BTW. Agust is 6' tall. Jay is very tall! |
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Agust Gudmundsson is widely known as a technology innovator in the government sector. There is, however, a passion for politics and the democratic process that precedes Agust's governmental developments. Below are some excerpts taken from various publications demonstrating this background.
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Professional HistoryAGUST GUDMUNDSSON, former President and CEO of GOVT.com, Inc., began his career as a consultant for national, state, and local political campaigns by implementing his ideas of automating politics and government. In March of 1989 he established Austin Professional Systems, the corporation that would evolve into GOVT.com in July 1999. As a visionary in government solutions, he perceived the importance of the Internet in 1995. He combined his extensive expertise in politics and computer programming to develop the software known as OurTown2000 -- the first Internet-based citizen-centric solution to address basic government problems. This product literally keeps city hall open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, while reducing, not increasing, public expenses. The program has gained widespread attention both from the news media and from public officials who see OurTown2000 as a solution that maximizes citizen involvement in government, improves civic services, reduces costs to the taxpayer, and enhances the quality of life in communities. The GOVT products were sold to UC Hub in 2003. Mr. Gudmundsson's uses of computerized databases helped him establish varied software clients, such as Mensa, the Independent Computer Consultants Association, United States Army Reserve Personnel Center, and the American Society of Association Executives. Mr.Gudmundsson's political and governmental expertise has been utilized by winning campaigns that include the 1986 Cook County Sheriff's election, the 1988 U.S. Presidential Campaign for George Bush, the 1990 Illinois Governor's election, the 1992 Chicago Ward ReMap Referendum, the 1992 U.S. Presidential Campaign for Bill Clinton, the 1992-1996 Legislative and Constitutional races and the 1995 and 1999 Chicago Mayoral elections. He also designed the financial disclosure software for the 1996 Democratic National Convention. Prior to his political consulting career, Mr. Gudmundsson used his marketing expertise to help dramatically increase the number of skiers at Snowshoe Ski Resort in West Virginia. He also was responsible for overhauling and computerizing the resort's lodging reservations system, implementing one of the first of its kind computer-oriented marketing solutions in the ski industry. |
Selected ClientsPolitical clients. All Illinois except Bob Dole – Iowa. Federal U.S. President George Bush Bob Dole Bill Clinton U.S. Senate Richard Durbin U.S. House George Sangmeister Bobby Rush Dan Rostenkowski Rob Blagojevich Harris Fawell John Porter Henry Hyde Phil Crain Jerry Weller Ray LaHood Dennis Hasert State
- Executive Governor Jim Edgar Dawn Clark Netsch Sec. State
George Ryan Atty Gen. Jim Ryan Tres.
Judy Barr-Topinka State -
Legislative Senate Pres. Pate Philip, and All 32
Illinois GOP State Senators Various State Reps. State - Judicial Two State
Supreme Court Justices Over 50 Circuit and Sub-circuit district judges County County Board Presidents Gayle Franzen - DuPage John Stroger - Cook Sheriff O’Grady - Cook Municipal Mayor / Council Richard M. Daley - Chicago 26 of the 50 Chicago City Council
Members 50
+ local mayors throughout Illinois. |

| Politics in a bottle? Almost | |
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March 1993. What H. Ross Perot did for democracy with his money, Agust G. Gudmundsson is hoping to do with his technology. Mr. Gudmundsson, a political junkie turned computer software developer, offers even the most independent politicians something only the big parties could provide in the past: computerized voter lists. Using seven powerful personal computers in his Bartlett home, Mr. Gudmundsson, 39, has compressed statewide voter information into easy-to- manage disks that any pinky-ringed politico could handle. The cost to get around the party's control: as little as $650. 'This is sort of bringing democracy to politics,' says Mr. Gudmundsson, a native of Iceland who was raised in Virginia and educated in the Republican politics of the 1970s and '80s. The user-friendliness of Mr. Gudmundsson's system centers around its simple presentation of correct addresses(which Mr. Gudmundsson double-checks), nine-digit ZIP codes (which can trim a campaign's postage costs) and technical assistance that Mr. Gudmundsson farms out to Pascal Systems, a Chicago computer consultancy. |
'It's an election-winner,'
says Brent C. Bluthardt, who is managing the Schiller Park mayoral campaign
of his mother, Diane Latoria Bluthardt. Mr. Bluthardt notes that the software's
ability to hone campaign lists to targeted voters - female senior citizens,
for example - makes it particularly valuable.
With more independent - or at least, out of the mainstream - politicians testing the waters in politics, Mr. Gudmundsson estimates that his company, Austin Professional Systems Inc., can grow from its 1992 revenues of $180,000 to $500,000 in 1994, a congressional election year. Mr. Gudmundsson moved to Illinois in 1986 to work on Republican executive Donald Rumsfeld's presidential campaign that never materialized. But he also can work with the other party: His partner in Austin Professional Systems is prominent Democrat Michael E. Lavelle, former chairman of the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners and now of the Oak Park law firm Lavelle Holden & Juneau Ltd. Adam Lashinsky
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