Alithya And Utz Quality Foods To Present At Microsoft Community Summit NA
Alithya Group inc. , a leader in strategy and digital transformation employing more than 3,300 highly qualified professionals and offering enterprise cloud solutions throughout the United States, Canada, and Europe, is a premier sponsor at Microsoft Community Summit North America (NA), October 12-15, 2021 in Houston, Texas, and will present 11 sessions over the three-day event.
Read More: Powerbridge Technologies Establishes Powercrypto Holdings For Its Crypto Mining And Digital Asset…
Summit NA is the largest independent gathering of the Microsoft ecosystem, and is designed for business and technology professionals, system administrators, business analysts and developers who are using, recently implemented or considering Microsoft Business Applications.
Alithya will lead 11 sessions on a variety of topics including What Can We Do with IoT and ERP, Azure Full Stack Implementation with D365 F&O, What’s the Difference Between Dataverse Database & Dataverse for Teams, Maximize Customer Potential by Connecting your Data, PowerApps and more.
Read More: SalesTechStar Interview With John Bruno, Vice President Of Strategy At PROS
On October 13, 10:30 am-11:20 AM CDT, Utz Quality Foods, a leading U.S. manufacturer of branded salty snacks, will discuss its partnership with Alithya to implement a Microsoft Business Intelligence solution to make relevant and timely decisions from one single source of the truth. Microsoft BI is helping Utz work more efficiently to manage exceptions; problem solve quickly on fast and changing targets; and get visibility into operational trends that allow the business to make critical decisions for improved operational efficiencies.
Quote from John Scandar, Senior Vice President, Alithya Microsoft Practice:
“Microsoft Business Intelligence is the perfect solution for manufacturers like Utz to get deep insights into operational and performance trends and empower employees to better spend time on value creation.”
Read More: New Study Reveals Consumer Confidence Is Surging—But Shopping Expectations Have Changed