出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2016/01/16 21:46:41」(JST)
Type
|
Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Software |
Founded | Sunnyvale, California (1995) |
Headquarters | San Jose, California, U.S. |
Key people
|
Joe Cowan, CEO and Director Max Carnecchia, President |
Products | Content management system |
Revenue | $225.7 million USD (2007) |
Number of employees
|
Ca. 750 |
Parent | HP Marketing Optimization |
Website | www |
Interwoven is a line of content management systems and related products. Previously a stand-alone company headquartered in San Jose, California, USA and founded in 1995, it was acquired on March 17, 2009 by Autonomy, which in turn was acquired by Hewlett-Packard in 2011. The Interwoven and Autonomy product lines became known as HP Autonomy. HP has since aligned the former Interwoven product lines to the HP Marketing Optimization business group.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2011) |
The company produces a content management system called TeamSite, which is designed for creating complex intranet and Internet web applications. Their document management system, WorkSite, stores, indexes, organizes, and searches documents including email messages. Other products include OpenDeploy and LiveSite.
Interwoven claims to have over 4,200 organizations among its customers, including Airbus, the Macquarie Group, American Hospital Association, Avaya, the BT Group, Cisco, Citi, Delta Air Lines, DLA Piper, FedEx, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, Grant Thornton, Hilton Hotels, Hong Kong Trade and Development Council, HSBC, LexisNexis, MasterCard, Microsoft, Samsung, Royal Dutch Shell, Qantas Airways, Tesco, Virgin Mobile, and White & Case.
A substantial percentage of the company's revenue came from document management for law firms and financial services. It has system integration and marketing partners (including Accenture, Deloitte, DigitHaus, and IBM) as well as development and technology partners (including Adobe, Sapient, EMC, Microsoft, SAP AG and Sun Microsystems).
Some content management competitors included, Sitecore, SDL Tridion product suite, FatWire with its FatWire Content Server solution (now: Oracle WebCenter Sites after acquisition of FatWire in 2011), the open source ECM and WCM platform Alfresco, Squiz with its Squiz Matrix enterprise open source wCMS, Open Text Corporation (Livelink, supplemented with acquisitions of Vignette, RedDot, IXOS, Hummingbird), EMC (Documentum acquisition), Xerox DocuShare, IBM FileNet, Oracle Corporation (Oracle Content Management via Stellent acquisition), Microsoft SharePoint, Day Software (bought by Adobe Systems on July 28, 2010), Hyland OnBase, Broadvision, Drupal and the Open Source ECM and Enterprise Social Platform eXo Platform.
Among the few leading companies that continue to provide services in TeamSite and related products is Autowoven. Autowoven, based in Princeton, NJ provides Support and Training services in TeamSite, FormsPublisher, LiveSite, Workflows and related products.
The company was founded in 1995 in California by Singaporean Peng Tsin Ong, who was also Interwoven's first CEO and chairman. Peng was previously co-founder of Match.com, and later went on to found Encentuate.[1][2] In its private startup phase the company was backed by Foundation Capital,[3] Draper Fisher Jurvetson,[4] Accel Partners and other venture capital co-investors including Gary Kremen.[5]
On October 8, 1999 Interwoven had their initial public offering (IPO) on NASDAQ with Credit Suisse First Boston as the lead underwriter.[6] In November 2001 the IPO and a follow-on public offering were challenged in a class-action lawsuit, based on the allegation that the official prospectus filed with the SEC did not disclose connections between the underwriters and other investors and customers of Interwoven.[7][8]
In the years of the dot-com bubble the company offered huge hiring incentives, in order to compete with other startup companies in Silicon Valley. In 2000, it promised to pay for a 2-year lease on a new BMW Z3 sports car to the first 20 new engineers coming to Interwoven and staying with the company for at least a year.[9] This was less expensive than the going rate for recruiting fees in Silicon Valley at that time. Though a minority of engineers elected to take the car over the equivalent sum in cash, the move generated publicity.[10][11][12]
On January 21, 2009, Interwoven announced it agreed to be acquired by Autonomy Corporation, based in England.[13] Autonomy estimated the consideration at $775 million [14]
The acquisition was finalized on March 17, 2009.
HP bought Autonomy on August 19, 2011.
全文を閲覧するには購読必要です。 To read the full text you will need to subscribe.
.