In a move that consolidates two companies that produce systems for managing museum, archive, and library collections, Axiell Group has acquired Adlib Information Systems. Axiell offers a variety of library automation systems used in Scandinavia and the United Kingdom as well as Axiell CALM, for the management of archive and museum collections. Adlib's products find use primarily in museums, archives, and special libraries. The acquisition of Adlib, a company with particular strengths in the museum and archive automation sector, significantly expands Axiell's reach, especially into the museum sector and also into many new geographic areas. While it has not yet ventured into the North American library automation market, Axiell, with its growing arsenal of products, warrants attention as a major, global contender with the potential to expand into new geographic regions.
Although the financial transaction closed on March 1, 2013, the operational merger of Adlib into Axiell will not take place until 2014. Adlib was privately owned by Bert Degenhart Drenth, who served as its Chief Executive Officer and Marijke van der Kwartel, its Chief Financial Officer. Both will join Axiell and continue with their leadership of Adlib.
This acquisition is the latest in a series of business acquisitions that has built Axiell into the largest company involved in library and archives automation in Europe, and one of the largest in the world. In an earlier phase, between 2001 and 2007, the company's acquisitions brought together all the major competitors for public library automation systems in Denmark, Finland, and Sweden. In 2008, it acquired DS, the company that developed the OpenGalaxy system used in many public libraries in the UK.
Axiell, though not well known in the United States, is a major supplier of automation systems to libraries, museums, and archives in Scandinavia and the United Kingdom. Prior to the acquisition of Adlib, Axiell employed just under 200 personnel, which ranks it as eighth largest globally, behind Ex Libris, Civica, SirsiDynix, Follett Software Company, Innovative Interfaces, Serials Solutions, and The Library Corporation. In 2011 the total revenue for the company was 37.7 million Euros or just over $49 million, which would place Axiell Group behind Ex Libris, Innovative Interfaces, SirsiDynix, and Follett Software Company. The acquisition of Adlib will expand annual revenue by about 3.5 million or $4.5 million.
Customers include more than 700 public libraries in Nordic Countries, 70 library services in the United Kingdom, and more than 3,000 schools using Axiell's School Library systems. Through its succession business acquisitions, Axiell has responsibility for a number of integrated library systems, which include:
Axiell has followed a rather soft product integration strategy as it has brought new companies and their respective products into the fold. In most cases, it has continued to develop and maintain the products of the acquired companies. This strategy causes less disruption, respecting the often country-specific practices and standards embodied in these established automation systems. An example of Axiell's product integration is seen in Finland, where a new product Aurora, as noted above, has been developed to supersede the three existing products serving that market.
Axiell's product integration strategy has focused on customer- facing interfaces, positioning Axiell Arena to be coupled with any of its management products, including those for library and archival collections. Arena not only serves as a discovery or search interface, but offers a wide range of features to provide information about and access to the organization's services so that it can function as its complete Web presence. For libraries that have both archives and traditional collections, Arena provides unified access to both types of materials. Axiell CultureNet, recently launched at the Roskilde Libraries in Denmark, exemplifies Arena's capacity to provide access to a blend of library and archival collections. Arena was initially created collaboratively by DS and Axiell prior to their merger.
Axiell Calm is used in about 400 archives and museums, primarily in the United Kingdom. The product was originally developed with DS beginning around 1995 and has become a strategic product of Axiell following the merger. In July 2011, the company launched a new subsidiary with responsibility for CALM and the archives and museum market. Malcolm Howitt serves as Managing Director of the Axiell CALM. The concept Merppet, Open Library or 24/7 Library allows access to library facilities even after staff have gone home. Worldwide, about 80 Open libraries are in operation, and results have been positive.
Adlib is based in Utrecht, The Netherlands with offices in Berlin, Germany, and Swindon, United Kingdom, employing around 35 personnel. The company products are used in 1,600 organizations spanning 30 countries. Prior to its acquisition by Axiell, Adlib was privately owned by Bert Degenhart Drenth, company CEO, and Marijke van der Kwartel, its CFO.
ADLIB Information Systems has 1,600 clients in 30 countries. It offers automation systems, based on the same underlying technology, tailored for museums, libraries, and archives, packaged as Adlib Library, Adlib Museum, and Adlib Archive. Each can be used individually, or for organizations with multiple types of collections, one or both of the other products can be integrated together. The optional Adlib Internet Server provides Web access to the organization's collections.
As one of the veteran companies of the industry, Adlib has been involved with providing automation software to libraries, museums, and archives through many generations of technologies. ADLIB had originally created its products based on its proprietary database management system, which transformed from its original development on Primos minicomputers, to Unix and DOS, and to client-server technologies based on Microsoft Windows in the mid- 1990s. The days of proprietary databases have passed, with both open source and commercially licensed database technologies readily available. In October 2012, Adlib announced that it would discontinue use of its own CBF proprietary database in favor of databases from Microsoft or Oracle. For small installations, Microsoft SQL Server Express is included without cost; larger installations would need to license the supporting database technology that matches their requirements. Adlib is not alone in phasing out proprietary database. Innovative Interfaces, for example, had created its own proprietary database for its INNOPAC and Millennium ILS products, which has been replaced by PostgreSQL in Sierra.
Databasix originally focused on library automation with its ADLIB ILS. In 1996, the company launched ADMUSE, a version of the software for the management of museum collections. Over time the company has become well known in the museum and archives management arena, but it continues to have a strong presence in special libraries, which represents more than half of its revenue.
Axiell Group continues to grow through the acquisition of companies, each of which expands not only its overall size, but also its reach into new geographic areas and product markets. With the acquisition of Adlib, Axiell enters markets in a more diverse set of countries. Adlib currently has customers in the United Kingdom, Australia, Asia, the Middle East, and the United States. It also amplifies its penetration into museum and archives.
Given Axiell Group's historic gentle pace in regard to the integration of its companies and product lines, we can expect little immediate disruption for the existing Adlib customers. As part of Axiell, Adlib gains access to the resources of a larger company and opportunities to expand its customer base beyond what it might be able to accomplish as a small company. In the longer term, with the combined resources of Axiell CALM and Adlib Information Systems, Axiell is positioned to become more of a dominating force in the realm of archives management. A vast number of libraries also have responsibility for archives, cultural collections, or other types of special collection. Axiell's expertise and products in both of these areas has the potential to open up new business opportunities.
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There are forms and interactive elements such as carousels which do not meet multiple AA success criteria. We are working with the software supplier, Innovative Interfaces Inc, to fix these issues, including, but not limited to:
Some pages contain elements with low contrast between the element and its background. This can cause text to be difficult to read, especially for those with low vision, poor eyesight, or colour blindness (Success criterion 1.4.3 Contrast - minimum).
Input fields should always have a description that is explicitly associated with the field to make sure that users of assistive technologies will also know what the field is for. The Library Search site has multiple IDs with the same value, failing criterium 1.3.1 Info and Relationships.
AdPlug is a free, cross-platform, hardware independent AdLib soundplayer library, mainly written in C++ and released under theLGPL. AdPlug plays sound data, originally created for the AdLib (OPL2)and Sound Blaster (Dual OPL2/OPL3) audio boards, directly from itsoriginal format on top of an emulator or by using the realhardware. No OPL chip is required for playback.
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