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Lawson Software Marches Over $300M Milestone ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Aug 24, 2000 Abstract : On August 3, Lawson Software, a provider of Internet-enabled business applications, announced it had won the largest contract in its history to extend its healthcare market leadership. Earlier, on July 20, Lawson Software announced financial results and its year-over-year growth statistics for the year ended May 31, 2000.
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| 2. |
Lawson Software Expands Vertically As Well ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Nov 6, 2000 Abstract : On October 12, Lawson Software announced the formation of a new vertical market initiative for the telecommunications industry, its sixth and newest vertical market. On October 9, Lawson Software announced 'the best quarter of contracting activity in the company's 25-year history'.
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ERP Vendor Lawson Software Extends to IBM's DB2 Universal Database ( Pages)
by M. Reed
Jan 10, 2000 Abstract : Lawson Software, a major privately held provider of enterprise resource planning software, today announced the delivery of its enterprise software applications for IBM's DB2 Universal Database. This availability extends Lawson's support of the IBM DB2 Universal Database to encompass IBM Netfinity, RS/6000 and S/390 servers. Support for IBM DB2 on Hewlett Packard and Sun Microsystems server platforms is scheduled for May 2000.
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| 4. |
Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After Part Three: Market Impact ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic & Lou Talarico
Nov 8, 2003 Abstract : In several aspects, Lawson Software could be regarded as an enterprise applications market anomaly. For one, at its peak in fiscal 2002, the company boasted annual revenues of nearly $430 million, but it still has only a slender (less than 10 percent of revenues) presence outside of its US domestic market. Further, it remains a major force in enterprise applications software, yet it does not cater the functionality to manufacturing sectors, and the vastness of its sales are thus derived from just a few service-oriented vertical markets-primarily health care and retail.
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| 5. |
Lawson Software Means Business With PSA and IPO ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jul 31, 2001 Abstract : By acquiring a leading PSA vendor and deciding to go public, in addition to the new functional and technological enhancements to its flagship lawson.insight suite due in August, Lawson Software continues to boldly challenge bigger competitors, primarily PeopleSoft and Oracle.
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| 6. |
Lawson Software’s CRM and ASP Moves – Wise, Bold, Injudicious, Enforced, or Something Else? ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
May 18, 2000 Abstract : Two recent moves by Lawson Software have stunned the market: 1) it discontinued its in-house CRM development in favor for partnering with Siebel Systems, and 2) it announced the intention to deliver its product also via 3rd-party Application Service Providers (ASPs). We express our views in this regard.
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| 7. |
Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic & Lou Talarico
Nov 6, 2003 Abstract : Lawson Software, almost two years since a successful IPO amid adverse conditions at the time, has had its share of difficulties while rounding up its vertical offerings via a slew of focused appetizing acquisitions. While the last two quarters have seen license revenue revive and profits, certain ongoing challenges will have to be overcome so that Lawson can see again its best days of a few years ago.
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| 8. |
'New' Lawson Software's Transatlantic Extended Enterprise Resource Planning Intentions ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Oct 25, 2005 Abstract : The recent merger of Lawson Software and Intentia, two vendors of similar size, but servicing different markets, will complement each other to become the largest enterprise applications supplier that is dedicated to the mid-market customer segment.
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| 9. |
Lawson Software Braves IPO And Reports Strongly Against The Odds ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jan 17, 2002 Abstract : Lawson Software has to a degree spiced up the end of a bland IPO year, and has also joined the elite of enterprise applications vendors that have seen license revenue growth and profit in 2001.
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