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GASABO 3D Hiring an Engineering Services Manager
Kigali, Jun. 17, 2008
Gasabo 3D Design, Ltd. is a joint initiative between the government of Rwanda, the École Technique Officielle (ETO) Gitarama and the SolidWorks Corporation in Concord, Massachusetts, USA. Located in Kigali, Rwanda, Gasabo 3D provides companies around the globe with a cost-effective and efficient way to convert critical two-dimensional (2D) CAD drawings and blueprints into accurate three-dimensional (3D) CAD models using the SolidWorks software.
JOB DESCRIPTION: Gasabo 3D Design is an engineering services startup seeking a talented and driven business leader to spearhead its engineering services business. Reporting directly to the CEO of Gasabo 3D, you will lead a small team responsible for developing a for-profit web-based engineering service focused initially on translating 2D drawings to 3D CAD models. You will be tasked with developing the business processes involved with delivering this service along with leading the technical development and advanced training of the team. You will be managing and mentoring a group of young technicians experienced in creating SolidWorks parts and drawings, while addressing the need for continued training in product design and manufacturing. The ideal candidate is an engineer with extensive experience in managing an engineering services business and knowledge of Computer Aided Design (CAD) and manufacturing. Knowledge of the SolidWorks CAD system is a plus.
Rwanda is a multi-culturally diverse country working hard to rebuild its economy. It has the fastest growing technology sector on the African continent but still suffers from minimal resources and funding. The ideal candidate must be motivated to help and support a developing nation and be able to reside in Rwanda for a minimum of 6 months. You should possess an intrinsic desire to teach and mentor and should be comfortable with basic living conditions (e.g. frequent power outages). Most of all you should have the compassion and desire to experience Rwanda and its people.
MINIMUM EXPERIENCE: The ideal candidate will have a minimum of 1 to 2 years developing and managing an engineering services business. In addition, he/she will have a minimum of 3 to 5 years experience in mechanical engineering and/or mechanical product design involving computer aided design (CAD) software.
REQUIREMENTS: Qualified candidates will be able to develop and build a sustainable engineering services business in a start-up environment. You should be able to effectively lead a small 12 person start-up team with minimal resources and have a “roll-up your sleeves”, results-oriented attitude, along with an affinity for solving new business challenges. You must be organized and expert in time management to meet customer deadlines as well as internal corporate revenue goals. You should have the ability and desire to engage various governmental and professional organizations to gain access to additional resources and expertise.
DURATION: The candidate must be able to make a commitment to reside in Rwanda for a period of at least 6 months.
COMPENSATION AND BENEFITS: Gasabo 3D Design offers an excellent salary with potential for bonus, commensurate with experience that is above average in the local community. In addition, there will be 3 weeks of paid vacation.
Gasabo 3D Design Ltd. launches e-commerce Web site
for 2D-to-3D CAD file conversion
SAN DIEGO, Jan. 21, 2008
At SolidWorks World 2008, Rwanda-based Gasabo 3D Design Ltd. today unveiled an engineering e-commerce site to help SolidWorks users around the world convert 2D drawings to 3D models quickly, accurately, and affordably. Now SolidWorks users can log on to www.gasabo3D.com to leverage their existing 2D design data without having to do time-consuming file conversions in-house.
Gasabo 3D Design Ltd. is an engineering services company based in Kigali, the capital city of Rwanda. Located in the Kigali ICT Park, the company was formed in 2007 as a spin-off from the Rwandan Information Technology Authority (RITA). Gasabo 3D's roots stem from a collaboration between Rwanda President Paul Kagame and SolidWorks executives to help build the information and communications technology (ICT) sector within Rwanda's economy. SolidWorks Corporation continues to provide software, training, and business expertise to Gasabo 3D as well as support and advice for 3D CAD curriculum development at ETO Gitarama and Kigali Institute of Science and Technology (K.I.S.T). Top-ranked engineering students from ETO Gitarama and KIST formed the nucleus of Gasabo 3D's staff.
Gasabo 3D CEO John Rugamba has aggressive plans for the company. "We are working closely with the administrations of ETO Gitarama and K.I.S.T. to ensure that their graduates meet Gasabo 3D's exacting standards" he said. "Simply being expert in the use of 3D CAD is not enough. We are constantly re-engineering our services and CAD processes to deliver the highest possible quality to our customers."
