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Vincent Lamanna

Technology & Innovation Executive

Bio

With a degree in software engineering, Vincent has over 15 years of experience in software, game and web development.

Vincent worked for 5 years building custom softwares through the company he had founded in 2000 before joining Electronic Arts in 2006.
As a software engineer, Vincent shipped 4 titles working on several aspects of the games.
As a development manager, Vincent also oversaw the development of Spore Hero on the Wii.

Since 2009, Vincent moved from the game industry to the web industry as vice president of engineering at CakeMail. As vice president of engineering, Vincent is overseeing the technical direction of the company as well as managing the development, the roadmap, the quality assurance and the technical support of the product. Vincent has acquired a strong experience in building web architecture that can scale to serve millions of requests per day.

In 2014, Vincent decided it was time for new challenges. He then took the role of vice president of technology at SSENSE where he implemented Agile methodologies and built a team of over 20 developers who managed to deliver the rewrite of the SSENSE website in 11 weeks.

Vincent is now CTO at Salesfloor, a company that will connect online shoppers with physical stores.

Vincent is focused on results, people, technology and innovation.

Recent Answers

Mobile applications

How do you take an app idea and turn it into an app? Who will help make the app? How do you connect it through social media? How much does it cost?


Vincent Lamanna

Technology & Innovation Executive

Having gone through this multiple times either in new startups or for side projects, here is how I would approach turning your idea into an app. 1. Defining the Minimum Viable Product Your first goal with any new idea should be about proving the idea and finding a market that wants the app you want to build. Achieving that quickly is probably one of the most important thing. To achieve that, you will need to write the specifications that will constitute your MVP. The MVP is basically the simplest expression of your idea to prove it. This step should not cost you much as you can do this on your own. 2. Design the app Before starting any development work, I would suggest you work with a good UX/UI designer to create wireframes and mockups of the app based on the specifications you came up with in step 1. You can find good designers in meetups & hackathons or on website like Dribbble or 99designs. If you want to reduce your costs, you can give shares in the project to the designer. Otherwise, it really depend on the size of the MVP but I would say it will probably cost between $5K-$10K. 3. Develop the app Once you have the specifications and the design of the app, you now need to find a good developer that will build it. Again, you can find good developers in meetups & hackathons or on sites like Github. If you want to reduce your costs, you can give shares in the project to the developer. Otherwise, it really depend on the size of the MVP but I would say it will probably cost between $10K-$25K. For this part however, I would recommend the developer becomes part of the project as his engagement will most likely be higher. 4. Test the app This step is not only about making sure the app is bug free, it's also making sure the app does what was intended in the specifications. To test the app, you can use platforms like BrowserStack or SauceLabs which gives you access to multiple devices/browsers. You can do this step on your own so the cost will be for the subscription to the test platform which would be around $100/month. Hope this helps and good luck with your project.

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Software EngineeringPHPCross-functional Team LeadershipApplication ArchitectureFull Stack Web DevelopmentApacheAgile Project ManagementRisk ManagementTechnical LeadershipLean Software Development