Saturday, August 1, 2009

IBM Lends IT and Business expertise to COMTEQ

Top experts from IT giant, International Business Machines (IBM), and a management team from COMTEQ Computer and Business College recently went through a transformative four-week program that brought the teaching of IT at Comteq to the highest level.

The IBM experts visited the country to foster the growth of the information technology community in the Philippines as part of the company’s global corporate social responsibility (CSR) program. They are all brilliantly engaged in a spectrum of disciplines in the markets where IBM is competing in globally.

“We initially thought we were justified in thinking that our competitive edge as an IT institution was already razor-sharp due to the college’s stellar track record in winning IT competitions,” Comteq Deputy Administrator Ansbert Joaquin said.

“But the IBM volunteers have awakened us to the fact that there are knowledge-areas in the field of IT that we have yet to explore and conquer, which our college is uniquely positioned to accomplish to better serve our students,” Joaquin admitted.

Comteq has consistently been winning local and national skills competitions because of the quality of its students some of whom find themselves employed by prestigious companies even before they graduate.

The school was chosen by the Subic Bay Chamber of Commerce as the learning institution operating in the Subic Bay Freeport Zone, Olongapo city, and the province of Zambales that possesses the highest yield-potential to benefit from the CSR program and help spread IBM’s expertise in the community.

Project output

Douglas Del Prete, Global Industry Solutions senior consultant for IBM from Massachusetts in the United States, provided Comteq with a road map to enhance its curriculum so that the knowledge-base and the skill-sets being imparted by the faculty to its students are at par with the most prized worker assets in the global IT sector.

Del Prete said that the “hot skills” program that is now embedded in Comteq College’s curriculum will “enable students enrolled here to compete with other students anywhere in the world.“

“We made sure that Comteq’s curriculums are more aligned in the regional, national, and global trends in IT. This way, the expertise that students will obtain here on their way to getting jobs after they graduate, comprises the most valued skills in the industry. This should translate to satisfactory and lucrative careers for them later,” he said.

In a symposium about the latest trends in IT attended by hundreds of high school and college IT students, Del Prete said “schools in the area will become catalysts in transforming the Subic Bay Freeport Zone into “a mighty economic engine“ by arming its students with the hot skills that are prized in the industry.

“I see a lot of potential here. But it is going to need knowledgeable people to realize that potential and turn it into something valuable. And that's why itis important that the learning institutions in this area are always engaged in enhancing the skills of its students that are important to industry, he said.

“Comteq is now several steps ahead of the competition in this regard,” Del Prete stressed.

Another expert, YiRen “Judy” Yuan, IBM User Experience Engineer, from Shanghai, China, meanwhile, helped craft Comteq’s strategic plans for the next five years.

She was joined by Jens Teichelmann, Director of asset recovery service for IBM, from Stuttgart, Germany who shared his expertise in sales, marketing and finance. Together, they also worked with the Comteq staff in developing the college’s marketing program.

Yuan said that that the IBM group which consisted of “IBM’s best performing and high-potential employees” hoped to have succeeded in leaving a lasting legacy to the community through Comteq.

“As much as we have shared our knowledge and our expertise to Comteq, we hope that what we have done here benefits as many persons as possible and improves their lot in life through education,” she said.

Teichelmann agreed and said he is confident that the entire community will benefit from the program as well. “The local community will also be able to build its capacity for IT through IBM's expertise,” he explained.

“In fact, they are the foremost beneficiary of the program since most of the students who enroll in Comteq are part of the communities that surround the Freeport Zone,” he added.

Another IBM volunteer from Columbia, Camilo Roxas, who was actually assigned at the tourism office of Olongapo City, also shared his skills to selected Comteq students in web development.

Cutting edge

The IBMers that formed the team in Subic came from India, China, Germany, Canada, U.S, Columbia and Costa Rica. They were chosen from a pool of over 400, 000 workers scattered throughout the globe. Some of them were assigned to develop the strategic plan for the Subic Bay Freeport Zone.

“Together, our friends from IBM have brought Comteq to the cutting edge of the IT industry in terms of our curriculum and strategic management initiatives,” Joaquin said at the end of the four-week program.

“The volunteers really left us with a lot of work to do as they have set us in the direction that will shape the course of this college’s future,” Joaquin said.

“And it will be mainly due to their (IBM experts’) inspiration and their guidance that our students shall reap the benefits of IBM’s culture -- that of sharing and excellence in the field of IT,” he added.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

COMTEQ creates award-winning website

Once again, COMTEQ College showed proof of its excellence in design and development in the field of IT by creating the website of Zambales Congresswoman Mitos Magsaysay that won the Best Website Award for Celebrities and Personalities Category in the 11th Philippine Web Awards.

