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Todd Watson

IBM To Acquire StoredIQ

Written by Todd Watson
12/19/2012 3 comments
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IBM today announced it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire StoredIQ Inc., a privately held company based in Austin, Texas.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

StoredIQ will advance IBM's efforts to help clients derive value from big data, respond more efficiently to litigation and regulations, dispose of information that has outlived its purpose, and lower data storage costs.

With this agreement, IBM adds to its prior investments in Information Lifecycle Governance. The addition of StoredIQ capabilities enables clients to find and use unstructured information of value, respond more efficiently to litigation and regulatory events, and lower information costs as data ages.

IBM's Information Lifecycle Governance suite improves information economics by helping companies lower the total cost of managing data while increasing the value derived from it by:

  • Eliminating unnecessary cost and risk with defensible disposal of unneeded data
  • Enabling businesses to realize the full value of information as it ages
  • Aligning cost to the value of information
  • Reducing information risk by automating privacy, e-discovery, and regulatory policies

Adding StoredIQ to IBM's Information Lifecycle Governance suite gives organizations more effective governance of the vast majority of data, including efficient electronic discovery and its timely disposal, to eliminate unnecessary data that consumes infrastructure and elevates risk.

As a result, business leaders can access and analyze big data to gain insights for better decision making. Legal teams can mitigate risk by meeting e-discovery obligations more effectively. Also, IT departments can dispose of unnecessary data and align information cost to value to take out excess costs.

What does StoredIQ software do?
StoredIQ software provides scalable analysis and governance of disparate and distributed email as well as file shares and collaboration sites. This includes the ability to discover, analyze, monitor, retain, collect, de-duplicate, and dispose of data.

In addition, StoredIQ can rapidly analyze high volumes of unstructured data and automatically dispose of files and emails in compliance with regulatory requirements.

StoredIQ brings powerful, innovative capabilities to govern data in place to drive value up and cost out.

StoredIQ brings powerful, innovative capabilities to govern data in place to drive value up and cost out.

"CIOs and general counsels are overwhelmed by volumes of information that exceed their budgets and their capacity to meet legal requirements," said Deidre Paknad, vice president of Information Lifecycle Governance at IBM. "With this acquisition, IBM adds to its unique strengths as a provider able to help CIOs and attorneys rapidly drive out excess information cost and mitigate legal risks while improving information utility for the business."

Named a 2012 Cool Vendor by Gartner, StoredIQ has more than 120 customers worldwide, including global leaders in financial services, healthcare, government, manufacturing, and other sectors. Other systems require months to index data and years to configure, install, and address information governance. StoredIQ can be up and running in just hours, immediately helping clients drive out cost and risk.

IBM intends to incorporate StoredIQ into its Software Group and its Information Lifecycle Governance business.

Building on prior acquisitions of PSS Systems in 2010 and Vivisimo in 2012, IBM adds to its strength in rapid discovery, effective governance, and timely disposal of data. The acquisition of StoredIQ is subject to customary closing conditions and is expected to close in the first quarter of 2013.

Go here for more information on IBM's Information Lifecycle Governance suite, and here for more information on IBM's big-data platform.

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slfisher
Thinkernetter
Monday December 31, 2012 8:39:42 PM
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I see that you framed StoredIQ in terms of being a big data vendor, whereas some people frame it as being an ediscovery vendor. IDC, for example, calls it ediscovery, whereas Gartner doesn't. But a lot of their purpose in life is indeed related to ediscovery and document lifecycle stuff. 

asanka.geek
IQ Crew
Friday December 28, 2012 5:50:37 AM
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Thats a good move and I think both parties will gain something big out of this merge. This will be a big boost for StoredIQ and the common user base of Stored IQ will enjoy the benifits soon.

mharden
IQ Crew
Monday December 24, 2012 11:46:48 AM
no ratings
Nice article Todd. IBM wants to help businesses figure out which data is important in the short- and long-term so that it's easier to find valuable data and easier to eliminate unneeded data. Aside from being a good business practice you don't really want to keep every bit and byte.
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