Compuware
Private Company | |
Industry | Information technology |
Founded | 1973 |
Founder |
Peter Karmanos, Jr. Thomas Thewes Allen B. Cutting |
Headquarters |
The Compuware Building Detroit, Michigan, U.S |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
Chris O'Malley (CEO) |
Products | Enterprise software |
Services | IT services |
Website | Compuware.com |
Compuware Corporation is an American software company with products aimed at the information technology (IT) departments of large businesses. The company's services also include testing, development, automation, and performance management software for programs running on mainframe computer systems. The company has its headquarters in Downtown Detroit, Michigan.[1]
In December 2014, Compuware was acquired by private equity firm Thoma Bravo and became a privately held company.
History
Inception and early years
In 1973, Peter Karmanos, Jr., Thomas Thewes, and Allen B. Cutting established Compuware Corporation. Their vision was to help people do things with computers by providing their clients with professional technical services, allowing them to focus on their own core businesses. In 1977, Compuware introduced Abend-AID, its first software product. Designed to detect bugs and suggest corrective action in corporate IBM mainframe systems. The release of Abend-AID established a product strategy for Compuware, alleviating the peaks and valleys of revenue that occur in the services business. By 1978, Compuware opened its first remote office to service the Washington, D.C. and Baltimore area.
1980s
Compuware launched its File-AID product line. Using a request-driven interface, File-AID products help programmers and developers quickly and easily find, create, extract, transfer, fix, convert, load, edit, age, and compare data. This allows developers to focus on developing and maintaining applications that meet business needs. Compuware also announced Playback, the company's first automated testing tool. Later, Compuware moved from its Southfield location to a new corporate headquarters in Farmington Hills, Michigan. Compuware also acquired its first European subsidiaries during the 1980s. Compuware launched Powerbase with Datazoom, a very user-friendly, non-programmable, relational database for MS-DOS through Compuware/Power-base Systems, Inc.
1990s
Throughout the 1990s, Compuware acquired several companies, building their position in the marketplace, including Centura Software, XA Systems, EcoSystems Software, Uniface development environment, Hiperstation, Coronet, Direct Technology Limited, DRD Promark, Inc, NuMega, Data Processing Resources Corporation, Programart, and the CACI Products Company.
In 1992, Compuware completed its initial public offering (IPO) of stock trading on the NASDAQ under the symbol CPWR. In 1994, Compuware commenced a secondary public offering to raise cash, and named Joseph A. Nathan President and Chief Operating Officer. By April 1998, Compuware had more than $800 million in sales.[2] At the end of 1998, Compuware surpassed the US$1 billion revenue mark. In 1999, the number of Compuware employees grew considerably, prompting the company to build a new headquarters building in Campus Martius Park in Detroit, Michigan.
2000s
Since 2000, Compuware has acquired e-business services firms BlairLake, Inc., Nomex, Inc., Covisint, LLC,[3] Adlex, Inc.,[4] SteelTrace,[5] Changepoint,[6] Proxima Technology's Centauri Business Service Manager. In 2003, the company's 30th year of existence, Compuware completed construction on its new world headquarters building in downtown Detroit. On November 9, 2009 Compuware acquired Gomez, Inc. for its application performance management software.[7]
2010s
On July 6, 2011, Compuware acquired dynaTrace software.[8] On September 25, 2013 Compuware subsidiary Covisint announced pricing of Initial Public Offering.[9] On January 8, 2014 Compuware announced the planned divestiture of its Changepoint, Professional Services, and Uniface divisions to Marlin Equity Partners for $160 million.[10] Compuware completed a spin-off of Covisint on October 31, 2014.[11]
Acquisition and Privatization
On September 2, 2014 Compuware and private equity firm Thoma Bravo, LLC, jointly announced that Compuware had entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by Thoma Bravo for approximately $2.5 billion.[12] After finalizing the deal in December 2014, plans were announced to separate Compuware's remaining Mainframe and Application Performance Management (APM) business units into two distinct companies. The mainframe business unit retains the Compuware name and is exclusively focused on mainframe software. Chris O'Malley is the current CEO. Compuware's former APM business operates independently under the new Dynatrace name with John Van Siclen operating as CEO.
As a result of the privatization, Compuware stock is no longer listed on the NASDAQ.
Locations
Compuware is a global company operating in North America, Australia, Europe, and Asia. The company's world headquarters are at One Campus Martius, Detroit, Michigan 48226.[13] Compuware moved its headquarters and 4,000 employees to Downtown Detroit in 2003.[14] Prior to the move, the headquarters were in Farmington Hills, Michigan.[15] In December 2014, Compuware announced that Bedrock Real Estate Services and Meridian Health jointly purchased the Compuware headquarters building.[16] Compuware still runs its global operations out of the building.
Products
- File-AID - Mainframe-based file editor/manipulator
- Abend-AID - Mainframe application failure resolution tool
- Hiperstation - Mainframe automated testing and auditing tool
- Strobe - Mainframe application performance monitoring tool
- Xpediter - Mainframe developer productivity tools
- Test Data Privacy - Multi-platform creation of subsets of privatized test data from production data
- Topaz - Data and Program Management capabilities with visualization in updated UI
See also
- AppDynamics
- Computer Associates
- Compuware Arena
- One Campus Martius (Compuware World Headquarters)
- Dynatrace
- New Relic
- Riverbed Technology
References
- ↑ "Compuware World Headquarters". Emporis. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
- ↑ William Patalon III (April 19, 1998), "The Year 2000 caper: Finding riches in glitches But unwary investors risk getting singed chasing fix-it stocks", Baltimore Sun, sec. Financial, p. 1F, retrieved January 9, 2013
- ↑ "Compuware Corporation Signs Definitive Agreement to Acquire Covisint". Compuware Corporation. Retrieved 2004-02-05.
- ↑ "Compuware Acquires Adlex to Strengthen Application Service Management Leadership". Compuware Corporation. Retrieved 2005-05-09.
- ↑ "Compuware Adds Business Requirements Management Through Acquisition of SteelTrace". Compuware Corporation. Retrieved 2006-08-04.
- ↑ "Compuware to Acquire IT Governance Market-Leader Changepoint, Further Optimize, Quantify, and Communicate IT Value". Compuware Corporation. Retrieved 2004-04-28.
- ↑ "Compuware Completes Acquisition of Gomez". Compuware Corporation. Retrieved 2009-11-09.
- ↑ "Compuware Acquires dynaTrace software" (PDF). Compuware Corporation. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
- ↑ "Compuware Announces Pricing of Covisint Initial Public Offering". Compuware Corporation. Retrieved 2013-09-25.
- ↑ "Compuware Announces Strategic Divestitures, Completes Major Transformational Milestone". Compuware Corporation. Retrieved 2014-01-08.
- ↑ Covisint Spin-Off From Compuware Completed
- ↑ "Thoma Bravo Completes Take-Private Acquisition of Compuware Corporation in $2.4b Deal". Thoma Bravo. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
- ↑ "Directions to Compuware Headquarters." Compuware. Retrieved on November 2, 2009.
- ↑ "Decade in review: Business." The Detroit News. December 31, 2009. Retrieved on January 7, 2010.
- ↑ "United States/Canadian Compuware Offices." Compuware. May 8, 1999. Retrieved on January 7, 2010.
- ↑ "Gilbert’s Bedrock, Meridian Health To Buy Compuware Building In Detroit" (PDF). Bedrock. Retrieved 17 November 2014. line feed character in
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External links
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