Mohammad Hourani, MSc, PMP

Co-Founder, COO, VP of Products at EMMA Systems, Inc

Mohammad Hourani, MSc, PMP has worked in a variety of roles in the IT and aviation industries. In 2007, they were a part-time Project Manager for a Private Villa. From 2009 to 2011, they were a System Administrator Trainee for Orange Jordan and a Sales Engineer for STS. In 2011, they were an EMC Product Manager for Al-Jeraisy. From 2012 to 2014, they were a MEP and SAS Systems Manager and a Technical Service Support Electrical and SAS/ELV Engineer for Airport International Group (AIG). From 2014 to 2020, they were a Senior Special Airport Systems (SAS) Engineer for Parsons Corporation. Since 2017, they have been the Aviation Division Manager for Informatica Qatar and Co-Founder, COO, VP of Products for EMMA Systems, managing a team responsible for building airport operations software (A-CDM) and responsible for the Sales and Marketing of the Product. Mohammad is also a board member.

Mohammad Hourani has an extensive educational background. In 2022, they obtained a Certificate in Product Management from the Product School. In 2009-2010, they earned a Masters of Science in Engineering Business Management from Coventry University, with a focus on Engineering/Industrial Management. From 2004-2009, they obtained a Bachelor degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Jordan. Additionally, they completed A Levels in Maths, Physics, Chemistry, and Arabic from Collège De La Salle - Frères between 1991-2004.

Hourani also has several certifications, including the Jira Fundamentals Badge from Atlassian in November 2022, the Product Manager Certificate from Product School in April 2022, Airport Collaborative Decision Making: from concept to implementation and partners' roles [APT-ACDM-E] from EUROCONTROL in March 2020, and Project Management Professional (PMP) from Project Management Institute in September 2015.

Links

Previous companies


Org chart


Teams

This person is not in any teams


Offices

This person is not in any offices