BP

Bill Pope

Director of Business Development- eDiscovery Markets at Informative Graphics Corp (IGC)

Bill Pope has over 30 years of work experience in the computer industry. Bill started their career at Hewlett-Packard Inc in 1979, where they held various sales and technical positions. Bill then became an Imaging and Printing Account Manager, responsible for managing State, Local, and Education (SLED) customers in the southwest, specifically in Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah. During their time at HP, they developed strong client relationships and expanded the preference for HP Imaging and Printing products in their territory. In 2009, Bill transitioned to Informative Graphics as the Director of Business Development- eDiscovery Markets. During their time at Informative Graphics, the specific start and end dates are not provided, but their role primarily focused on business development in the eDiscovery markets. Prior to joining Informative Graphics, Bill worked as an IT Professional in the computer industry, where they had a strong sales and technical background, with extensive experience in imaging and printing product sales and support, as well as a strong PC and Server Technology background.

Bill Pope attended Purdue University from 1975 to 1979 where they obtained their Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Technology (BSEET). Bill specialized in the field of Computer Automation.

Location

Mesa, United States

Links

Previous companies


Org chart

No direct reports

Teams

This person is not in any teams


Offices

This person is not in any offices


Informative Graphics Corp (IGC)

1 followers

Informative Graphics Corporation One day in 1989 co-workers Gary Heath and Martin Davis had a four-hour parking lot discussion about how an application could be built to view multiple file formats and still run in minimal DOS memory. Marty's daughter had a chalkboard in her room so they met there the next day to sketch out a preliminary designfor their idea. The premise was simple: If we build a good product, people will buy it. With just a chalkboard roadmap, $5,000 and two computers, IGC was born. The product they designed eventually became MYRIAD, the company's first product, and the rendition platform technology on which it resided.


Industries

Employees

51-200

Links