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Dr. Bradley P Lehman

Dayton VA 22821 * 540-879-3576 *

This resume is current as of 1 May 2008. *Source:

17 years experience as a full-time computer software developer. Doctoral and master's degrees in music performance and musicology (historical and analytical research); undergraduate degree in mathematics and music.

/ Designing and building business and public service IVR applications:VUI designer (Voice User Interface), Visio and database-driven call flows, voice dialogue design, Web applications and modeling, EPOS Firstline Encore and ScriptExpress (IVR tools equivalent to Avaya Dialog Designer or Nortel/Periphonics MPS: Media Processing Server Developer), Nuance speech recognition, voice talent coaching, Audacity.Other background skills aiding IVR design:SQL Server 2000/2005 database integration and design, PL/SQL stored procedures, Oracle, XML, HTML, CSS, ASP (Active Server Pages), JavaScript, data conversions, web development, copy editing, documentation, typing 100 wpm. Learned some C# and ASP.NET 2.0 in February-April 2008.
Other:Harpsichord performance, organ, clavichord, piano, classical recording production, music arrangement and editing, composition, basso continuo improvisation, tuning harpsichords by ear. Conversational in Spanish and German, and able to read French.

Objective

Role: Programmer/analyst position designing and developing customer applications, preferably IVR. I do call-flow analysis for interactive self-service and administrative systems. My projects often include customized databases.
I design and build automated phone systems to ask clear, courteous, short questions. The users find them natural and intuitive, like conversation. The systems accomplish important tasks quickly. A caller must not get confused, or stuck in frustratingly worded choices!
My major projects 2000-2008 have been for large corporations, state and local governments, and universities. The user interface is typically telephone touchtone (IVR), speech recognition (VUI), and/or web-based. Communication is typically with a business layer of SQL Server stored procedures and tables, XML web services, or with a legacy mainframe host. / Location: My residence is in Dayton Virginia, about 125 miles from either Washington DC or Richmond.
I prefer a mostly-telecommuting arrangement from an office in my house, if possible. This has worked very well full-time from 1999-2008, with internet and phone connections. Daily commuting to Bridgewater, Harrisonburg, or Staunton is also OK. Charlottesville, Winchester, or further are possible once a week, if most of the work can be prepared from home.
Occasional team meetings in a larger office, or business trips to client sites, are fine at milestones in a project and to promote collaborative effort. Travel time should be less than 10% of any typical day or week. I do not waste unnecessary time, money, or gasoline simply moving my body around. Most of the work could already be finished on a computer connection or with telecommunications!
Family time with my wife and two small children is also a very high priority, when off-duty from job hours...and they keep me asking clear questions.

Documents and sample work

  • View complete resume details:
  • Download resume: long version, Word DOC – includes project details 2000-2008
  • Download resume: short version, Word DOC
  • Sample 1: design of an IVR application and its database-driven development environment.
  • Sample 2: design of a web-based wholesale ordering system.

Principles of effective work – personal mission statement

While my technical skills are fine and always changing, I prefer to emphasize my effective principles. I have been required to learn new toolkits, business procedures, and connectivity in almost every project, developing innovative cross-tool solutions. In many of these I interfaced new and old systems: doing data conversions and closely analyzing the business rules on both sides, to build improvements into either the databases or the user interfaces.

With training, examples, and an opportunity for on-the-job real world use, I pick up new environments and tools quickly to be able to build solutions in them. I thrive on flexibility, pattern insights, modification of in-progress models, and team cooperation with different skill sets.

Carefully elicit what the customer really needs, from the untrained user's perspective.
Design a business process and user interface to serve that need in the most natural, intuitive, and flexible way while remaining cost-effective.
Learn new systems quickly, and be able to see it somebody else's way to understand what they're asking for.
Catalyze the best work from colleagues; lots of people already have good ideas, or can be convinced to develop them.
Work diligently, accurately, intelligently, and creatively...giving plenty of time to prototyping and revision processes.
Build and use reusable parts from similar projects, wherever practical: examples that have already been successfully tested.
Train the client to understand and troubleshoot most of their own product intelligently, since they own it.
Test the system thoroughly and proactively during all stages of development; expect the unexpected, and ask all the silly but plausible questions.
There are at least three workable solutions to most problems; find five, and know how to get to a best one with the available resources and requirements. / As with a bridge game, or accompanying music on keyboard: success comes as much by being a capable, reliable, communicative, nurturing, flexible partner as by raw skill.
If something goes badly, acknowledge it politely once and move on; if something goes well, acknowledge it politely once and move on.
Somebody is always going to know better; let them.
Be able to communicate the system, and understand the problem, at all levels of detail...or none.
Without being patronizing, an effective end-user solution should be mostly graspable by a child: elegant, attractive, and transparent. Don't create unnecessary problems that make the user apprehensive or confused.
Being able to get to something resourcefully is almost as important as knowing it ahead of time.
To get a task done well, focus on nurturing talent and understanding.
Excellent work sells itself by example and by clear presentation, not by hype.
Interdisciplinary perspective into a concept is valuable; recognize appropriate patterns wherever they exist.

My professional accomplishments – highlights since 2000

  • Designed and developed two current VUI/IVR (speech recognition telephony) applications for the state government of Illinois: childcare support (2003) and food stamps renewals (2006-7).
  • Designed and developed the current web-based system for Dean Foods to restock its products weekly in more than 1000 supermarkets.
  • Designed and developed the current delivery-tracking IVR system for Nestle Waters delivery in North America.
  • Designed and developed the current IVR system to administer Medicaid inquiries in the state of Utah.
  • Music: I discovered Bach's special harpsichord-tuning method, wrote a major scholarly paper about this research (published 2005), produced three CDs, did university guest lectures, and created a web site ( to promote these resources worldwide.
  • Developed and maintained parts of the current IVR systems for state government administration of unemployment benefits: Colorado, Virginia, Arkansas, and Vermont.
  • Developed a web-based application and maintained IVR systems that provide course registration functions to colleges and universities (each interfaced with Datatel's "Colleague" software).
  • Developed standardized auxiliary features (web, fax, e-mail, message queueing, and transaction inquiry) for the proprietary product line "FirstLine Encore" (principally an IVR implementation platform).
  • Supported and customized parts of the HR systems for Tier, Footstar, Walt Disney World, and several other clients.
  • Music: I played more than a dozen harpsichord and organ concerts as a soloist and ensemble player. Most recently (19 February 2008) I collaborated with three other musicians to perform concerts and record a CD from Thomas Jefferson's sheet music collection at Monticello.
  • Gave SQL database development assistance to other teammates on their projects.
  • Eight years of scripting, testing, and troubleshooting applications in the proprietary scripting language of EPOS and Tier (FirstLine Encore, ScriptExpress/ScriptWrite), with various host and database connections.
  • I always have a strong concern for the easy usability of end-user interfaces. A finished system must be elegant and intuitively obvious.
  • Several Nuance voice-design classes in 2006 helped to convince me that voice prompting is a good focus for me. So have several books on the subject of cognitive psychology in speech applications. It is a fascinating challenge. I enjoy designing sequences of words that will be clear to senior citizens, non-native English speakers, non-computer users, children, and any distressed or distracted adult callers. I read children's books aloud to my own children every night, paying attention to vocabulary and sentence structures. A good VUI/IVR design must consider these things. Every word needs a reason.

My programming history and style

This is available in the long version of this resume, or the web version at

Dr. Bradley Lehman – Dayton VA – – 540-879-3576 – May 2008