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Yachts sail during the annual Sydney to Hobart yacht race in Sydney, December 26, 2011. Yachts pictured are (L-R): Knee Deep of Australia, Hugo Boss of Britain, Accenture Yeah Baby of Australia, and Lahana of Australia. View Photo »
(L-R) Caitlin Buck, Cody Cravatt, Paul Fagin, Angela Finney, Rafael Gomes, Sandy Shan, Bjorne Skarboe, Brenda Sarmiento Quezada and Jason Wagner from the George Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M present their research findings... View Photo »
Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop (L) talks during a news conference beside Nokia's Executive Vice President of the Markets Unit Niklas Savander at the company headquarters in Keilaniemi, Espoo April 27, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker... View Photo »
Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop gestures during a news conference at the company headquarters in Keilaniemi, Espoo April 27, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture... View Photo »
Managing Director Stephen Elop of mobile phone giant Nokia is pictured at a press conference at the headquarters of Nokia in Keilaniemi, Espoo April 27, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource... View Photo »
The headquarters of Nokia are pictured in Keilaniemi, Espoo April 27, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture as part of a plan to slash annual spending by 1 billion... View Photo »
Stephen Elop, Managing Director of mobile phone giant Nokia, talks during a press conference at the headquarters in Keilaniemi, Espoo, on April 27, 2011. The world's leading mobile phone maker Nokia said on April 27 it would cut 4,000 jobs worldwide by... View Photo »
People enter an Accenture office in downtown Helsinki on April 27, 2011. The world's leading mobile phone maker Nokia said on April 27 it would cut 4,000 jobs worldwide by the end of 2012 and transfer a further 3,000 employees to consulting firm Accenture. View Photo »
File picture shows Nokia chief executive Stephen Elop (L) welcoming Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer with a handshake at a Nokia event in London February 11, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and... View Photo »
File picture shows a corporate logo is displayed at the Nokia flagship store in Helsinki in this picture taken September 29, 2010. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture as... View Photo »
File picture shows a woman as she passes a Nokia advert in London July 20, 2009. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture as part of a plan to slash annual spending by 1 billion... View Photo »
Photo taken on April 27, 2011 shows the Nokia headquarters in Keilaniemi, Espoo. The world's leading mobile phone maker Nokia said on April 27 it would cut 4,000 jobs worldwide by the end of 2012 and transfer a further 3,000 employees to consulting firm... View Photo »
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Yachts sail during the annual Sydney to Hobart yacht race in Sydney, December 26, 2011. Yachts pictured are (L-R): Knee Deep of Australia, Hugo Boss of Britain, Accenture Yeah Baby of Australia, and Lahana of Australia.
View Photo »(L-R) Caitlin Buck, Cody Cravatt, Paul Fagin, Angela Finney, Rafael Gomes, Sandy Shan, Bjorne Skarboe, Brenda Sarmiento Quezada and Jason Wagner from the George Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M present their research findings on public policy reform at the...
View Photo »Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop (L) talks during a news conference beside Nokia's Executive Vice President of the Markets Unit Niklas Savander at the company headquarters in Keilaniemi, Espoo April 27, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000...
View Photo »Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop gestures during a news conference at the company headquarters in Keilaniemi, Espoo April 27, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture as part of a plan to slash annual...
View Photo »Managing Director Stephen Elop of mobile phone giant Nokia is pictured at a press conference at the headquarters of Nokia in Keilaniemi, Espoo April 27, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture as part of...
View Photo »The headquarters of Nokia are pictured in Keilaniemi, Espoo April 27, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture as part of a plan to slash annual spending by 1 billion euros ($1.46 billion). Nokia said it...
View Photo »Stephen Elop, Managing Director of mobile phone giant Nokia, talks during a press conference at the headquarters in Keilaniemi, Espoo, on April 27, 2011. The world's leading mobile phone maker Nokia said on April 27 it would cut 4,000 jobs worldwide by the end of 2012 and transfer a...
View Photo »File picture shows Nokia chief executive Stephen Elop (L) welcoming Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer with a handshake at a Nokia event in London February 11, 2011. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture...
View Photo »File picture shows a corporate logo is displayed at the Nokia flagship store in Helsinki in this picture taken September 29, 2010. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture as part of a plan to slash annual...
View Photo »File picture shows a woman as she passes a Nokia advert in London July 20, 2009. Nokia, the world's largest phone maker by volume, will lay off 4,000 people and outsource another 3,000 to Accenture as part of a plan to slash annual spending by 1 billion euros ($1.46 billion). Nokia said...
View Photo »Photo taken on April 27, 2011 shows the Nokia headquarters in Keilaniemi, Espoo. The world's leading mobile phone maker Nokia said on April 27 it would cut 4,000 jobs worldwide by the end of 2012 and transfer a further 3,000 employees to consulting firm Accenture. Nokia said it would...
View Photo »Yachts sail during the annual Sydney to Hobart yacht race in Sydney, December 26, 2011. Yachts pictured are (L-R): Knee Deep of Australia, Hugo Boss of Britain, Accenture Yeah Baby of Australia, and Lahana of Australia.
View Photo »Enterprise customers require core retail data and advanced tools to leverage and create value through analytics ... Accenture, in close collaboration with global Microsoft specialists Avanade, is developing and delivering solutions built on Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 for Retail, which enable clients to ...
Companies which hired include start-ups as well as the well established ones such as Microsoft, Infosys, HP, Cognizant, Nokia and Accenture. The appointments were for user interface designers, interaction designers, user experience designers in the range of Rs 7.5 lakh to Rs 9.5 lakh per annum — about 1...
Unlike HP, IBM or Accenture, Indian IT companies do not own any hardware. They have been late entrants in this space and hence lack the expertise
Accenture’s systems integration experience coupled with AT&T’s cloud-based technologies means hospitals can have virtually real-time access to medical images while reducing healthcare costs
If a professionally run IT function is essential to every business, government or non-profit enterprise, then running IT like a business is the only logical way to run IT. This has been our approach at Accenture since our company was established and our experiences serve as the basis for the insights an...
The name change and the Accenture building offered us a great opportunity to head downtown and start a new chapter in the life of our firm
Rolex, the watchmaker, and Fuse Science, a sports nutrition start-up, had enough confidence in Woods to sign sponsorship deals with him. Although the details were not released, they replace only a fraction of the income Woods lost when AT&T, Accenture, Gatorade, Gillette and others cut ties with him. An...
After a thorough review of over twenty vendors, including SAP, Accenture recommended Wellogix.