Aimed at customers who design, build, and maintain large mechanical systems, Gasabo 3D is currently working with companies in the U.S. and India to supply advanced manufacturing and services training and is actively seeking corporate partners for a new technical internship program.
Users can log on to the Web site and submit 2D drawings for rapid quotes and conversion to 3D CAD models. Any company who has large numbers of 2D drawings required to support existing machinery can benefit from the Gasabo 2D-to-3D conversion service. To highlight the launch of its new Web site, Gasabo 3D is offering five free drawing-to-model conversions to SolidWorks World attendees.
"Working with Gasabo 3D is like adding a team of highly trained SolidWorks technicians to your staff for a fraction of the cost of hiring full-time employees," said Scott Harris, vice president of new product concepts at SolidWorks Corporation. "Manufacturers depend on all of their design data – both 2D and 3D – to enhance product lines and fix products in the field. Gasabo 3D Ltd. ensures these companies can quickly respond to customer needs using SolidWorks 3D CAD software to design better products."
SolidWorks
Serious About Helping Rwanda
March 08, 07 - Cad Insider
http://cadinsider.typepad.com/my_weblog/2007/03/solidworks_seri.html
You gotta love this guy! John McEleney,
CEO of SolidWorks, should have been getting ready for this
board meeting on this bitterly cold Wednesday morning in
Concord, MA. But instead he pops into a meeting I am having
(I happen to be in town) to tell me he is going to Rwanda
next month. No, it's not to fatten the corporate bottom
line by selling software. He wants to help Rwanda get back
on its feet. It is a poor African nation still reeling from
its 1994 genocide. SolidWorks is going to help by providing
software and training in the hopes that their country can
become a cost effective offshore resource for developed
nations that need 3D modeling.
Rwanda would just love to be where India is. But whereas India's elite -- developers, IT pros and other "knowledge workers" -- strive to own a car, a Rwandan's ambition is decidedly more modest. The CAD students in Kigale (Rwanda's capital) were overjoyed to learn that their recent efforts had landed them a windfall. After another project at the school, "each student was able to buy one egg a week," says Scott Harris, one of SolidWorks founders, who is also assisting with the company's humanitarian efforts.
The cynical would suggest SolidWorks is only acting to incubate a market that would eventually be able to pay full price for software. But surely, there must be areas of the world in which this effort would bear fruit sooner and easier. Certainly fast developing nations like India and China jump to mind. Let's just say Rwanda is not exactly on the same map for foreign investors. Could SolidWorks' support of Rwanda be the real thing -- a purely selfless act?
I know, it's hard to believe. The corporate
world of late is plagued by greed and scandal -- witness
the stock option abuse, Enron, record profits of oil companies
amid global warming... the list goes on. We've all heard
that news.
But a CEO that puts his board meeting on
hold to promote efforts to help the forgotten and helpless?
That's news to me.
Rwanda
to launch 2D-to-3D CAD files conversion company with help
from SolidWorks Corporation
April 2, 2007
- Solid Works
http://solidworks.com/pages/news/pressreleases/viewrelease.html?prid=432
Gasabo 3D Design, Ltd. to help companies around the world
streamline product development, cut costs, reuse design
data
CONCORD, Mass., April 2, 2007 — Capitalizing on the
growing pool of skilled engineers in Rwanda, the country’s
technology ministries are teaming with two major science
and technology schools and SolidWorks Corporation to launch
a company that will convert 2D data into 3D models efficiently
and affordably. Called Gasabo 3D Design, Ltd., the venture
will provide fast, accurate file conversion as a service,
enabling SolidWorks customers to leverage their existing
2D design data without having to do it in-house.
Rwanda has experienced a re-birth, fueled in part by an
ambitious science and technology capacity building program
launched by President Paul Kagame who has said, “The
application of science and technology is fundamental, and
indeed indispensable, to the social and economic transformation
of our countries… It is about applying science and
technology holistically – in all levels of education
and training, in commercializing ideas, in developing business
and quickening the pace of wealth-creation and employment-generation,
in enabling government to provide better services, and indeed,
in providing basic tools to society at large for self- and
collective betterment.”
