Founded | 1 October 2008 (Berlin, Germany) |
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Headquarters | Munich, Germany |
Area served | Worldwide |
Products | Unified Communications and Collaboration, Voice, contact center, Small and Medium businesses, Devices and clients, Network infrastructure and security, Cloud Computing |
Services | Business services, financing, project engineering and construction |
Parent |
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Website | www |
Unify is a Mitel company [1] headquartered in Munich, Germany and is present in over 100 countries. [2] It provides software-based enterprise unified communications including voice, Web collaboration, video conferencing and contact center, networking product and services.
Known as Siemens Enterprise Communications (SEN) until January 21, 2016, it was a joint venture between The Gores Group and Siemens. [3] Originally announced July 29, 2008, SEN started operating in 2013, with Gores having a 51% stake, while Siemens had 49%.
In October 2023, Mitel completed the purchase of the company. [4]
Siemens Communications traces its origins to Siemens & Halske (German legal name: Telegraphen-Bauanstalt von Siemens & Halske) founded by Werner von Siemens on 12 October 1847. Siemens' first invention was the pointer telegraph. [5] In the latter half of the 19th century, the company built long-distance telegraph lines, encompassing major projects in Germany and Russia, and the monumental Indo-European telegraph line stretching over 11,000 km from London to Calcutta. [6] In 1897, Siemens & Halske went public.
During the first half of the 20th century, the company undertook a series of mergers and spin-offs, leading to the formation of three separate companies. The original company, Siemens & Halske, focused on communications engineering. Siemens-Schuckertwerke was founded in 1903 to develop electric power engineering. Finally, in 1932, Siemens-Reiniger-Werke was founded to specialize in electro-medical equipment. [7] In 1966, through a major restructuring process, these main companies merged to form Siemens. [8]
In the late 1970s, Siemens focused on information and communications technology (ICT). In 1978, it established Siemens Communication Systems, which, in 1985, was reorganized into two divisions: Siemens Communication Systems for public network products, and Siemens Information Systems for PBX and computer-related products. [9] [10] Entering the globalization era of the 1990s, these two divisions made acquisitions. In 1989, the PBX division initiated a structured purchase of ROLM from IBM, renaming it ROLM Systems, and completed the purchase in 1992 as Siemens-ROLM Communications. [11] The same year, the company acquired a 40% stake in GEC Plessey Telecommunications (GPT) which evolved into the UK operations of the current company. In 1991, the carrier networks division acquired Stromberg-Carlson from The Plessey Company plc. [9] In 1996, the PBX businesses of Mercury Communications, a subsidiary of UK-based Cable & Wireless were also acquired.
In late 1998, Siemens undertook a major restructuring into four main divisions: power generation, industry, rail systems, and information and communications (ICN). [12] As part of the ICN Division, Siemens Information & Communication Networks (SICN) — later to be commonly known as Siemens Communications (Siemens COM) — became Siemens's biggest business unit. [13] Its focus was to Internet-based network technologies, as it was predicted that global data traffic volume would surpass voice telephony traffic in the early part of the 21st century. In addition, Siemens COM placed greater emphasis on the US market, dominated at the time by Nortel, Lucent, and the emerging Cisco; to that end, the company made two American acquisitions, Castle Networks and Argon Networks in 1999.
In March, 2002, Siemens Communications was divided into two major business units - one for public mobile networks and fixed networks; and the other for enterprise networks.
The evolution of Siemens Enterprise Communications began in June, 2006, when Siemens divided Siemens COM into two pieces. On June 19, 2006, the carrier networks business was merged with Nokia's Network Business Group to form a new joint venture, Nokia Siemens Networks. On October 1, 2006, Siemens Enterprise Communications was created as a wholly owned subsidiary of Siemens. Since then, the business focused on unified communications.
In late July 2008, Siemens announced a joint venture with American private equity company The Gores Group (headed by Alec Gores), integrating two Gores Group businesses, Enterasys Networks and SER Solutions. [14]
Enterasys operated as a subsidiary of Siemens Enterprise Communications until 12 September 2013, when Extreme Networks, announced that an agreement to purchase Enterasys in an all-cash transaction valued at US$180 million. [15]
In October 2013, Siemens Enterprise Communications was rebranded to Unify.
In November 2015 it was announced that IT services company Atos would purchase Unify from The Gores Group/Siemens for 340 million euro. [16] The acquisition was completed in January 2016. [17]
In January 2023, Atos announced it entered into exclusive negotiations with Mitel for the sale of its Unified Communications & Collaboration business (Unify). [18]
Unify is a communications provider that develops, deploys, and manages unified communications, network infrastructure and security and managed and professional services for large enterprises and small and medium enterprises, both directly and via partners. [19]
Its primary product brands are OpenScape (unified communications applications), HiPath (converged enterprise communications) and Circuit (SaaS Team Communication). The company announced OpenScape with Microsoft in 2003. [20] [21] Unify demonstrated SIP and service-oriented architecture with OpenScape. The company's services cover managed services, professional services, and maintenance and support services.
OpenScape scored in the Leaders Quadrant in Gartner's Magic Quadrant surveys for both voice and UC. OpenScape UC received the top rating in Enterprise Connect's UC RFP session in 2012 and 2013. [22]
On 28 October 2014 Unify launched a SaaS Team Communication product called Circuit which was previously codenamed Project Ansible. [23] [24] Due to agreement between the new owner Atos and former owner, from 2016 Circuit was further developed on-the-go and in 2017 launched as a unified communication and collaboration platform for the whole Siemens. [25]
The Digital Private Network Signalling System (DPNSS) is a network protocol used on digital trunk lines for connecting to PABX. It supports a defined set of inter-networking facilities.
Siemens AG is a German multinational technology conglomerate. It is focused on industrial automation, distributed energy resources, rail transport and health technology. Siemens is the largest industrial manufacturing company in Europe, and holds the position of global market leader in industrial automation and industrial software.
Mitel Networks Corporation is a Canadian telecommunications company. The company previously produced TDM PBX systems and applications, but after a change in ownership in 2001, now focuses almost entirely on Voice-over-IP (VoIP), unified communications, collaboration and contact center products. Mitel is headquartered in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, with offices, partners and resellers worldwide.
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Siemens Communications was the communications and information business arm of German industrial conglomerate Siemens AG, until 2006. It was the largest division of Siemens, and had two business units – Mobile Networks and Fixed Networks; and Enterprise.
Unified communications (UC) is a business and marketing concept describing the integration of enterprise communication services such as instant messaging (chat), presence information, voice, mobility features, audio, web & video conferencing, fixed-mobile convergence (FMC), desktop sharing, data sharing, call control and speech recognition with non-real-time communication services such as unified messaging. UC is not necessarily a single product, but a set of products that provides a consistent unified user interface and user experience across multiple devices and media types.
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