Jan Baan Popular Books

Jan Baan Biography & Facts

Jan Baan (Born in Rijssen, 9 March 1946) is a Dutch entrepreneur and venture capitalist, known as the founder of the Baan Company, a software company providing Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software. After selling the company, he founded Cordys, a company to provide web-related ERP products. Biography Baan was born and raised in Rijssen as eldest son in a family of ten. His father was a carpenter, and his grandfather on his mother's side was cofounder of a regional bus company. At the age of 16, Baan started working at a meatworks, leaving secondary school without a degree. After serving in the military, Baan got a job at an accounting firm. In 1970, he started working for a wholesale firm, where after two years he became head of the accounting department. When the company bought their first computer, Baan got acquainted with automation. Mid 1970s Baan started working as a consultant, and shortly managed the financial department of a large company. In 1978, Jan founded The Baan Company, a software company providing ERP solutions, which became a major player in the ERP software industry. Jan Baan left the Baan Company in 1998. After his efforts with the Baan Company, Baan became a venture capitalist and invested in companies like Top Tier and WebEx; both were eventually valued above $1billion. Top Tier was later sold to SAP, while WebEx was sold to Cisco. In an interview, Baan said that "... with WebEx and Top Tier I was an investor. Baan, and Cordys, I do for life. I am not a serial entrepreneur at all." In 2005, Baan wrote a book on his life as an entrepreneur, called The Way to Market Leadership. Work Baan Company The Baan Company was founded in 1978. With the development of his first software package in 1979, he commenced his career in the ERP industry. His brother Paul Baan joined him in the management of the company. Under Jan's stewardship, the company made good market in the field of Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software and grew from a $35 million company in the early 1990s, to $680 million in 1998. The Baan Company competed successfully with large companies like SAP and PeopleSoft and became the number 2 ERP player in the software industry. However, the company's fall started in 1998 as the stocks started to dip and eventually in 2000, it was sold to the British company Invensys. Cordys In 2001, Baan started a new company, Cordys, along with Theodoor van Donge. The intention was to produce products serving to bridge the traditional Enterprise Resource Planning products with the internet, using the internet as the front end. In 2010, Cordys Switzerland AG was founded as an independent legal entity according to Swiss law. The Swiss company was not part of the later M&A deal between Jan Baan and OpenText. In August 2013, Jan Baan sold Cordys to OpenText for 33M USD. Contribution The entrepreneur from Lunteren went creatively with his principles as a Christian and businessman. The prohibition on labor on Sunday has managed to combine the entrepreneur with virtually unhindered services to customers to work in different time zones. The company's course in 1999, was a reason for the establishment of the De Keursteen Stichting that fights financial abuses in reformational circuit. References External links Jan Baan at Cordys CEO Interview: Jan Baan The Gartner Fellows: Jan Baan's Interview Cordys Switzerland. Discover the Jan Baan popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Jan Baan books.

Best Seller Jan Baan Books of 2024

  • Reduce software complexity synopsis, comments

    Reduce software complexity

    Jan Baan

    In de vorige eeuw werden computersystemen gebouwd vanuit een drietier architectuur: Data, Logica en UI (User Interface). Ze zijn nog steeds georganiseerd als individuele silo’s, d...

  • Pioniers in enterprise IT synopsis, comments

    Pioniers in enterprise IT

    Jan Baan

    Avoiding vendor lockin by generation lean Java code for systems of innovation.

  • MLOPS synopsis, comments

    MLOPS

    Jan Baan

    Machine Learning Operations, better known as MLOps, is the discipline of delivering machine learning (ML) models through repeatable and efficient workflows. It advocates formalizin...

  • De burger geniet van de e-governance services synopsis, comments

    De burger geniet van de e-governance services

    Jan Baan

    Hoe kunnen we de bestaande starre transactiesystemen bij de overheid flexibel inzetten om de steeds veranderende regelgeving voor die uitvoering van de taken van de kenniswerkers (...

  • Profit by loss synopsis, comments

    Profit by loss

    Jan Baan

    In the first part of my entrepreneurial journey at Baan Company, we became a worldleading ERP player with what we call today 'systems of record.' In my second book, I am explainin...