Cookies Policy
The website need some cookies and similar means to function. If you permit us, we will use those means to collect data on your visits for aggregated statistics to improve our service. Find out More
Accept Reject
  • Menu
Publications

Publications by João José Ferreira

2004

Developing a reusable workflow engine

Authors
Ferreira, DMR; Ferreira, JJP;

Publication
JOURNAL OF SYSTEMS ARCHITECTURE

Abstract
Every time a workflow solution is conceived there is a large amount of functionality that is eventually reinvented and redeveloped from scratch. Workflow management systems from academia to the commercial arena exhibit a myriad of approaches having as much in common as in contrast with each other. Efforts in standardizing a workflow reference model and the gradual endorsement of those standards have also not precluded developers from designing workflow systems tailored to specific user needs. This article is written in the belief that an appropriate set of common workflow functionality can be abstracted and reused in forthcoming systems or embedded in applications intended to become workflow-enabled. Specific requirements and a prototype implementation of such functionality, named Workflow Kernel, are discussed.

2008

Innovation and entrepreneurship: What professors from leading universities say?

Authors
Oliveira, M; Pinto Ferreira, JJ; Barandas, H;

Publication
INNOVATION IN MANUFACTURING NETWORKS

Abstract
As innovation is essential for the competitiveness of enterprises and economic development there is a question which has been raised with some insistence: Do teaching practices make a difference to innovation and entrepreneurship in the work place? Experts were contacted for their views. They say yes, as long as the teaching method is adequate. So, in the USA, a naturally innovative society, a new concept of integrated teaching was developed - "hands-on" to increase innovation ever more in North America. This concept proved also to be successful in a non-innovative society as is demonstrated by the case of MIETE (a partnership between FEUP and FEP, University of Porto) in Portugal.

2000

Enacting dynamic distributed networks - The damascos project

Authors
Goletz, T; Ferreira, JJP;

Publication
Advanced Network Enterprises, Virtual Organizations, Balanced Automation, and Systems Integration, IFIP TC5/WG5.3 Forth IFIP/IEEE International Conference on Information Technology for Balanced Automation Systems in Manufacture and Transportation, September 27-29, 2000, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

1999

Support Services for Business Process Oriented Telework. The COBIP Project

Authors
Ferreira, JJP; Dangelmaier, W; Goletz, J; Araújo, P;

Publication
Flexible Working - New Network Technologies

Abstract

1999

Building a Workflow Enactment Service for Telework Co-Ordination

Authors
Ferreira, DR; Rei, J; Mendonça, JM; Ferreira, JJP;

Publication
ICEIS

Abstract

2012

SPIN-UP - Creating an Entrepreneurship Coaching and Training Program for University Spin-Offs

Authors
Oliveira, M; Ferreira, J; Xavier, A; de Sousa, J; Meireles, G; Sousa, M; Tzmrielak, D; Tomperi, S; Salmi, P; Torkkeli, M; Tolsma, A; Ye, Q; van Geenhuizen, M;

Publication
PROCEEDINGS OF THE 7TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON INNOVATION AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP, VOLS 1 AND 2

Abstract
This SPIN-UP project has been funded with support from the European Commission and is a study involving research performed in 4 countries: Finland, the Netherlands, Poland, and Portugal. The SPIN-UP research question is: What sort of entrepreneurship training and coaching program will contribute to the development of key entrepreneurial skills, both technical and behavioural, essential to enable and leverage university spin-off (USO) growth? The aim of the SPIN-UP study was to picture key entrepreneurial skills and their contribution to the performance of university spin-off firms, as well as missing skills, in order to develop an effective training and coaching program. USO, entrepreneurial firms that bring university knowledge to market, do not traditionally grow very much and we sought to contribute to a countering of this trend. To avoid a large differentiation in firm age, firm age limits were set at 2 years (lower limit) and 10 years (higher limit). 10 years was however used flexibly, particularly in those sectors where development and bringing products to market goes relatively slowly, like in the medical life sciences and material (nano) science (15 years used as the maximum in these cases). The research to date has involved a total of 64 interviews and questionnaires in the four countries mentioned above. The preliminary comparative analysis revealed that the four countries studied show somewhat different skill sets, meaning that we may still be in a World where differences still matter (Ghemawat, 2007). For example, spinoffs in Finland tend to be strong in skills dealing with intellectual property, which is the opposite of Poland, the Netherlands and Portugal. Portugal on the other hand appears to be quite strong in operations management skills as compared to the rest of the sample. The skill set of the Netherlands emphasized strength in skills related to the building of social and business networks, a theme which is very in vogue in the current business and management literature. However, spinoffs in the four countries did show some similarities, tending all to be strong in innovation skills. As concerns future training for USO our research indicates that this should focus on: gaining financial capital, internationalization and sales (top 3 missing skills hampering growth). More practical "hands-on" type entrepreneurship training, such as that using role-playing enriched by the sharing of entrepreneurial participant experiences, may be seen as being appropriate for USO. Work by Ghemawat (2001) (CAGE Model for internationalization) and Cialdini (2007) (principles of persuasion to be used in sales) may serve as a theoretical basis for such training.

  • 9
  • 13