Boldon James

Boldon James is a UK-based software company incorporated in February 1985, and specialising in data classification and secure messaging solutions aimed primarily at the commercial, defence, intelligence and government marketplaces. The company is named after its founders Peter Boldon and Roger James. The company was acquired in June 2020 by Minneapolis, Minnesota-based software developer HelpSystems.

Boldon James - A HelpSystems Company Logo

History

Originally, Boldon James specialised in Information Processing Architecture (IPA) networking solutions for interworking with International Computers Limited (ICL) systems, with offices in Congleton and Alsager.

In October 2007, Boldon James was acquired as an autonomous subsidiary of Qinetiq a major UK plc and FTSE 250 company, who took over the company from previous owners, a management buy out led by Martin Sugden and backed by Livingbridge.[1]

In June 2020, Minneapolis, Minnesota-based software developer HelpSystems acquired Boldon James from parent Qinetiq.[2]

Products

Boldon James produce a range of messaging products, principally integrating with Microsoft Exchange and Outlook, including addons for Outlook Web Access, X.400 Bridgehead connector (gateways), and products designed to integrate Exchange with large third party LDAP Directories, known as MasterKey+, MK+ or enterprise directory. The company also provides related support and maintenance services.

Operations

Boldon James Holdings Ltd is registered in Farnborough, Hampshire, whilst Boldon James' development office is in Crewe. The company has 85 employees, 70% of which are technical staff, and has clients including Financial Services Organisations such as Prudential and Allianz, the UK and German Ministries of Defence, and defence contractors such as Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, amongst others.

gollark: It probably just has trouble with the stupidly high energy physics involved.
gollark: I'm a bit unsure about the numbers though. 50 YW is... 25 times the sun's power output, or something. Surely it should do more than that.
gollark: The laser thing has been a feature since they added... a bunch of other tools for interacting with planets, I think, probably a month or more?
gollark: styropyro in the year 2100
gollark: The memespeech thing sounds neat. But Unicode's ridiculous amount of invisible characters offers a different solution: storing your data in those instead!

References

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