Progress scoops up BPM vendor Savvion
- 12 January, 2010 06:56
- Comments
Middleware vendor Progress Software announced Monday it has purchased BPM (business process management) vendor Savvion for approximately US$49 million.
Savvion, based in Santa Clara, California, has been in business for 15 years. Its software is used to map out business processes, such as how orders are fulfilled or employees are hired. The company also has developed BPM offerings for health care, energy, financial services and other verticals.
The Savvion technology will work alongside Progress's BEP (business event processing) middleware, which monitors system activity in real time, looking for certain patterns or correlations and triggering corrective actions.
Also known as CEP (complex event processing), such software is also sold by IBM, Tibco and other vendors. A financial institution might use it to detect fraud, whereas a utility could monitor its delivery systems.
Progress chose Savvion for a number of reasons, including the fact it is "event-enabled," according to Progress CTO John Bates.
In addition, "Savvion can orchestrate processes but can also involve human users in workflow," he wrote in a blog post.
Savvion has also developed a rules engine for its BPM software, which Bates dubbed "a powerful capability"; real-time analytics; and document management functionality.
The acquisition comes only weeks after IBM announced plans to purchase a Savvion rival, Lombardi.
Buying Savvion was a smart move for Progress, according to analyst Sandy Kemsley.
"The existing suite of Progress products allows for determining what happened within an organization -- a rear-view mirror approach -- but not much that allows the organization to quickly change how they're doing things," she wrote in a blog post.
"Bringing BPM into the fold allows them to change that."
But a fair amount of integration work will need to be done in order "to really sell this as an integrated suite of tools rather than a 'solution' patched together with professional services," Kemsley added.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email TechWorld
- Follow TechWorld on twitter
- Seven Steps to Effective Data Governance
- Developing an Information Strategy - Strategize, Align, Govern, Execute, and Optimize
- Aberdeen Group Analyst Insight Report: Does Your Enterprise Have a “Dropbox Problem?”
- Optimised Data Protection for VMware® Environments with Symantec NetBackup™ Appliances
- Strategy to Success Framework: Investigate to Invest
-
Eight easy extras for IE8
-
Coalition NBN better or worse?
-
CSIRO develops hands-free technology for mining repairs
-
Broadband Forum to improve IPTV performance with new spec
-
Amazon Web Services moves backups to cloud with new appliance
-
Microsoft Office
-
Teach Yourself Visually Windows 7
-
Office 2007 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies
-
Windows 7 for Dummies®
-
Excel 2007 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies
-
Windows 7 for Dummies® Dvd+book Bundle
-
MYOB Software for Dummies 6E Australian Edition
-
Computers for Seniors for Dummies, 2nd Edition
-
Office 2007 for Dummies








Comments
Post new comment