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Open Text to buy Captaris in OCR battle

Open Text to buy Captaris in OCR battle By:  Kathleen Lau On: 04 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The content management specialist gains optical character recognition technology by spending US$131-million on a Bellvue, Wash.-based firm. Canadian analysts sum up the impact



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Waterloo, Ont.-based Open Text Corp.’s planned acquisition of Captaris Inc. is a move to bolster presence in the document and records capture space in light of rival players and a market that is heating up, said one analyst.

The US$131-million acquisition of the Bellevue, Wash.-based vendor of business process automation software will render Open Text optical character recognition (OCR) technology, which according to George Goodall, analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group Ltd., is the core engine that operates other capture technologies like Captiva and Kofax, for instance.

The OCR engine was acquired early this year by Captaris through the purchase of a division of Germany-based Oce Document Technologies GmbH, and “Open Text has really done an end run around the mall to basically acquire the core engine,” said Goodall.

An Open Text spokesperson said the company is not commenting on the planned acquisition until formal approval has been reached. The transaction is expected to close by the end of the calendar year.

Interestingly, Captaris’ acquisition of Oce occurred at around the time that rival Oracle Corp. bought Captivation, said Goodall. And, EMC Corp., some years prior, had been early on the capture technology bandwagon with its purchase of Captiva.

Following Thursday’s announcement of the intended acquisition, Open Text touted as a motivation the broadening partnership offerings from tighter integration with its invoice management products that work with SAP and Oracle.

But Goodall noted that Open Text failed to mention integration with the Microsoft platform, especially considering one of Captaris’ strengths is its workflow offering, a .NET-based technology for which Open Text support “has been a bit weak”.

And while Goodall doesn’t anticipate much duplication in product functionality, he does see some aspects of Captaris product line, in particular the RightFax line, “that really don’t fit well at all” with Open Text’s line. “I don’t think Open Text is a good home for that kind of appliance-based, fax-based type of thing,” he said, “especially when Open Text is really focusing on software and service, that type of hardware play is a little harder to pull off.”

According to Vinay Nair, analyst with Toronto-based research firm IDC Canada Ltd., Open Text already has a substantial share of the Canadian market, and acquiring Captaris will only serve to increase its global presence. Existing customers won’t be massively affected by the companies’ union, he said, “but there will probably be some hesitation as people start to figure out exactly what does it mean from a roadmap perspective.”

Captaris has a Calgary location, which Nair anticipates will continue to operate as before, however, he does foresee the usual elimination of redundancies around shared services like marketing and customer support. Sales, added Nair, is Captaris’ strong point in Canada.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau is a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada since December 2006.In her role as senior writer, she covers broadly technology news and issues relevant to the Canadian en... more

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Comments (1)

What Calgary Office?
9/6/2008 12:00:00 AMYes, Calgary once did have an office. They officially began layoffs November 2007 and most employees had already left by the end of March 2008. There are currently 4-5 employees working in Calgary from their home. As for sales in Canada, they don't have any sales people in Canada. They do however have partner(s) that sell the Captaris product line (1 or 2 good partners that I can think of). The funny thing is that they first started doing these layoffs so they could be acquired. Then a Canadian company scoops then up and they don't care much about the other offices. Chalk one up for Canada!
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