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Pythian creates $30K in MIS Scholarships

PYTHIAN NEWS

In celebration of the company’s 14 year anniversary, Pythian today announced a donation of $30K worth of scholarships to support students in the MIS Program at the University of Ottawa’s Telfer School of Management.

The scholarship will support four Honours Bachelor of Commerce students specializing in Management Information Services (MIS) each year by providing them with a $2,500 scholarship and a paid internship.

Since opening its doors in 1997, Pythian has grown from an ambitious local startup into one of the world’s most respected database services companies. Founder Paul Vallée and team members Marc Fielding, Sylvain Fontaine, and Greg Leger are alumni of the MIS program.
Read the rest of this entry . . .

Building a successful business is “all about the people”: Pythian Founder Paul Vallee

Building a successful, profitable business isn’t easy. If you’re thinking about it, best to get advice from the “voice of experience”, people who have been in the trenches, fought the startup battle and won.

In an interview with Startup 3.0, Pythian Founder, Paul Vallee tells the tale of how Pythian started and how he built his management team by appointing Andrew Waitman, accomplished businessman and venture capitalist, to the role of CEO. Paul talks candidly about what it takes to build a successful business, provides advice to budding entrepreneurs, and shares the latest Pythian news of being named one of Canada’s fastest-growing companies & opening Pythian’s newest office to bring a new wave of Oracle, MySQL & SQL Server database expertise to Toronto.

Read the full interview.

Pythian founder Paul Vallee shares sage advice on bootstrapping a business

Thinking of starting a business?

In a recent session with University of Ottawa’s Telfer School of Management Paul Vallee, winner of the Ottawa Business Journal Forty Under 40 Award states “starting a business is a no-brainer” to a captive audience of student entrepreneurs.

Paul describes how he started Pythian, key traits you need to have to be an entreprenueur, and shares secrets to success.

Read more in the the full Ottawa Business Journal article “Of bootstrapping, business divorce and outsourcing“.

Paul Vallee, Pythian Founder, Named to Ottawa Business Journal’s Forty Under 40

Pythian is pleased to announce that Paul Vallee, Pythian’s Founder and Executive Chairman, has been named as one of Ottawa’s rising stars on Ottawa Business Journal’s 2011 Forty Under Forty list.

The Forty Under 40 recognizes the amazing achievements of forty accomplished business people under the age of forty. After careful review, the judges, a prestigious group of community leaders, name a list of Ottawa’s top entrepreneurs – people who are driving Ottawa’s economy and setting an example in corporate and philanthropic circles. Nominees are assessed on a 40-point system, using three key criteria: career accomplishments, professional expertise as well as community and charitable involvement.

Paul thanks Pythian’s Ottawa customers and partners for their longstanding support and Pythian’s employees for their dedication to delivering outstanding service.

Pythian Ranked In Next 100 Ranking of Canada’s Fastest-Growing And Most Profitable Companies

PYTHIAN NEWS UPDATE

The Pythian Group, Inc., a leading provider of remote database infrastructure services, is pleased to announce its selection as one of Canada’s fastest-growing companies. Measured against a running five-year revenue growth, Pythian is listed in the NEXT 100, making it one the top 200 companies overall in the 22nd annual PROFIT 100 ranking of Canada’s Fastest-Growing Companies by PROFIT Magazine.

“We are ecstatic to have our organization achieve the a position on the Profit 100, Next 100 list” said Andrew Waitman, Pythian’s Chief Executive Officer. “Our revenue growth is a true testament to our talented team of industry experts and the hours of hard work we put in for our clients.”

Paul Vallee, Pythian’s Founder and Executive Chairman attributes the success to the company’s unique, flexible outsourcing engagement model. “The world is different today. Rapid economic changes brought about by global economic forces require businesses to be agile, and able to rapidly respond to increases or decreases in demand. Service provider models must also adapt to the needs and demands of today’s customer.”
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Gerry Narvaja: the Winds Of Change

For very personal reasons that don’t belong in this article, I decided a few weeks ago that it’s time for me to move on. The year and a half that I worked for Pythian have been a wonderful experience, and this is article is my tribute to this great company.

The MySQL Team

Being able to work side by side with two MySQL experts like Sheeri Cabral and Augusto Bott has been a great experience. I have learned a lot, not only about MySQL, but also about what a great DBA should be like. Both of them are recognized MySQL Community members and regular speakers at the MySQL Users Conference and other events. Sheeri has been named MySQL Community Member of the Year twice in a row. Both are a guarantee of excellent service.

My Predictions For Pythian

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Webinar for EMEA, June 4: Migrating to an Open Source DB Platform

When we founded Pythian Europe a year ago, we had, as former Oracle employees, a rather black-and-white view of the database world. There was the Oracle database; and then “The Others.”

