SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: altair19 who wrote (186181)2/3/2010 4:43:03 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361493
 
IBM Buying Initiate Systems
______________________________________________________________

IBM has agreed to acquire Initiate Systems Inc., a Chicago-based provider of master data management solutions for the exchange of health information. No financial terms were disclosed. Initiate Systems has raised over $67 million in VC funding, from Apex Venture Partners, First Analysis Group, Sigma Partners, BlueCross BlueShield Venture Partners and Paladin Capital Group. It canceled a proposed IPO in 2008.

PRESS RELEASE

February 3rd, 2010 -- IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Initiate Systems, a market leader in data integrity software for information sharing among healthcare and government organizations. Initiate’s software helps healthcare clients work more intelligently and efficiently with timely access to patient and clinical data. It also enables governments to share information across multiple agencies to better serve citizens.

Initiate Systems is a privately held company based in Chicago, IL and marks the 30th acquisition IBM has made to advance its capabilities in information and analytics. Financial details were not disclosed.

Healthcare organizations and governments around the world today are embarking on new initiatives to improve healthcare and citizen safety. In healthcare, this means finding ways to simultaneously improve health outcomes and efficiency of care. In government, this means providing better services to citizens in a more cost effective manner by combining information from multiple agencies such as child welfare and veterans’ programs.

A key requirement for all such initiatives is proper management and delivery of trusted and accurate information. With the stimulus funding that is being invested around the globe, the number of these transformational projects is accelerating.

Unmatched Technologies and Expertise for Improving Patient Care

In healthcare, hospitals, integrated delivery networks, insurers and governments are seeking to create systems that share a consistent view of all critical information as a means of improving both patient health and efficiency. Bringing together data from separate systems managed by hospitals, doctors’ offices and payers is a daunting task. Initiate has helped clients meet this challenge at more than 2,400 healthcare sites, over 40 health information exchanges and multiple government health systems around the world.

The software speeds the adoption and exchange of electronic medical records. With easier access to accurate information, medical professionals can recognize patients at any facility within a health network with access to complete medical histories of patients, resulting in more timely and better informed patient care. Like IBM, Initiate is committed to industry standards and its technologies support relevant healthcare regulations and standards including HL7 and HIPAA.

“With the addition of Initiate’s software and its industry expertise, IBM will offer clients a comprehensive solution for delivering the information they need to improve the well-being of patients at a lower cost,” said Arvind Krishna, general manager, Information Management, IBM. ”Similarly, our government clients will now have even more capabilities for gathering and making use of information to serve citizens in a timely and efficient manner.”

Initiate’s healthcare clients include payers and providers as well as retailers selling prescription drugs. Among these clients are Alberta Ministry of Health and Wellness, BMI Healthcare (UK), Calgary Health Region, CVS/Caremark, Humana, Ochsner Health System, the State of North Dakota’s Department of Health and Human Services and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

For example, Sutter Health, a not-for-profit network of doctors and hospitals serving more than 100 communities in Northern California, is using Initiate’s technology to link its entire health network with accuracy and flexibility to enhance patient safety, customer satisfaction, and the efficiency of business operations.

Helping Government Agencies Make the Most of Their Budgets

Initiate’s technology is also widely used to help government agencies of all sizes use information to boost efficiency. Government agencies are stymied at times because they have no easy way to access pertinent information across multiple systems. In combination with IBM InfoSphere software, Initiate software will expand capabilities for information governance and help agencies gain a single view of relevant information to better serve citizens.

For example, the North Dakota Department of Human Services (DHS) — which helps vulnerable residents of all ages with critical services such as Medicaid and child welfare programs — turned to Initiate to help it create a single view of all the citizens it serves. Like other government agencies, DHS’s information on citizens was dispersed across numerous data silos. DHS is now using technology to access a single view of all its clients, allowing the agency to share information across its many programs to increase citizen enrollment, speed the process of determining eligibility and more accurately measure program effectiveness.

“Our clients will be the ones who benefit most from this acquisition,” said Bill Conroy, president and chief executive officer, Initiate Systems. ”They will continue to get the software and expertise they depend on, plus the incalculable advantage they will gain through IBM’s global reach and its capabilities in enterprise software, hardware and services.”

