Chairman, CRO & Founder NextStage Evolution, CRO & Co-Founder NextStage Global
Halifax, Canada Area
Chairman, CRO & Founder NextStage Evolution, CRO & Co-Founder NextStage Global
Halifax, Canada Area
Joseph Carrabis has authored 23 books (cultural anthropology, database technology and methods, information mechanics, language acquisition, learning and education theory, mathematics, network topologies, and psycholinguistic modeling) and over 300 articles (computer technology, cultural-knowledge modeling, equine management, knowledge studies and applications, library science, martial arts, myth and folklore, neurolinguistic, psychodynamic and psychosocial modeling, studies of group and tribal behavior, studies of social interactions in NYC and more). He’s currently a columnist for iMediaConnections, blogs at BizMediaScience and AllBusiness.com and has been selected as a Senior Research Fellow and Board Advisor to the Society for New Communications Research.
Carrabis has been a lead speaker, guest presenter and panelist at several industry and trade conferences and conventions. His knowledge and data designs have been used by Caltech, Citibank, DOD, IBM, NASA, Owens-Corning and Smith-Barney among others. He's been everything from butcher to truckdriver to Senior Knowledge Architect to Chief Research Scientist. Currently Carrabis is Chairman and Chief Research Officer of NextStage Evolution, LLC, and co-Founder and Chief Research Officer of NextStage Global. He's inventor and developer of Evolution Technology. In his spare time he plays various musical instruments, flies many different kites, practices obscure languages, walks his dog and kisses his wife. He's currently working on Reading Virtual Minds, a book on how people interact with new information technologies. You can reach him at jcarrabis@nextstagevolution.com.
understanding and designing for various behaviors. Research includes social networks, branding, ... see my articles or read my books for an up to date listing.
(Non-Profit; 11-50 employees; Internet industry)
May 2007 — Present (1 year 1 month)
The Society for New Communications Research is a global nonprofit 501(c)(3) think tank dedicated to the advanced study of new communications tools, technologies and emerging modes of communication, and their effect on traditional media, professional communications, business, culture and society.
The Society's Fellows include more than 40 futurists, scholars, business leaders, professional communicators, members of the media and technologists from around the globe.
(Research industry)
2007 — Present (1 year)
(Privately Held; 11-50 employees; Market Research industry)
July 2005 — Present (2 years 11 months)
Lead and define all research, develop technologies which Global productizes, interact with clients when they want to meet the geek that figured this all out, meet with investors when they want to meet the geek that figured this all out, ...
(Privately Held; 1-10 employees; Market Research industry)
October 2001 — Present (6 years 8 months)
According to a well known PDA maker, "NextStage turns marketing into a science".
(Educational Institution; 201-500 employees; Higher Education industry)
January 2005 — May 2005 (5 months)
Taught Information System Design on the undergrad level
(Public Company; 5001-10,000 employees; Information Technology and Services industry)
April 1997 — December 1999 (2 years 9 months)
Both Co- architect and -designer and principle architect and designer of several web deployed database systems which presaged much of what is being done today by such systems as Autonomy, Verity, Vignette, and so on. Designed and architected several system-wide data and information backbones for aA and similar internal websites. Advised on organization of ecommerce site from taxonomic, knowledge management and knowledge transfer aspects. Developed several data exchange tools for data maintenance, developed several RAD methodologies, developed content migration methodologies, reviewed taxonomies, knowledge management and transfer methods for various web sites, researched and developed methods for improving above.
MNLP, anthropology, linguistics, mathematics, neuroscience, physics, and many permutations of these
still going to school, probably always will be. Only got a degree by accident because I wasn't looking. There's a character, Captain Casey from the "Dear Dad, Again" MASH TV episode. He comes to the 4077 as a surgeon and is a great one. It turns out he's never studied medicine. It further turns out he's an accomplished engineer, musician, ... half a dozen fields. When HawkEye asks why he doesn't get a medical degree Captain Casey -- who's actually a seargent -- answers, "I can do it all. I just never had the patience to get a degree." I seem to fall into that category. I've taught at the university level and many of my books are used as text books. I, myself, just don't have the patience to sit in a class (and have them lecture from a paper or article I published, something that's happened twice and gave me a chuckle when the professor paused and asked if I was related).
many and varied
AAAS, NYAS, SNCR, PCF, NHBDN, KNH, CSE, probably others. Can't remember them all., Boston Social Media Club,
mostly academic and for things I've written/published.
Selected Senior Research Fellow and Member of Advisory Board to Society for New Communications Research.