Some time in mid-2005 TEC published a six part article on IQMS, a relatively small and obscure enterprise resource planning (ERP) vendor based in Paso Robles, California (US), with offices across North America (i.e., in Chicago, Canada, and Mexico), Europe (i.e., Sweden and with recently announced indirect presence in the UK) and Asia (i.e., China and Taiwan). Some readers were likely wondering why I “made so much mileage” out of a seemingly unimportant vendor of fewer than 70 employees and with only a few hundred customers at the time.
Well, I might have been somewhat vindicated in early 2009, when IQMS announced that it closed 2008 with double-digit profitability and a 10 percent increase in new customer accounts. Even as manufacturing markets have tightened and doom-and-gloom sentiments have pervaded the globe, IQMS has accumulated revenue gains for several years. Namely, in 2005 and 2006, the company grew by about 25 percent each year (which was a multiple of the industry’s average growth), demonstrating its value proposition to selected manufacturing industries worldwide, including medical devices, automotive, aerospace, plastics, and consumer packaged goods (e.g., appliances, electronics, computers/business machines).
IQMS (whose name alludes to “manufacturing systems with an intelligence quotient [IQ]”) was incorporated in 1989 and has been privately held ever since without any venture capital (VC) money involved. Having been based in California and founded (and still majority-owned) by a married couple, IQMS somewhat resembles its bigger fellow ERP peer, QAD. But the differences between the two vendors are also apparent starting with QAD being publicly held for over a decade. QAD is also a much larger vendor, with typically larger customers (although overlapping and possibly competing with IQMS in many similar industries and regions), and has an incomparably better global presence.
For its part, IQMS boasts a 98 percent customer retention rate and continuous profitability and growth, which traits have not always characterized QAD. Currently, IQMS has a total of over 500 corporate customers at over 1,000 locations in 4 continents and 11 countries. These user companies range from a single site with only 5 users to companies with 10 sites and an unlimited number of users.
IQMS focuses on small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) in make-to-order (MTO) and make-to-stock (MTS) operations in the discrete manufacturing, repetitive manufacturing, and process manufacturing environments. These companies tend to embrace lean manufacturing (and overall “lean business”) principles and thus require low-maintenance and cost-effective (but fully functional) ERP systems. To that end, perpetual licensing provides the rights to all future upgrades and includes database licensing too.
Well, I might have been somewhat vindicated in early 2009, when IQMS announced that it closed 2008 with double-digit profitability and a 10 percent increase in new customer accounts. Even as manufacturing markets have tightened and doom-and-gloom sentiments have pervaded the globe, IQMS has accumulated revenue gains for several years. Namely, in 2005 and 2006, the company grew by about 25 percent each year (which was a multiple of the industry’s average growth), demonstrating its value proposition to selected manufacturing industries worldwide, including medical devices, automotive, aerospace, plastics, and consumer packaged goods (e.g., appliances, electronics, computers/business machines).
IQMS (whose name alludes to “manufacturing systems with an intelligence quotient [IQ]”) was incorporated in 1989 and has been privately held ever since without any venture capital (VC) money involved. Having been based in California and founded (and still majority-owned) by a married couple, IQMS somewhat resembles its bigger fellow ERP peer, QAD. But the differences between the two vendors are also apparent starting with QAD being publicly held for over a decade. QAD is also a much larger vendor, with typically larger customers (although overlapping and possibly competing with IQMS in many similar industries and regions), and has an incomparably better global presence.
For its part, IQMS boasts a 98 percent customer retention rate and continuous profitability and growth, which traits have not always characterized QAD. Currently, IQMS has a total of over 500 corporate customers at over 1,000 locations in 4 continents and 11 countries. These user companies range from a single site with only 5 users to companies with 10 sites and an unlimited number of users.
IQMS focuses on small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) in make-to-order (MTO) and make-to-stock (MTS) operations in the discrete manufacturing, repetitive manufacturing, and process manufacturing environments. These companies tend to embrace lean manufacturing (and overall “lean business”) principles and thus require low-maintenance and cost-effective (but fully functional) ERP systems. To that end, perpetual licensing provides the rights to all future upgrades and includes database licensing too.
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