Expands InfoSphere and Cognos Software for Integrating and Analyzing Information

Consistent with the company’s strategy, IBM will continue to support and enhance Initiate’s technologies while helping clients take advantage of the broader IBM portfolio. Customers will benefit from additional information management capabilities including: clinical analytics, information discovery and transformation and data warehousing and business intelligence.

IBM’s acquisition of Initiate extends the company’s business analytics strategy, including the range of offerings available through IBM’s recently-announced Business Analytics and Optimization Consulting organization which includes a team of 4,000 consultants, a network of analytics solution centers, and is backed by an overall investment of more than $10 billion in organic growth and acquisitions.

The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions and regulatory clearance and is expected to close in the first quarter of 2010. IBM intends to integrate the Initiate organization with its Information Management business after the closing.



To: altair19 who wrote (186181)2/3/2010 4:47:32 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361493
 
Tiger Woods could be out of sex rehab and back on the links in two weeks, an Australian newspaper reported Wednesday.

Woods is "poised to make a shock return to competitive golf" in the upcoming Accenture Match Play Championship in Arizona, according to the Herald Sun of Melbourne, which did not cite a source.

The top spokesman for the PGA Tour would not confirm the Herald Sun story.

nydailynews.com



To: altair19 who wrote (186181)2/3/2010 11:19:07 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361493
 
IBM buys Chicago health care tech firm Initiate Systems /

Feb. 03, 2010 -- (Crain's) -- IBM Corp. has taken a shine to Chicago, buying another local technology company.

The New York-based computer giant says it will purchase Initiate Systems Inc., which makes software used in coordinating data from different computer systems.

IBM didn’t disclose the purchase price, but said it expects to close the transaction in the first quarter.

Initiate is best known for software used by medical providers and the insurers and governments that pay for care. Clients include CVS/Caremark, Humana Inc., Ochsner Health System, North Dakota’s Department of Health and Human Services and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

The 15-year-old company’s profile and profits have been on the rise as the federal government has pushed for more widespread use of electronic medical records to cut down on treatment errors and reduce the cost of administering payments for health care. The effort got a $19-billion boost from the stimulus bill and is viewed as a big opportunity for technology companies such as IBM, which has a $4-billion health care technology business.

IBM estimates Initiate has about an 80% share in the market for software that can link individual patient records across various health care databases.

It was growth that led the company to sell to IBM, said Initiate CEO Bill Conroy. The two companies have partnered for about five years, and Initiate chose to sell to the larger company as it faced demand for a broader software platform.

“Our customers wanted more complete solutions,” he said. “There were products we knew we wanted to build and needed to build, but we just didn’t have the bodies. Our options were to do an IPO and use the capital to catch up with demand or do an acquisition. An IPO was a fall (2010) proposition, so an acquisition made sense.”

Mr. Conroy said discussions with IBM took about two months.

Initiate was one of Chicago’s more promising tech startups. It became profitable in 2008, posting annual sales of $74.4 million, and was among the 50 fastest-growing companies tracked by Crain’s last year.

Mr. Conroy was named CEO of the Year in 2009 by the Illinois Technology Assn. The company was founded in 1995 and put together a diverse group of backers, including Blue Cross Blue Shield Venture Partners L.P., as well as data-storage company EMC Inc.

“We had investors who had been in the company for a while and probably were ready for a liquidity event, but we also have new investors who weren’t so anxious,” Mr. Conroy said.

But the sale of Chicago’s Initiate to IBM represents the loss of another stand-alone technology company in a city where such companies are in short supply.

IBM purchased another Chicago company, software maker SPSS Inc., last year for $922 million. SPSS was founded in 1968 by three Stanford University graduate students who migrated to the University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center to make software that helps predict human behavior. It became a publicly traded company with 1,200 employees and more than $300 million in annual revenue.

The purchase of Initiate further cements Big Blue’s ties to Chicago, where it already employs about 3,800 workers and its presence dates back 100 years.

“The market’s growing very quickly. As it continues to grow, we’ll likely add resources,” said Dan Pelino, Oak Brook-based general manager of IBM’s global health care and life sciences business.

Initiate has about 350 employees, most of them in Chicago.

“It’s going to be good for Chicago. We’re going to get nothing but bigger,” said Mr. Conroy, 50, who added that he will stay with the company.



To: altair19 who wrote (186181)2/4/2010 6:23:11 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361493
 
It's About Leadership: A Proposed Scorecard for Massachusetts Technology Companies

billwarner.posterous.com