SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Information Architecture

Global 360 buy ‘strenghtens our resolve’ to BPM: OpenText

Global 360 buy ‘strenghtens our resolve’ to BPM: OpenText

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 13 Jul 2011 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

An OpenText exec explains one of the “sweet spots” in its latest acquisition of a BPM vendor, and how Global 360 brings to the table a different aspect of BPM than did Metastorm. An analyst explains what this means for OpenText’s Microsoft partnership

The announcement Wednesday of the $260-million acquisition of business process management (BPM) vendor Global 360 Inc. by OpenText Corp. “strengthens our resolve” in the BPM space, said an executive with the Waterloo, Ont.-based company, which already made a similar purchase earlier this year.

Having bought BPM vendor Metastorm Inc. last February, this second purchase in the same space for the enterprise content management (ECM) vendor is “basically a natural expansion into an adjacent market,” said Lubor Ptacek, vice-president of strategic marketing with OpenText (NASDAQ: OTEX).

Ptacek said one of the “sweet spots” in Global 360’s technology is case management—managing the documents along a process such as opening a bank account or applying for a mortgage—and is part of the motivation behind “doubling up” on its investment in BPM.

The ECM space has traditionally had an element of transactional content management and that many decisions in an organization are based on the content residing along a business process, said Ptacek.

And, while Ptacek said it is too early in the transaction to detail how Global 360’s technology will be integrated into OpenText’s platform, customers of Global 360 can rest assured that standalone offerings will continue to be available.

“We have no intention to disrupt anything that customers have bought or might be in the process of buying today,” said Ptacek.

It’s was also too early for the company to detail which roles Global 360’s leadership will play within OpenText.

While Global 360’s BPM focus is document case management with a heavier focus on content management, that of MetaStorm is more human-based BPM. Just this week, MetaStorm released a new version of its BPM offering with new features such as a personalized collaboration environment.

Ptacek wouldn’t say which other areas in BPM OpenText will consider adding to its arsenal, but did describe the existing BPM portfolio as “comprehensive” as it stands now.

The common denominator in all this is Microsoft Corp., which plays the role of partner for OpenText, Global 360 and Metastorm. “That plays a big role into our strategy,” said Ptacek.

Michelle Warren, analyst and president of Toronto-based MW Research & Consulting, said this acquisition strengthens OpenText’s commitment to Microsoft and also “strengthens Microsoft’s role within the Canadian enterprise BPM space.”


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 3666   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

Related Content

Why Metastorm is good for OpenText
Why Metastorm is good for OpenTextOne analyst thinks that business process management will give the Canadian enterprise content management vendor some ammunition against middleware vendors such as SAP
Metastorm brings workflow modeling to the cloud
Metastorm brings workflow modeling to the cloudThe new service, Metastorm M3, from the business management process vendor is hosted on Microsoft Azure can be applied to goals, systems, workflows, rules and projects
Go with the workflow
Go with the workflowTraditional enterprise application integration vendors are tackling business process management head-on to meet the demand to integrate human workflow with application integration efforts.
BI plus BPM plus business rules equals a new kind of IT system
one of my overworked colleagues was recently asked about a project that hadn’t yet gotten off the ground. he replied, “that’s a strategic issue, and right now we only have time for operational issues.” pricewaterhousecoopers is convinced we won’t be able to separate the two for much longer.in the consulting firm’s latest technology forecast (once
blog comments powered by Disqus