The aforementioned website was created in partnership with another exceptional institution, the Victa Solutions. The development team of the Mitos Magsaysay Website is composed of John Carlo Nova (President, Victa Solutions), Marcus Reyes (VP for Operations, Victa), Jov Mark Felarca (IT-TESDC Head, COMTEQ), Yam Villena (Project Manager, Victa), Anjo Catindig and Ryan Macaspac (COMTEQ instructors), and Paul Jayme and Ederson Lim (COMTEQ students).
 
The development team was surprised when they were announced as winner as they were competing against very impressive sites in the Celebrities Category. However, COMTEQ Administrator Ansbert Joaquin said that this did not surprise him because it is his belief that COMTEQ staff and students truly have the intelligence and creative and technical skills to compete with much bigger and stronger adversaries.

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Related Article:
Subic ICT talents raring for the big time 
by Henry EmpeƱo - Business Mirror

SUBIC BAY FREE PORT—While Subic Bay remains outside the initial development spheres for the budding Philippine information and communications technology (ICT) industry, the area has been producing a growing talent pool that is now raring for recognition in various fields of the knowledge-based industry.

Industry experts in Subic told the BusinessMirror in exclusive interviews recently that local IT professionals have become proficient over the years and could now compete with some of the country’s best.

“Name it—systems development, database management, biometric solutions, web design, multimedia development, outsourcing and consulting —and the locals can do it,” said John Carlo Nova, president and chief executive officer of Victa Solutions, an IT firm based in Olongapo City that won an award for best website in the 11th Philippine Web Awards held in February.

The web site www.mistosmagsaysay.org, which was designed for Zambales First District Rep. Mitos Magsaysay, won in the celebrities and personalities category, besting the official web sites of Sen. Aquilino Pimentel Jr. and broadcast journalist Daniel Razon.

“The Subic Bay area is teeming with capable and talented individuals, and should some investor put up any ICT/BPO/KPO business in the locality, there is no doubt that local talents can fill the manpower needs,” Nova added.

The 26-year-old Nova, who has a degree and an academic excellence award in computer science, has kept faith in the capability of local talents by hiring talents straight out of a local computer school.

“Most of our developers are graduates of the Comteq Computer and Business College because this is the only school which provides solid IT instructions in the Subic-Olongapo City area,” Nova explained.

“Comparatively speaking, students and graduates of Comteq display more than competence; they are good in team efforts, they understand the need for promptness with their deliverables, and they have high morale, which results in tension-free work even when there is pressure,” he added.

For the Magsaysay web-site project, for example, Victa Solutions tapped several programmers and developers from Comteq to beef up the firm’s technical staff. These included Comteq instructors Jov Mark Felarca, who helped out in planning, concept development and project management; Ryan Macaspac, who assisted in research and development; and Anjo Catindig, who executed graphic design and animation.

Two Comteq students, Ederson Lim and Paul Ameer Jaime, meanwhile, assisted in Web development.

“The task for the web-site design concept was handed down to us with no specific instruction regarding color scheme and design, so the design team really had to brainstorm for two concepts and then decide later which had the better look and feel,” Nova recalled.

“When it was announced that we won the best design, we were really surprised because we knew we were up against some of the most competitive sites there were in the celebrities category,” he said.

Comteq administrator Ansbert Joaquin, meanwhile, revealed this was not the first time that their students shone in the field of ICT, pointing out that another team, headed by Comteq’s Felarca, became the overall winner in Globe Telecom’s G-Cash competition last year.

“The Subic Bay area is actually brimming with ICT talents, despite the apparent disinterest of big companies to invest in the area,” Joaquin said.

“Because of this very sad situation, the best talents in Subic are pirated out of the area by companies in Manila or even those based abroad,” he added.

Among those who have been successfully wooed out of Subic, Joaquin said, are Comteq graduates who have designed and developed software for FedEx’s Asia hub loading and destination planning system; computer generated images for the Subic-based Idess Interactive Technologies; point of sale and payroll systems for various Subic locators; data systems for Meralco, United Coconut Planters Bank and Global Steel Philippines; as well as banking solutions software for the Slovenska Sporitelna (Europe) Bank.

Earlier, the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) has noted that the Subic Bay area has lagged in attracting investments in BPO and knowledge-based industries.

According to SBMA Administrator Armand Arreza, Subic has to provide additional incentives to pioneering knowledge-based industries for the free port to make a significant presence in the burgeoning Philippine BPO market.

Arreza added that the SBMA will now work with local schools to enhance their ICT curriculum and initiate the development of an IT park within the free port.

Nova and Joaquin said these developments are what local talents have been waiting for.

“There was a time when they lamented that investors in ICT were most willing, but the manpower supply was weak. Now the reverse may be true,” noted Joaquin.

“Today local ICT talents are raring to prove they’re among the best there is, but there is simply a shortage of opportunities to showcase their skills and abilities,” he added. 

Source: http://subicbaynews.blogspot.com -  Subic ICT Talents Raring For the Big Time


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