Product lifecycle management: IBM and Siemens team up

Paul Boughton
IBM and Siemens PLM Software are working together to help companies improve the management of products throughout their lifecycle - from design and manufacturing to end-of-life planning and recycling - and simplify the process of sharing product data and manufacturing plans.

As products become more sophisticated and the number of suppliers and manufacturers increases, companies need a more intelligent and well-connected framework to support the accurate exchange of data. These transactions are important in the design and manufacturing of mechanical, software and electrical components for products ranging from planes and ships to global positioning systems and cell phones.

Using IBM's Product Development Integration Framework (PDIF) as a development platform and primary integration environment, Siemens is delivering ready-to-use systems built on its Teamcenter PLM software portfolio and IBM Websphere and Information Management (DB2). PDIF also enables a richer integration between Siemens Teamcenter and Rational Software Platform for Systems.

Additionally, IBM and Siemens will jointly provide a comprehensive range of services including consulting and implementation, systems integration and application hosting.

Michael Wheeler, vice president of IBM's PLM and Supply Chain Solutions, comments: "Siemens PLM Software's Teamcenter is the industry's first PDIF-ready platform to deliver tightly integrated IBM middleware offerings that reduce PLM software acquisition and lifecycle costs. By using a flexible software environment, companies have a framework for marrying key PLM business processes to technology initiatives that offer a structured approach to managing the life of a product."

Michael Burkett, an industry analyst and vice president of AMR Research, states: "For information technology groups the news translates into easier deployment and technical support. For line-of-business users from product development to supply chain it means faster access to information and better performance to support collaboration for global product development. The technology certification is significant in its depth where Teamcenter PLM is now optimised to run on IBM applications including Websphere and DB2."

By exploiting the open computing flexibility of IBM's service-oriented architecture (SOA) and IBM's PDIF, companies can address the challenge of making sure millions of pieces of data and design plans are exchanged accurately throughout the product lifecycle communities. The combination of PLM with SOA helps companies build, extend and transform their existing infrastructures incrementally over time by allowing multiple systems to reuse business services and incorporate new technologies such as web-based collaboration across the product supply chain.

Chuck Grindstaff, executive vice president of Products and CTO at Siemens PLM Software, says: "One of the significant benefits of today's announcement is the fact that customers will no longer need to choose between IBM and Siemens when selecting the best PLM solution for their organisations. Companies now have access to the performance and reliability of IBM middleware combined with the scalability and instant access to product knowledge provided by Teamcenter. This combination presents a unique advantage for companies as they address the growing demand from their customers for more sustainable products."

IBM and Siemens PLM Software are also working closely with IBM's Business Partner network to deliver PLM to the small and medium size business community. In addition, the companies will deepen their joint client offerings by optimising Siemens PLM Software applications that can run IBM server and storage devices.

For more information, visit www.ibm.com/solutions/plm and www.siemens.com/plm

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