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'''Henk Gerard Sol''' (born 1951) is a [[Netherlands|Dutch]] [[organizational theorist]], [[management consultant|consultant]], and Professor of [[Systems Engineering]] at Delft University of Technology, and Professor of [[Business Engineering]] and ICT at [[Groningen University]]. His research focuses on the development of services enabled by [[ICT]], [[management information systems]], [[decision support systems]] and [[telematics]]. Currently his research interest shifts towards designing information-intensive, innovative organizations.<ref name="MIT"> [http://www.mitportugal.org/external-review-committee/hsol.html Prof. Henk Sol] at mitportugal.org. Retrieved June 10 2009.</ref>
'''Henk Gerard Sol''' (born 1951) is a [[Netherlands|Dutch]] [[organizational theorist]], [[management consultant|consultant]], and Professor of [[Systems Engineering]] at Delft University of Technology, and Professor of [[Business Engineering]] and ICT at [[Groningen University]]. His research focuses on the development of services enabled by [[Information and communication technologies|ICT]], [[management information systems]], [[decision support systems]] and [[telematics]]. Currently his research interest shifts towards designing information-intensive, innovative organizations.<ref name="MIT"> [http://www.mitportugal.org/external-review-committee/hsol.html Prof. Henk Sol] at mitportugal.org. Retrieved June 10 2009.</ref>


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Henk Sol was born in 1951 near Groningen. In 1974 he received a M.A. in [[Econometrics]], [[Operations Research]] and [[Information Systems]] from the [[University of Groningen]]. In 1982 here he also received a PhD on the subject of "Simulation in Information Systems Development".<ref>[http://www.tbm.tudelft.nl/live/pagina.jsp?id=5dc326ba-b4a6-4593-8faa-b8a58c03b7ce&lang=en Prof. dr. Henk G. Sol bio] at TU Delft. Retrieved June 10 2009.</ref>
Henk Sol was born in 1951 near Groningen. In 1974 he received an M.A. in [[Econometrics]], [[Operations Research]] and [[Information Systems]] from the [[University of Groningen]]. In 1982 here he also received a PhD on the subject of "Simulation in Information Systems Development".<ref>[http://www.tbm.tudelft.nl/live/pagina.jsp?id=5dc326ba-b4a6-4593-8faa-b8a58c03b7ce&lang=en Prof. dr. Henk G. Sol bio] at TU Delft. Retrieved June 10 2009.</ref>


From 1974 to 1984 Sol was assistant professor at the [[University of Groningen]], where he was involved in the development and control of a Masters Program in Information Systems within the School of Economics and Management Science. In 1984 he became professor of Information Systems Development at [[Delft University of Technology]] (TU Delft), where he developed the Department of Information Systems to one of the leading Information Engineering Schools in Europe. In 1992 he became Professor of [[Systems Engineering]] at Delft University of Technology since 1998 at the new [[Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management]].<ref name="MIT"/> Since 2004 he is Professor of Business Engineering and ICT at [[Groningen University]] as well.
From 1974 to 1984 Sol was assistant professor at the [[University of Groningen]], where he was involved in the development and control of a Masters Program in Information Systems within the School of Economics and Management Science. In 1984 he became professor of Information Systems Development at [[Delft University of Technology]] (TU Delft), where he developed the Department of Information Systems to one of the leading Information Engineering Schools in Europe. In 1992 he became Professor of [[Systems Engineering]] at Delft University of Technology since 1998 at the new [[Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management]].<ref name="MIT"/> Since 2004 he is Professor of Business Engineering and ICT at [[Groningen University]] as well.
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To a certain extent the process model supports these five modes of inquiry. In order to model the same problem from multiple points of view, a set of sufficiently powerful [[modelling language]]s is required.<ref name="Sol84"/>
To a certain extent the process model supports these five modes of inquiry. In order to model the same problem from multiple points of view, a set of sufficiently powerful [[modelling language]]s is required.<ref name="Sol84"/>



