Advertisment

Engine for Collaboration enhanced by nGenera

author-image
CIOL Bureau
Updated On
New Update

BOSTON & AUSTIN, TEXAS: nGenera, the provider of end-to-end software solutions that manage and accelerate collaboration among employees and between enterprises and their customers, announced Spaces by nGenera.

Advertisment

Designed in collaboration with IDEO, the global design and innovation firm, Spaces by nGenera is claimed as the first enterprise-class collaboration solution that can be easily customized to integrate into organizations’ cultures, workflows, internal structures, and data sources. Built from the point of view of the user and usability, Spaces encourages wide-spread employee adoption while providing the back-end security and scalability needed for successful enterprise collaboration.

The enterprise-class capabilities of Spaces by nGenera will finally give IT the back-end functionality they need to maximize existing investments and achieve the scalability and security needed to enable their enterprise collaboration strategies,” said Tom Kelly, CEO of nGenera. “This, combined with Spaces’ world-class intuitive user experience to drive broad adoption, finally will enable enterprises to realize the increase in productivity and competitiveness that knowledge sharing provides.”

“To fully realize the potential of social software in an enterprise setting, organizations need to balance a complex set of requirements from powerful end-user enablement to robust integration with enterprise architectures. nGenera does a great job of meeting these requirements, truly enabling business process transformation,” stated Jonathan Yarmis, Senior Research Fellow at Ovum.

“We selected Spaces by nGenera to help us monitor and manage disruptions in our supply chain,” said Tony Martins, VP Supply Chain for ratiopharm, a producer and distributor of generic pharmaceutical drugs in Canada. “We are very excited about the user experience, flexibility, and controls built into Spaces by nGenera. It’s unlike anything else we’ve seen.”