Here at Pythian, though, we learned that the database world is more colorful than that, and very dynamic. Of course there are passionate debates between our Oracle, MySQL, and SQL Server teams over whose DBMS is better. These discussions, however, are friendly and respectful, and when it comes to a concrete situation, the winner is always the customer—his or her business needs and circumstances decide.

We learned a lot about the fascinating history of MySQL and more details about its features from Nicklas Westerlund and Danil Zburivsky, MySQL experts and members of Pythian Europe. Nicklas helped with the migration of a 1 TB Oracle RDB database on OpenVMS to MySQL on Linux. And there’s our Australian colleagues—see Alex’s blog about the Australian Webinar.

Paul Vallée, Pythian’s founder and Executive Chairman really opened our eyes. Paul talks about Oracle’s 11G features with the same enthusiasm he has for MySQL’s federated architecture, or for SQL Server’s peer-to-peer replication technology. You could hardly find anybody who presents his visionary views of the new technology trends like cloud computing, virtualization, or server consolidation with such a deep understanding of the topics.

Here is your opportunity—especially those of you in Europe,the Middle East, or Africa—to confer with Paul Vallée on Thursday, June 4, 2009 12:00 PM–1:00 PM CEST (11AM–12:00 PM GMT) in a free webinar, Database Platform Migration. Read the rest of this entry . . .

I’ve been blog tagged – you might be next.

I was blog-tagged by Doug Burns – his post is here: I *hate* chain letters ….

I hate them too, I literally never pass them on no matter what vile fate that condemns me to (so far nothing has happened so maybe those are idle threats). But this one includes a chance to talk about myself without seeming too self-involved, and there wasn’t even a threat of eternal damnation if I don’t do it. So let’s proceed then!

8 things about me that aren’t common knowledge:

  1. I was born in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, which is just south of Detroit, Michigan. I celebrated my thirteenth birthday in Montpellier, France, where my entire family relocated for a year. I moved to Ottawa for school when I was 17, and lived in Minneapolis Minnesota for a year in 1996-97 where I worked for a great company called Pragmatek. I am a French-Canadian, but my English is unaccented. Unless you count my outrageous Canadian accent, eh?
  2. I was 17 years old when I started my university education. This has everything to do with how much I hated high school, and nothing to do with me being “smart”. Even though I hated high school, I was voted most likely to succeed at my graduation ceremony to my incredible shock and embarassment. Since that award is by any definition a popularity contest, I am still and always will be puzzled as to how that happened.
  3. I’ve always loved UNIX or UNIX-like operating systems, and UNIX servers. No, seriously, from a young age. When I moved to Ottawa for University, my father co-signed a loan for me (around $3500) to buy a used Sun workstation for my dorm room (this was an upgrade from a CP/M box, guess which!). Everybody else had PCs. I traded in that Sun for a NeXT a few years later.
  4. My heroes are Carl Sagan who more than anyone else inspired in me a sense of wonder and awe for the universe we live in, and ingrained in me a deep love for science and the scientific method; and Steve Jobs, who more than anyone else inspired in me a sense of appreciation for excellence, appreciation for genius, and the importance of generating passion and excitement in your work (that excitement and passion must always start with yourself.) That’s a favourite Steve Jobs article linked there, which was especially influential to me.
  5. I am a sucker for a good analogy. I think with them, I love them, and I use them all the time when trying to explain or convince. My staff and customers tease me about that continuously.
  6. My first real Oracle exposure was in a project on Oracle 5. Not because that was current, it was incredibly obsolete already (I’m talking about 1993 here!). But it was what we had. That and a current version of SAS. We wrote most of our stuff to SAS. I started working with Oracle in earnest in 1996, doing a huge Oracle 6 to Oracle 7 migration on VMS.
  7. I was 25 years old in 1997, when I co-founded Pythian. At the time, we had to bundle Internet services and VPN hardware (and even leased-lines) with our services since our customers typically didn’t already have Internet. My how times have changed.
  8. We post family pictures here. That beautiful family is composed of my partner of 12 years Nicole, my 3 year-old son Felix and my 16 month old daughter Clementine. I’m going to wrap this post up and go home to them now.

So… now who to tag? I think I’m going to spread this out somewhat from the Oracle-only blogosphere. I’m not sure about tagging 8 people – can that really be how it works? Here goes…

  1. Christo Kutrovsky
  2. Yasin Baskan
  3. Radoslav Rusinov
  4. Sheeri Kritzer
  5. George Trujillo
  6. Craig Mullins
  7. Adam Machanic
  8. Ronald Bradford

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