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New Documentum
eContent Services Speed Business Collaboration and Lower Technology Infrastructure
Costs Documentum
Leverages 4i eBusiness Platform to Build Web Services PLEASANTON,
Calif., August 6, 2001 – Documentum - (Nasdaq: DCTM - news), the provider
of content management to the Global 2000, today announced the launch of Documentum
eContent Services-the capability to define and expose content management functionality
as a set of standards-based components that control the creation, production and
delivery of a company's content assets. Documentum eContent Services will speed
the development of content-rich applications, expose content management services
to large-scale ERP and CRM applications and drive down the total cost of ownership
(TCO) for deploying e-business infrastructure. Web
Services -- The Foundation for a New Paradigm Web
Services are self-contained, modular pieces of programming logic that perform
specific business functions and are accessible over a network in a platform-independent
and language-neutral way. Once published, Web services can be located using Universal
Description, Discovery, and Integration (UDDI) and invoked across the Web with
Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP). ``Web
Services are the building blocks of a new e-business paradigm, a Content Ecotecture
-- a dynamic ecosystem of technology providers, architectures, and information.''
said Howard Shao, CTO and co-founder of Documentum. ``In this emerging Content
Ecotecture, no database-oriented content solution or rigid content infrastructure
will enable businesses to compete effectively or leverage the full benefits of
the Content Ecotecture as it takes shape.'' Made
possible by open standards such as XML and J2EE, the Content Ecotecture will enable
an information system in which the participating technologies interoperate and
seamlessly exchange information and content between and across all channels. "As
the lines between Internet, intranet, extranet, and portal come to blur, users
are recognizing that a total content management system means supporting more formats
and channels, along with ever-broadening types of information-from traditional
Website brochure-ware, to multimedia files, to rich structured product content,
to enterprise data, to business-critical documentation code, and so on,"
said Louis Columbus of AMR Research. "So Documentum's move toward a platform
strategy, whereby it exploits its expertise in document workflow and content repositories
and urges its sizable partnership base to produce content management applications
for vertical industries, seems a wise one.'' eContent
Services Leverage Developing Content Ecotecture Leveraging
its J2EE compliant, XML-enabled technology platform, Documentum has been well
ahead of the Web Services wave. The company's Web Development Kit (WDK), built
on an extensible J2EE framework, contains nearly 60 pre-built, reusable components
that perform common Documentum functions such as browse, check in, check out,
and search. WDK enables developers to quickly engineer applications using these
components, which can then be deployed and scaled on any J2EE-based applications
server. Because of the ability to easily modularize key functions within its platform,
Documentum is the only enterprise content management provider in a position to
deliver Web Services. Documentum
eContent Services include an expanding library of pre-defined, reusable pieces
of application logic that can be easily ``plugged'' into applications to allow
them to access the content that fuels them as well as the associated content management
capabilities (such as version management, workflow, and robust searching). By
allowing content management to be easily exposed in any application, eContent
Services will enable vital business processes such as real-time negotiation of
contracts among many parties, personalized customer self-service applications
and management of projects across supply chains. Every business function of this
type that requires the use of multiple applications, devices, and e-business networks
is driven by content, and can be developed more quickly and efficiently with Documentum
eContent Services. eContent
Services Deliver Tangible Benefits ``Businesses
that don't use Web Services will suffer as a result of inefficient applications
and missed revenue generating opportunities ... Companies that embrace Web services
will leapfrog over their competition.'' -- AMR Research eContent
Services will provide tangible benefits to application developers, software vendors
and businesses. - Application
developers will reduce development time and speed time to market for new applications
- Software
vendors will be able to easily expose content management functionality in their
enterprise applications
- Businesses
will accelerate e-business infrastructure deployment and reduce TCO
``We
see the Documentum eContent Services initiative as an enormous support for BOC
going forward. For example, we plan to extend our existing Documentum content
management system to the BOC external supply chain through our portals, and Documentum
eContent Services will make that extension easier, faster, and more cost efficient,''
said John Koerwer, Manager of Design Automation at BOC Gases. Documentum
