new architectures and maturity of our industry, there is a great deal to be done to create new markets, renewing methodologies, organization, work tools and control and finally the image of this sector. Instead of this, because of the dictatorship of financial markets (shares, always shares!), they continue to fuel gross margins, while with competence centers and clouds, capital expenditures have heavily appeared among the pioneers of the industry. Imagine for one moment the capital expenditures of Infosys! Meanwhile, the French IT system is losing its market share. It is fortunate for emerging countries and companies such as Pentalog are in the hands of real entrepreneurs, and how necessary it is to know how to make bets a little more complex than those of external growth and to dare to evolve towards a global market through industrialized competence centres, in order to give this sector its patent of nobility.

In a few days I will come back to the dissatisfaction they generate for their shareholders too, finally, by comparing the results of offshore players, French tenors and Pentalog.

Posted on Thu., 4 Feb. 2010 19:17 by Frédéric LASNIER (211 day(s) old)
Tags: Design to cost - Productivity, Nearshore, Offshore
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AVERAGE PRICE REPORT (DAILY RATES)
2nd quarter 2009

460
137
175
91
256