=== Business engineering ===
=== Business engineering ===
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[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Delft University of Technology faculty]]
[[Category:Delft University of Technology faculty]]
[[Category :Dutch business theorists]]
[[Category:Dutch business theorists]]
[[Category:Operations researchers]]
[[Category:Operations researchers]]
[[Category:Systems scientists]]
[[Category:Systems scientists]]

Revision as of 16:55, 13 August 2009

Henk Gerard Sol (born 1951) is a Dutch organizational theorist, consultant, and Professor of Systems Engineering at Delft University of Technology, and Professor of Business Engineering and ICT at Groningen University. His research focuses on the development of services enabled by ICT, management information systems, decision support systems and telematics. Currently his research interest shifts towards designing information-intensive, innovative organizations.[1]

Biography

Henk Sol was born in 1951 near Groningen. In 1974 he received an M.A. in Econometrics, Operations Research and Information Systems from the University of Groningen. In 1982 here he also received a PhD on the subject of "Simulation in Information Systems Development".[2]

From 1974 to 1984 Sol was assistant professor at the University of Groningen, where he was involved in the development and control of a Masters Program in Information Systems within the School of Economics and Management Science. In 1984 he became professor of Information Systems Development at Delft University of Technology (TU Delft), where he developed the Department of Information Systems to one of the leading Information Engineering Schools in Europe. In 1992 he became Professor of Systems Engineering at Delft University of Technology since 1998 at the new Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management.[1] Since 2004 he is Professor of Business Engineering and ICT at Groningen University as well.

From 1992 to 1998 Sol was founding Dean of the new School for Engineering, Policy Analysis and Management at the TU Delft. He prepared the merger, in 1998, into the Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management (TPM). From 1999 to 2004 he was appointed as Scientific Director of Delft Institute for Information technology in Systems Engineering (DITSE). And from 2000 tot 2003 he was again Dean of the Faculty of Technology, Policy & Management again.[1] From 2007 to 2008 he was founding Dean of the Faculty of Economic and Business at the University of Groningen. He is also an external review at the MIT Portugal Program was launched in October 2006

He serves on the editorial roles with journals as "Decision Support Systems", "Electronic Journal of E-commerce", "Organizational Science", "Communications of AIS" and "Information and Management". He is member of IFIP TC 8, W.G. 8.1, 8.2, 8.4 and one of the founding fathers of AIS and one of its first vice-presidents.

Further Sol has acted as a management consultant for a large range of national and international organizations since 1972. He is chairman/member of the (Supervisory) Board of Directors of several companies, for example at Joh. Enschedé BV, and Groningen Airport Eelde NV.

He received the IFIP Outstanding Service Award as well as the IFIP Silver Core. In 2003 the TU Delft TPM Faculty initiated a annual Henk G. Sol Award for faculty members and PhD students for the best paper or publication, in honor of Prof. Henk Sol, who may be regarded as the "founding father" of TPM.[3]

Work

Process of problem solving

Process of problem solving.

In the 1984 article "The Emerging Role of Simulation Based Inquiry Systems for Decision Support" Sol has defines a modeling environment for problem solving activities" similar as depicted in the figure. The process of problem solving is defined here as the cycle of problem conceptualization, specification, model validation, and solution finding, verification and implementation activities.[4]

In this context C. West Churchman has identified five types of modes of inquiring:[5][6]

  • Leibnitzian : formal and deductive, based on methods of mathematical proof.[6]
  • Lockean : consensual, based on empirical findings and human agreement by experts.[6]
  • Kantian : multi-model, providing many explicit views of the problem<.ref name="SB93"/>
  • Hegelian : confrontational, presenting conflicting opinions to illustrate their underlying, theoretical assumptions.[6]
  • Singerean : adaptive, with continual feed back and learning, and structured versus ill structures problem transformation.[6]

To a certain extent the process model supports these five modes of inquiry. In order to model the same problem from multiple points of view, a set of sufficiently powerful modelling languages is required.[4]

