MaxxVault is an open system built using technology designed to provide security and interoperability with existing systems.
Syber,
a provider of consulting, technology and marketing services designed to
strengthen the core of its clients, allowing them to gain competitive
advantage, announced that it has selected MaxxVault, a specialist in enterprise
electronic document management systems, as a new technology partner for
document management solutions.
"Every
company is unique in how they meet the challenges of business," said Jack
Crane, CEO of Syber. "Because our clients are of different sizes and use
different business systems, we need partners that provide only best-of-breed
technologies. With dynamic document capture and easy integration to other
business applications, MaxxVault fits in the space between business
applications and processes, easing the flow of information while keeping it
secure. With MaxxVault, our consultants are able to enhance workflow,
dramatically improve compliant record keeping and save money."
MaxxVault
is an open system built using technology designed to provide enhanced security,
dependability and interoperability with existing systems. The company provides
software solutions for the management, distribution and control of corporate
documents.
Syber
manages business technologies from the daily help desk to strategic network infrastructure
installs and aids business leaders in making improvements to the performance of
their organizations.
"It's
exciting to have Syber as a partner because they will use all the tools in
MaxxVault we have worked so hard to include," said Mohammed Iqbal,
director of sales for MaxxVault. "The Syber consultants diagnose the
situation, then use their expertise and integration capabilities to build
solutions that get the most out of all the technology they implement, resulting
in high ROI. We are happy to be one of Syber's technology solutions and look
forward to working with them to make efficient work of otherwise laborious
tasks."
In
April, MaxxVault released Enterprise 5, which added new features and
enhancements to existing tools. Some of the new features include "Go Green
Printing," which prevents unnecessary waste by letting users choose which
pages of a large document need to be printed at 100 percent and which can share
a page with other documents at 50 percent or 25 percent of normal size, and
automatic document linking based on key index values that will make associated
documents instantly accessible from each other.
Nathan Eddy is Associate Editor, Midmarket, at eWEEK.com. Before joining eWEEK.com, Nate was a writer with ChannelWeb and he served as an editor at FierceMarkets. He is a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.