![Show Menu](styles/mobile-menu.png)
![Page Background](./../common/page-substrates/page0003.jpg)
Tech in the early 1990s, following in the footsteps
of his father, a systems engineer, and majoring in
engineering science and mechanics. “My father
taught me to see the world through a systems
lens,” Long said. “I knew I wanted to be a systems
engineer, and engineering science and mechanics
provided a solid foundation.”
In 1991, the lanky youth had, for a senior project,
written software to support the design process for
modeling and designing complex systems. This
computer-aided system design tool was focused on
the fundamentals needed to capture requirements,
corresponding functions, physical architecture, and
linking the three concepts together.
“Systems engineering was my field of interest.
Programming was my hobby,” Long said.
“Combining the two made for an interesting
capstone design project.”
For a person of his interests and aptitudes, Long
happened to be in the right place at the right time.
Systems engineering—a field that had begun in the
1950s and ’60s—while no longer in its infancy, was
still an emerging discipline. And two of the biggest
names in the field—Benjamin Blanchard and Wolter
Fabrycky—were professors at Virginia Tech. They
had just come out with the second edition of their
landmark
Systems Engineering and Analysis
in 1990,
a book that has been called “the definitive text on
systems engineering.” They had also built one of the
premier graduate systems engineering programs of
the day, and had a design lab specifically devoted
to the discipline—an unusual thing at the time.
The lab was focused not only on research, but also
on developing supporting processes, methods, and
software in order to provide students hands-on
experience with the tools they would encounter in
the business world.
In addition to spending hours in Blanchard and
Fabrycky’s lab, Long served as resident advisor in
his dorm. He credits this experience with giving
him the leadership skills he would later use as a
CEO. “The soft skills that I learned on one side of
campus complemented the ‘hard’ skills I learned on
the other side of campus,” he said.
Long recalled that Blanchard and Fabrycky’s course
was unusual in other ways as well. Approximately
90 percent of the students were actually practicing
engineers pursuing their master’s degree in the
evening. They were scattered at remote sites around
the state with classes taught by TV broadcast from
Virginia Tech’s Blacksburg campus.
“As an undergrad, I had the opportunity to take
these graduate courses because of the systems
background my father had infused in me and
internships I had held,” Long said. “Not only did
I have the opportunity to learn from two industry
pioneers, but I also partnered with Dinesh Verma
[founder of the School of Systems and Enterprises
at Stevens Institute, who was then a Ph.D. student
in Industrial Engineering] on the course design
project. That chance collaboration began a lifelong
friendship and has fostered a number of systems
“Systems engineering was my
field of interest. Programming
was my hobby. Combining the
two made for an interesting
capstone design project.”
—David Long
2