Torry Harris Business Solutions

Torry Harris Business Solutions
Private
Industry IT services
IT consulting
Founded 1998 (1998)
Headquarters New Jersey, United States (incorporation)
Bangalore, Bristol, Dublin, Vienna, Munich, Dubai
Area served
Worldwide
Number of employees
1000 - 3000
Website thbs.com

Torry Harris Business Solutions (THBS) is a multinational provider of business, technology and consulting services headquartered in New Jersey, United States.

History

The founding members of Torry Harris Business Solutions belonged to a company called Transarc, a Pittsburgh-based Software Company. Transarc was purchased by IBM in 1994.

Several former members from Transarc formed Torry Harris. Torry Harris Business Solutions was founded in 1998 to offer IT services in the middleware and distributed-computing areas. On 19 March 1998 the company was formally registered as Torry Harris Business Solutions.

Operations

The company's headquarters in New Jersey, USA (Address) was incorporated in 1998. THBS' American clients are serviced out of this office and the facility in Bangalore.

THBS has operations[1] and projects in 39 countries worldwide.

In 2002, THBS' Singapore and Dubai offices were set up to cater to the Middle-East and Asia-Pac geographies. In 2008, the company expanded its operations to Africa. THBS operates in Tanzania. THBS helped provide farmers with regular updates regarding weather conditions through low speed mobile networks.

A UK office in Bristol was set up in 2001 to service THBS' increasing presence in the UK. A few years later in 2008 the Ireland office was set up as operations expanded.

In 2012 an Austria office was set up in Vienna, Austria to cater to the Central and Eastern European markets. In Austria & Eastern Europe, THBS works with a large bank, Telecom service providers, pharmaceutical majors and manufacturing companies.

In the news

In 2010, a stray online advert for job applicants for the company read "preferably of Indian origin" and broke UK law, the Equality and Human Rights Commission in UK has said.[2] The ad was taken down and the company launched an immediate internal investigation.

Industry Accolades

In 2009, THBS was identified as a leader in SOA integration by Forrester Research.[3] The company was also recognised as a Gartner "cool vendor" for application services in 2010.[4] THBS helped a telecom major in the UK drive its SOA initiative.[5] The implementation was taken up by Gartner as a case study.[6] THBS figured in the top 20 of the top 100 technology companies founded by Indians in the US as per a recent survey.[7] In 2013, the solution accelerators /Intellectual Property of THBS got special mentions by Gartner in their 'Top 10 IT Service Management Next Practices'[8] and 'Open-Source Software Adoption Becoming Mainstream in India'[9] reports.

In 2011, the Cloud Computing World Forum short-listed Torry Harris as one among the top 3 for the Cloud Computing World Series Awards. The selection was made under the "Best Enterprise Solution" category in recognition of the company's flagship cloud tool "Cloud Catalyst".[10]

In 2012, the Center for Excellence wing of THBS released a free-to-use Mobile Enterprise application specifically to manage EC2 instances on the Amazon Cloud. The application known as Eazy2 and was released free of cost to the cloud computing community on the Android and iOS stores. Eazy 2 is unique, in that it provides cost estimates along with updates on machine use.[11]

References

  1. "Torry Harris Global Operations".
  2. "Job advert for Indian in Bristol office was illegal". BBC News. March 18, 2010. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  3. Tim Sheedy (May 8, 2009). "The Forrester Wave™: EMEA SOA Systems Integrators, Q2 2009". Forrester Research. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  4. "Cool Vendors 2010". Gartner. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  5. Ian Grant (March 4, 2010). "02 regains IT control with SOA". ComputerWeekly.com. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  6. David Norton (March 22, 2010). "Case Study: O2 Uses Offshore Software Factory to Drive SOA Initiative". Gartner RAS Core Research. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  7. "si100 2010". Silicon India. March 4, 2010. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  8. Tapati Bandopadhyay (June 12, 2013). "Top 10 IT Service Management Next Practice". Gartner Research.
  9. Laurie F. Wurster (June 9, 2013). "Open-Source Software Adoption Becoming Mainstream in India". Gartner Research.
  10. "Cloud Computing World Series Awards". Cloud Computing World Forum. June 13, 2011.
  11. "Torry Harris launches mobile app to track Amazon cloud usage". The Hindu Business Line. August 14, 2012.
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