JEFF ANGUS
Award Winning Manager, Management Advisor, and Journalist
TRAVELS FROM
Washington
Jeff Angusis a management consultant specializing in work for entrepreneurial organizations in business, professional practice, government and non-profit sectors. He is currently a contributing editor at InfoWorld, a leading weekly publication that covers technical and business analysis of key solutions and technologies that benefit large organizations. He writes a management column for CIO Insight, and a baseball column for the Seattle Times that covers the new statistics, and is the author of Management by Baseball: The Official Rules for Winning Management in Any Field.
Organizations he has worked for as a manager or employee, consultant or contractor include: The U.S. Senate, Microsoft Corp., Boeing Company, London Transport, SAIC, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Farallon Computing, Lighthouse Consulting Group, Grey Rabbit, Yellow Cab, Seattle Housing Authority, and American Management Systems.
Angus was an aide for the U.S. Senate Small Business Committee and a legislative researcher for a U.S. Senator. He reported on baseball for both the Associated Press and United Press International and was a sportswriter for the Seattle Sun. His commentaries on political economy and business evolution have appeared on the op-ed pages of many papers, including the New York Times, the Baltimore Sun, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He’s been a regular opinion columnist for InfoWorld, InformationWeek, and Knowledge Management, and a professional radio broadcaster for stations in California, Ohio, and Washington.
He was Director of Marketing Operations for Farallon Computing, founded and was Director of the InfoWorld Test Center, and was Director of Strategic Consulting Services for Lighthouse Consulting Group.
Angus is a member of SABR (the Society for American Baseball Research). SABR's mission is to foster the study of baseball, to assist in uncovering the history of the game, to promote the distribution of baseball research, and to stimulate interest in baseball.
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