
Big blue purchased Boston based MRO software this week for $740 million, giving IBM a deeper opportunity to monitor the data coming in from facility networks.
MRO, based in Bedford, Mass., makes software that companies use to monitor the location and operation of all kinds of equipment, including airplanes, train cars, trucks, automobiles and power plants.
I.B.M. is pursuing a strategy of trying to apply more scientific engineering and technology to its $47 billion-a-year global services group. That means helping to automate services tasks with software to gain efficiency, while improving profits and quality.
“We want a more repeatable, assembly-line approach to delivering services to our customers,” said Kristof Kloeckner, a vice president for strategy and technology in I.B.M.’s software unit.
The MRO purchase, analysts said, represents a step toward that goal.
“This is a needed cornerstone for the success of I.B.M.’s services strategy,” said Rich Ptak, a partner at Ptak, Noel & Associates, a consulting firm.
In recent years, information technology has more and more been built into industrial equipment, which is now often linked to computer networks using Internet standards, sensors and radio frequency identification, or RFID.
As a result, commercial equipment and buildings can be tracked and managed using tools similar to those used to manage computer networks in data centers.
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