Business engineering

Business Engineering (BE) is defined by Van Meel and Sol (1996)[7] as the "integral design of both organizational structures and information systems". Despite the numerous developments in this field, Business Engineering has so far achieved little theoretical and methodological support. In the 1990s Van Meel and Sol has started a four years action research project[8] to overcome this problem. A key factor is dynamic modeling, a structured problem-solving approach for real-life problems using simulation.[7]

Van Meel and Sol had carried out two Business Engineering case studies within the Amsterdam municipal police. In the dynamic modeling they used theoretical findings from fields such as system science, statistics, and socio-technical design, and "a set of automated tools for supporting, structuring, and guiding future BE efforts. The results of this project give outlook to a new and promising interdisciplinary research domain".[7]

Publications

He is a well-known author with a few hundred publications in the fields of ICT, management information systems, decision support systems and telematics.[9][10] A selection:

  • 1982. Simulation in information systems development. Dissertation University of Groningen
  • 1982. Information systems design methodologies : a comparative review : proceedings of the IFIP WG 8.1 Working Conference on Cooperative Review of Information Systems Design Methodologies, Noordwijkerhout, The Netherlands, 10-14 May 1982. Ed. with T. William Olle and A.A. Verrijn Stuart. North-Holland. ISBN 0-444-86407-5
  • 1987. Expert systems and artificial intelligence in decision support systems : proceedings of the second Mini Euroconference, Lunteren, The Netherlands, 17-20 November 1985. Ed. with Cees A.Th. Takkenberg and Pieter F. de Vries Robbé. Reidel. ISBN 90-277-2437-7
  • 1991. Dynamic modelling of information systems I. Edited with Kees Max van Hee. North-Holland ISBN 0-444-88923-X
  • 2000. Integrated component-based framework for effective and flexible telematics application development. With Zoran Stojanovic and Ajantha Dahanayake. Project: BETADE, Building blocks for Effective Telematics Application Development and Evaluation, Metamodelling in component-based development. ISBN 90-76412-13-8
  • 2008. Decision enhancement services : rehearsing the future for decisions that matter. With Peter G.W. Keen. IOS Press. ISBN 9781586038373

References

  1. ^ a b c Prof. Henk Sol at mitportugal.org. Retrieved June 10 2009.
  2. ^ Prof. dr. Henk G. Sol bio at TU Delft. Retrieved June 10 2009.
  3. ^ Quarterly 01 10 2003. Accessed June 10 2009.
  4. ^ a b Sol, HG (1984). "The Emerging Role of Simulation Based Inquiry Systems for Decision Support". In: Beyond Productivity: Information systems development for organizational effectiveness. Th.M.A. Bemelmans (ed.). 1984.
  5. ^ C. West Churchman (1971). The Design of Inquiring Systems: Basic principles of systems and organization. New York: Basic Books.
  6. ^ a b c d e H.G. Sol & J.P. Bots (1993). "Information Systems to Support Decision Processes : From decision support to networks of inquiry systems". In: Recent developments in decision support systems. C.W. Holsapple te al. (eds.). 1991. ISBN 3540561579. p.34.
  7. ^ a b c Jeroen W. van Meel and Henk G. Sol (1996). "Business Engineering: Dynamic Modeling Instruments for a Dynamic World ". In: Simulation & Gaming, Vol. 27, No. 4, 440-461 (1996) DOI: 10.1177/1046878196274003
  8. ^ Jeroen W. van Meel, Pieter W.G. Bots and Henk G. Sol (1994). "Towards a research framework for business engineering". In: IFIP Transactions; Vol. A-54 archive. Proceedings of the IFIP TC8 Open Conference on Business Process Re-engineering: Information Systems Opportunities and Challenges. pp. 581-592. ISBN 0-444-82062-0.
  9. ^ Publications Henk G. Sol 1994-2007 op tudelft.nl. Accessed June 10 2009.]
  10. ^ Henk G. Sol List of publications from the DBLP Bibliography Server. Retrieved June 10 2009.

External links