BitTitan, a global leader in migrations and managed services automation with a family of solutions including MigrationWiz, Voleer and Perspectium,
has appointed Paul Nguyen as vice president of product and engineering
for Perspectium. A Perspectium co-founder, Nguyen has spent eight years
working in computer engineering and software development at the workflow
integration company. Nguyen's appointment comes following BitTitan's acquisition of Perspectium in June. He will be based in BitTitan's San Diego office.
In
this new role, Nguyen will lead Perspectium's product strategy and
development. He will also oversee Perspectium's delivery of efficient
and industry-leading cloud software to global enterprises and managed
service providers. The recent acquisition by BitTitan means that he will
have more resources, partnerships, and distribution methods available
to help accelerate further growth of Perspectium.
"I'm
excited about the opportunity to guide the product vision for
Perspectium and to continue driving innovation and growth in the
synchronization and integration space," Nguyen said. "BitTitan and
Perspectium are committed to delivering market-leading IT solutions to
our partners and customers around the globe. I look forward to
continuing to provide leading technology solutions that meet their
evolving needs and expanding Perspectium's reach into new geographies
and industries."
As
a co-founder of Perspectium, Nguyen was integral in the company's
evolution over the past eight years, helping it grow into a 75-person
organization with its IT solutions reaching customers around the world.
"Paul's
demonstrated expertise in engineering and software development have
made him a truly invaluable asset to BitTitan and Perspectium," said
David Loo, chief product officer at BitTitan. "His strong leadership
skills and continuous dedication toward advancing IT solutions on a
global scale are just what we need as BitTitan and Perspectium begin
this next phase of growth."
Prior
to Perspectium, Nguyen held a senior engineering role at EMC, which was
later acquired by Dell. At EMC, he led global projects in the company's
Document Sciences division and focused on creating new technology in
the enterprise content management space. In 2002, he earned a B.S. in
computer science from the University of California San Diego before
completing an MBA in entrepreneurial studies from San Diego State
University in 2010.