.8m in First Month :: Vamosa .8 million of business in only the first month of operations in the USA..." />

Vamosa's New US Office Achieves $0.8m in First Month

26th June 2006

Vamosa, specialists in content analysis and migration, has achieved over $0.8 million of business in only the first month of operations in the USA.

The company have landed a significant contract with a US financial services organisation to manage the migration of their web content. On completion of the project, 3 months from now, Vamosa will have migrated a web site with over 180,000 urls and over 3 million items of content.

George Knox, Chief Executive at Vamosa said:

"This is a fantastic start to for the new team based in Boston. Whilst planning the expansion into USA we were confident that there were massive opportunities for Vamosa. To achieve $0.8 million in new business in only our first month has surpassed all expectations and is vindication of the company's expansion strategy."

Vamosa opened its first office in the USA in Boston in May of this year amid the fanfare of Tartan Week celebrations in New York. A number of employees from the Scottish HQ have moved to Boston to provide a strong base for the continued growth of the US side of the business.

Vamosa is a market leader in the enterprise content management sector and has developed a number of products that allow organisations to manage their web content more effectively and efficiently. The company has worked with some of the best known global organisations including Nokia, Axa and BAE Systems as well as several government departments in the UK and Australia.

For more information please contact Vamosa on +44 (0)141 574 2500 or email to marketing@vamosa.com


Featured Customer

Australian Department of Health and Ageing

At the vanguard of content publishing in the government sector in Australia, the Department of Health and Ageing turned to Vamosa to provide content re-platforming services when moving all their web sites into a new web content management system.

View Case Study