Calgary Herald

BUSINESS THRIVES TRADING DATA FOR EFFICIENT EMAIL

- BY NANCY CARR

As president and chief executive officer of Form Verse, Inc., Kirk Deininger works with a wide range of companies and government organizati­ons to solve a common office problem: manual processes and dead data.

“It doesn't matter if it's a small company or a huge company,” says Deininger, whose customers include companies that make up the Dow Jones Global Titans 50. “They all said that the majority of their processes – 80% or more – were still being done manually with a form that's either a piece of paper or an email attachment .”

When someone emails someone else a spreadshee­t, a Word document oran Adobe form, it' s what De in in ger calls “dead data.” That's because the emailed data has to be re- keyed into another system to be combinedwi­th other informatio­n and become useful.

“But FormVerse is enabling that data to live and be integrated with other applicatio­ns,” he says. “It streamline­s their forms based processes immense ly, and helps employeesb­ecome more productive .”

Essentiall­y a forms and workflow automation business, FormVerse's unique selling propositio­n is that it uses forms within Microsoft Outlook to capture data and integrate it with the company' s other enterprise solutions.

“We're doing this in Outlook, and that infrastruc­ture is all in place,” Deininger says. “We're essentiall­y taking a form and putting it inside an email message, then using our patentedte­chnology to route it throughout the organizati­on for approvals .”

Deininger describes thetechnol­ogy as innovative and complex. But it results in a simple and user- friendly solution.

“That' s why people love what we' re doing.”

Form Verse helps clients cut down on manual work–and the possibilit­y of introducin­g errors–while reducing the amount of paper a business uses. According to the Associatio­n for Informatio­n and Image Management based in Silver Spring, Md ., 15.3% of all office space is used for paper storage, largely because people still print off their forms, email sand email attachment­s, and then store them in a traditiona­l file cabinet. But that number drops dramatical­ly once FormVerse enters the picture, creating productivi­ty, efficienci­es and cost savings.

Along time techno phi le, Deininger left his family's flower and greenhouse business to pursue computer sales in Chicago int he early1980s. He eventually followed the tech boom to the West Coast, working in California with E* Trade and other cutting-edge startups. He eventually became interested in the business of email archiving so companies could protect themselves from regulatory investigat­ions and legal suits. That's where hemet Andrew Moffat, who had his own email archiving business in Ottawa, where he still works to promote the capital region's high- tech offerings. Whenthey started FormVerse, Moffat, the chairman, remained in Ottawa and Deininger continued to work from California.

After five years in business, FormVerse is “seeing explosive growth” right now, Deininger says, because its product was officially launched in2014.

“We've probably got 25 Fortune 500 companies in our pipeline, as well as U.S. and Canadian government­s. And this year alone we've doubled our staff to20.”

There's still more growth for Form Verse on the horizon.

“We're building a big company,” Deininger says. “I see the product growing and there might be some acquisitio­ns that we do along the way. But it' s all going to be around the same market: productivi­ty and efficiency in any organizati­on.”

 ??  ?? Kirk Deininger, president and chief executive officer of FormVerse, Inc.
Kirk Deininger, president and chief executive officer of FormVerse, Inc.

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