G. Grybėnas will Head the IT Consulting and Service Company Alna Intelligence Alna Intelligence, the largest IT service and consultancy company in the Baltic States, will now be managed by Gintaras Grybėnas, the former CEO of Olympic Casino Group Baltija. In this position he will replace Valentinas Milaknis, the head ad interim of the company, and Chairman of Alna Board. The new director of Alna Intelligence will commence his duties on August 13.
”We highly appreciate the experience of G. Grybėnas in the fields of business processes and customer service organisation, marketing and sales. Without doubt, his leadership in Alna Intelligence will become a new pulse for the development of our company”, V. Milaknis said.
After passing his duties to the new director, V. Milaknis will continue on the Board of Alna Intelligence and will participate in the company’s development. “In the foreseeable future we intend to focus on customer service improvement, strategy update and restructuring of the management team“, he said.
”Information technology is among the most rapidly developing industries determining market tendencies, and one of the few tools capable of boosting corporate efficacy exponentially. The opportunity to participate in the processes of development and implementation of such tools was the determining factor for my engagement in a new field of activity”, said G. Grybėnas. According to him, modern company management requires the pursuit of the best activity results for customers, employees and shareholders, and this principle will be taken as a basis in organization of Alna Intelligence operations.
G. Grybėnas was a head of Olympic Casino Group Baltija since 2005. Before that he was employed by the companies TEO LT, Tetrapak Lietuva, Bitė.
Alna Intelligence provides IT consultancy and services for its customers not only in Lithuania but also the UK, Germany and Netherlands, Latvia, Estonia and Poland. The company employs over 120 of employees. In 2006 the company’s income from direct activities totalled 63.5 million litas in Lithuania and Latvia, or 35 percent more than in 2005.
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