Progress Buys DataRPM for $30M to Build Cognitive Business … – Xconomy

Posted: March 31, 2017 at 7:00 am

Progress Software, a 36-year-old software company, is pushing into machine learning and connected device technologies with its $30 million acquisition of DataRPM, a privately held firm based in Redwood City, CA.

The deal is the first acquisition made by new Progress CEO Yogesh Gupta, who took the helm in October.

Bedford, MA-based Progress (NASDAQ: PRGS) offers a variety of software products and services designed to simplify the development, deployment, and management of business applications.

One of Progresss strengths has been software that connects and integrates data from various programs, Gupta told Xconomy in an interview last fall. But the emergence of the Internet of Things is bringing an explosion of data from a variety of new sources.

To me, thats sort of an interesting thing for us to take a look at and say, Hey, how do you deal with the new data sources needed to build the business applications of tomorrow? Gupta (pictured above) said in November. The amount of data increases so much that human beings cant keep up with it. The only way to deal with it is to have machines deal with it through machine learning and data analytics technologies, he said.

Thats where DataRPM comes in. The company provides machine learning tools that aim to predict when industrial machines will fail, which can help businesses save money. DataRPMs customers include Jaguar, Samsung, and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, according to a Progress press release.

Under Gupta, Progress is now positioning itself as a provider of technologies for building cognitive-first business applications.

Our customers and partners already use many of the key product capabilities from Progress necessary for this approachfront-end application development tooling, mobility, back-end application services, and data connectivity, Gupta said in a prepared statement. With the acquisition of DataRPM, we now have leading predictive analytics capabilities to round out our cognitive apps platform.

The deal includes $28.3 million in cash, and DataRPMs founders will receive $1.7 million worth of restricted Progress stock, the company said.

DataRPM was founded in 2012 and had raised at least $6 million from investors, according to SEC filings.

Jeff Engel is a senior editor at Xconomy. Email: jengel@xconomy.com

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Progress Buys DataRPM for $30M to Build Cognitive Business ... - Xconomy

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