Partnerships: Putting Content at the Core of Web Services Working
together on new standards-based ways to unite content with applications, Documentum
and its Business Partners are laying the essential groundwork for the Content
Ecotecture. Documentum eContent Services are just the first deliverable from this
potent collaboration. ``Documentum
is committing additional effort and resources to working closely with Business
Partners including IBM, BEA, Sun Microsystems, SAP, Plumtree and Epicentric to
create a cooperative model that ensures faster, easier deployment of these critical
e-commerce technologies,'' said Dave De Walt, president and chief executive officer
of Documentum. Documentum
has worked aggressively with industry-leading Business Partners to integrate its
content management platform and components with their e-business infrastructure
products and services. Today Documentum is certified on all its Business Partners'
platforms. Through continued close collaboration, Documentum and its Business
Partners will enable customers to benefit from the evolving opportunities of Web
Services. ``We're
working with industry leaders to define how content will be dynamically produced,
distributed and personalized in an integrated environment, all based on the promise
of Web Services. Our goal is to simplify the task of creating and managing the
dynamic, content-rich applications that will reduce costs and drive productivity
for businesses in years ahead,'' continued De Walt. ``Web
Services make it possible to build bridges between systems, and ultimately people,
that otherwise would require a lot of time and money to connect,'' said Mark Carges,
president, BEA E-Commerce Application Components Division. ``BEA is working closely
with Documentum, and other long-standing partners, to provide an e-business platform
that leverages a portal framework to easily expose the significant value of Web
Services to partners, customers and employees.'' ``IBM's
WebSphere* e-business infrastructure brings key Web Services and dynamic application
integration standards together within an J2EE integrated platform -- enabling
a highly flexible end-to-end solution for e-business, '' said Scott L. Hebner,
Director of WebSphere Marketing. ``IBM believes that content is an important part
of that solution and is working with Business Partners like Documentum to provide
customers with highest levels of connectivity on the Web. IBM is pleased with
Documentum's expanding support for WebSphere.'' ``Web
Services will evolve into smart web services, delivering users a high level of
customization and personalization,'' said Doug Kaewert, Vice President, Sun Developer
Network Group, Sun Microsystems. ``Documentum's Web Services initiative will help
accelerate this evolution with its emphasis on context awareness and fully open
interfaces.'' Companies
are investing in their technology infrastructures today to prepare for the content-rich
applications that will be their competitive lifeblood in the years to come. Documentum
and its Business Partners are leading the way. About
Documentum Documentum
is the industry’s leading enterprise content management provider, automating the
production, exchange and personalization of all types of content, making it easier
for the Global 2000 to gain competitive advantage by connecting employees, business
partners and customers, worldwide. Built on an Internet-scale, XML-enabled and
standards-compliant platform, Documentum products manage Web content, power portals,
enable collaborative commerce, and solve regulatory content challenges. Over 300
partners across all major industries, including high tech, pharmaceutical, healthcare,
consulting services, government, manufacturing, financial services, automotive,
retail, and consumer goods, build and implement specialized applications using
Documentum’s content management infrastructure. For more information, visit Documentum
on the Web at www.documentum.com ###
| Documentum
Public Relations Contact: Kimberly
Devine UpStart
Communications (510)
457-3000 x3124 | Documentum
Investor Relations Contact: Janet
Scott Documentum
inv.rel@documentum.com |
Documentum
and the Documentum logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Documentum,
Inc. in the US and throughout the world. All other company and product names are
used for identification purposes only and may be trademarks of their respective
owners. Documentum cannot guarantee completion of any future products or product
features mentioned in this document, and no reliance should be placed on their
availability. Printed in the U.S.A. In
addition to historical information contained herein, this news release contains
forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. The company's
future actual results could differ materially from the forward-looking statements
discussed herein. Factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include,
but are not limited to, those discussed from time to time in the company's public
reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, such as those under
"Risk Factors" included in the company's annual report on Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2000, as well as the company's other public
reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company undertakes
no obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements. |