Inventive Designers

Inventive Designers is a privately owned software development company, based in Antwerp, Belgium. The company was founded in 1994 by Guy Dehond and Patrick Morren.

Inventive Designers
Private company
IndustrySoftware
Founded1994
Headquarters
Number of employees
38 (November 2014)
Websitehttp://www.inventivedesigners.com

Guy Dehond was one of the beta testers of the AS/400 (codenamed "Silverlake") at IBM. Dehond and Morren had worked with this system for years, and their first products were for the AS/400. Later they started to design products for cross-platform environments. Today, the company specializes in software for customer communications management in the public, financial, telecommunications, utility, insurance and healthcare industry, in over 30 countries.

In 2010 the company received a CIOnet Innovation Award[1]

The company participates in the AFP Consortium[2] and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). At the W3C, Inventive Designers was active in the XSL Working Group, and Chief Technical Officer Klaas Bals was the editor of XSL Requirements 2.0[3] document. Currently, the company plays an active role in W3C's Forms Working Group.[4]

At the end of 2012 Guy Dehond handed over the company to his daughter Joke Dehond and his son-in-law Klaas Bals.

Company timeline

1994 Inventive Designers BVBA founded by Guy Dehond and Patrick Morren in Belgium
1996 Alteration of Inventive Designers BVBA into Inventive Designers NV (comparable to limited liability company)
1998 Introduction of EverGreen/400 to allow 5250 non-programmable workstations to act as a full e-mail capable terminal
1998 Worldwide distribution of EverGreen/400 by IBM
1999 Introduction of DTM for AS/400 or DTM for iSeries, capable of converting OfficeVision documents to XML
1999 Inventive Designers' Litrik De Roy is co-author of the IBM Redbook: How to Replace OfficeVision/400 in Your Applications[5]
2000 Move to new offices
2002 Worldwide distribution of DTM for iSeries by Lotus Software
2002 Introduction of Scriptura XBOS, one of the first what-you-see-is-what-you-get XSL editors
2004 Release of Scriptura Designer and Scriptura Engine, first steps towards a document composition tool
2004 IBM's Watson Research Group invites Inventive Designers to join the XSL Working Group of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
2005 Release of Scriptura XSL Business Output Suite, a platform to compose templates and generate multi-channel output. Introducing electronic forms.
2006 The company joins the AFP Consortium
2006 Director Joke Dehond receives XPlor's Electronic Document Professional[6] certification
2007 Release of the Scriptura Post-Processor, enabling grouping, bundling, sorting ...
2009 Release of IntelliStamp (patent pending), a hybrid signature to secure electronic and paper documents
2009 Inventive Designers is selected for the Benelux short list of Logica's 'Global Innovation Venture Program' contest
2009 Release of Scriptura Document Flow, a what-you-see-if-what-you-get interface to design and execute document flows. Replaces the Scriptura Post-Processor
2009 Partnership with Xerox for Belgium and Luxemburg
2010 Scriptura’s newest version gets a new name: Scriptura Engage
2011 IntelliStamp project at IAK wins DCM award[7]
2012 Mechelen and Antwerp first cities worldwide to use IntelliStamp
2012 IntelliStamp Antwerp laureate ‘Accenture Innovation Award 2012’[8]
2012 In December Joke Dehond and Klaas Bals took over the company as co-CEOs
2013 The IntelliStamp Center now offers IntelliStamp as a cloud service
2014 In April Scriptura Engage is named[9] in Printing and Imaging by Gartner
2014 Scriptura Engage launches its own product website[10]
2014 The Scriptura Engage Communication Center is released: a central communications hub for all customer correspondence
2015 DataNews[11] named Joke Dehond as ICT Woman of the Year 2015
2015 Inventive Designers sells IntelliStamp to Cipal, to focus on the internationalization of Scriptura Engage
2018 Acquisition of Inventive Designers by UnifiedPost[12]

References

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