Science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) curricula
are playing a critical role as schools across the country
are graduating more engineers, in line with its vision of
building a knowledge-driven economy. Gasabo 3D Design, Ltd.
is a joint venture between the Rwanda Information Technology
Authority (RITA) on behalf of Rwanda ’s technology
ministries, the École Technique Officielle (ETO)
Gitarama high school, and the Kigali Institute of Science
and Technology (KIST).
SolidWorks Corporation is providing software and business
expertise to launch and grow a startup company. More importantly,
the company will also provide the hands-on 3D CAD software
training to teach STEM principles and ignite engineering
enthusiasm. Gasabo 3D Design, Ltd. expects to begin converting
2D drawings into 3D models by Q3 2007.
Accelerating Product Development and Repair
Converting 2D files to 3D solid models can be expensive
and tedious for large manufacturers with tens of thousands
of product drawings. Paper Converting Machine Company manufactures
machines that produce a variety of paper products, including
tissue, newsprint, embossed paper, etc. The company has
10,000 machines deployed worldwide, and allocates 50 percent
of its budget on service and retrofit projects.
“Our machines last a long time. Some of them have
been deployed for 87 years,” said Thad Perkins, director
of CAD systems at PCMC. “Many of our designs reside
in 2D drawings, but converting them to 3D models is expensive
and time-consuming. By outsourcing the conversion, we save
about two-thirds of the cost of doing it in-house. From
a resource standpoint, it’s like adding 10 people
to my staff, which enables us to be more responsive to our
customers’ needs and provides us with the opportunity
to accelerate investments in new technology. We’re
able to develop equipment we might not have been able to
develop, and sell equipment we might not have been able
to sell. Gasabo 3D Design, Ltd. will help companies like
us secure a competitive position in the global marketplace.”
SolidWorks’ involvement in the project is the latest
in a series of efforts aimed at helping rebuild Rwanda ’s
infrastructure. The company has donated software and staff
time to train teachers on how to use SolidWorks to promote
STEM education with the goal of increasing the country’s
engineering population.
“This partnership is really a testament to Rwanda’s
resilience in the face of devastating circumstances,”
said SolidWorks CEO John McEleney. “Gasabo 3D Design
Ltd. will provide large manufacturers a cost-effective and
fast way to convert vital 2D files into accurate 3D models
they’ll be able to modify, machine, and build upon
to meet customer needs. That efficiency will help companies
stay agile, so they can design better products and excel
in a global economy.”
About Gasabo 3D Design Ltd.
Gasabo 3D Design Ltd. is a registered Rwanda company. The
company will initially convert 2D data to 3D solid models,
however as the skills base matures, the company plans to
move to higher skill work within the product design field.
The company has the aim of being a SolidWorks centre of
excellence on the African continent.
About the Rwandan Information Technology Authority
(RITA)
RITA has been established by the Government of Rwanda in
recognition of the importance of ICT for the economic and
social development of Rwanda . RITA’s role is to manage
the implementation of ICT programs throughout all sectors
of the Rwandan economy in support of economic growth and
poverty reduction.
About Kigali Institute of Science and Technology
(KIST)
KIST was officially inaugurated in 1998 as the first public
technological institute of higher learning in Rwanda . KIST
aims to contribute to Rwanda ’s economic renewal through
the creation of highly skilled manpower. It seeks to become
a regional centre offering courses in science, technology
and management; carrying out extensive research activities
and knowledge dissemination; and providing technical assistance
and services to all sections of the community.
About ETO Gitarama
ETO Gitarama is a secondary technical school located in
the Southern province of Rwanda . The school has about 400
students, and it was established in November 2002.
About SolidWorks Corporation
SolidWorks Corporation, a Dassault Systèmes S.A.
(Nasdaq: DASTY, Euronext Paris: #13065, DSY.PA) company,
develops and markets software for design, analysis, and
product data management. It is the leading supplier of 3D
CAD technology, giving teams intuitive, high-performing
software that helps them design better products. For the
latest news, information, or a live online demonstration,
visit the company's Web site (www.solidworks.com) or call
1-800-693-9000 (outside of North America, call +1-978-371-5000).
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