The deal, expected to close before year's end, brings together two of the strongest players in their respective fields, creating a company that figures to take the lead in collaborative content management. Documentum in recent years has made the transition from providing dense document-management systems for pharmaceutical and manufacturing companies into the emerging area of enterprise content management. In July, the company unveiled plans to release tools that would let customers more easily deploy collaboration capabilities in their content-management systems.
In a conference call announcing the deal, Documentum CEO Dave DeWalt said content management and collaboration both have become an increasing part of enterprise applications such as ERP and customer-relationship management, as well as other business tools such as portals. DeWalt expects the addition of eRoom to result in deployments with larger numbers of seats and users. He says eRoom will continue to operate independently as Documentum's collaboration division, and no immediate plans for staff reductions were revealed. The companies will work on an integrated collaborative content-management offering, but no specific release date was offered. Documentum also said it would beat estimates for the third quarter ended Sept. 30, with expected revenue of $55 million to $56 million and a profit of 3 or 4 cents a share.
Stay connected and informed by visiting the CA Solutions Center Community!

Become a member today for instant access to free InformationWeek research, expert advice, peer perspectives, and more on the following topics:
- Application Performance Management (APM)
- Security Management
- Mainframe 2.0
- IT Automation
- Service Assurance
Also, visit our Government and Financial Services groups to see how these technologies apply specifically to those industries.
NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.