Oracle buys Logfire

Oracle said this week it has acquired LogFire, an Atlanta-based provider of Software as a Service (SaaS), Cloud-based, Warehouse Management Systems in an effort to complement its Oracle Supply Chain Management Cloud suite.

By·

Oracle said this week it has acquired LogFire, an Atlanta-based provider of Software as a Service (SaaS), Cloud-based, Warehouse Management Systems in an effort to complement its Oracle Supply Chain Management Cloud suite.

LogFire was established in 2007 and Customers from the retail, consumer goods, third-party logistics and e-commerce sectors use LogFire’s solutions to fill more than 100 million global orders annually.

Financial terms of the deal were not made publicly available.

In a letter to customers and partners, Rick Jewell, Senior Vice President, Oracle SCM Applications Development, noted that LogFire’s built-for-the-cloud solution provides an integrated warehouse, inventory, and workforce management platform that easily scales with increased volume and complexity.

“Supply chain organizations are under enormous pressure to capitalize on evolving business trends such as omni-channel fulfillment, integrated logistics and dynamic sourcing, while simultaneously increasing efficiency and reducing costs,” wrote Jewell. “To meet these challenges, Oracle Supply Chain Management (SCM) Cloud offers a broad suite of innovative applications that enables organizations to modernize their supply chain processes. The addition of LogFire will complement the logistics functionality of the Oracle SCM Cloud by adding cloud-based warehouse management capabilities. The LogFire team brings significant knowledge and capabilities to Oracle that will extend the value Oracle SCM Cloud already brings to our customers and partners.”

Diego Pantoja-Navajas, LogFire, Founder, Chairman, CEO, wrote in a posting on the LogFire Website yesterday that LogFire is “very humbled and excited about this great event,” adding that Oracle will leverage its expertise in the cloud-based warehouse management space while LogFire integrates into Oracle Supply Chain Management (SCM) Cloud’s broad suite of innovative applications that enables supply chain organizations to modernize their supply chain processes.

LogFire’s top executive added that for the last nine years LogFire has been on the forefront of changing the fulfillment and distribution industry.

“We were born with great passion for the supply chain industry that was multi-cultured, multi-tenant and multi-channel. Customer centricity was, and has always been foremost,” he said. “The years since 2007 have seen technology change the world. There was the emergence of mobile phones, Facebook, YouTube and the new working generation. On the Supply Chain front we started discussing multi-channel and new consumer buying behaviors around ecommerce. Cloud solutions started to encroach on traditional on-premises supply chain solutions as companies looked to squeeze even more costs out of the fulfillment supply chain. In the midst of it all, LogFire had the opportunity to build a new kind of warehouse management solution for The New Fulfillment Economy.”

Steve Banker, Vice President, Supply Chain Management, for ARC Advisory Group, said that this deal was not surprising, considering that financial analysts are bullish on SaaS revenues, and Oracle is eager to make Wall Street happy. And he added that at Oracle’s supply chain conference last year – Modern Supply Chain Experience – Logfire was featured to an unusual degree, but Oracle was mum when asked whether or not a plan was intact for it to acquire LogFire contingent on LogFire hitting certain growth targets.

“As far as shipper benefits, right now Logfire is integrated to their SCM cloud product,” said Banker. “But I would expect that Oracle would seriously look at going beyond certified integration to a seamless operation across TMS and WMS. This could be achieved by getting to a common master data model and being able to run both products on the same database. I would also expect that Oracle will accelerate the functional enrichment of the Logfire product. Their existing WMS is very functionally rich, perhaps even richer than some of their key competitors for supporting the factory warehouse. So Oracle already knows what they need to do to make a product that is feature/function competitive with Manhattan and JDA.”

In August 2015, LogFire said that it has successfully integrated its WMS with Oracle Transportation Management, which it said formed the industry’s first 100 percent cloud-based supply chain execution convergence solution, which is defined by Gartner as the need for supply chain organizations to better orchestrate and synchronize execution processes across functional domains.


About the Author

Jeff Berman, Group News Editor
Jeff Berman is Group News Editor for万博2.0app下载,Modern Materials Handling, andSupply Chain Management Review. Jeff works and lives in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, where he covers all aspects of the supply chain, logistics, freight transportation, and materials handling sectors on a daily basis.Contact Jeff Berman

Subscribe to Logistics Management Magazine!

Subscribe today. It's FREE!
Get timely insider information that you can use to better manage your entire logistics operation.
Start your FREE subscription today!

Article Topics

All Topics
Latest Whitepaper
Operate More Sustainably and Improve Logistics Performance by Moving to “The Edge”
Download this white paper to learn how you can optimize your fulfillment and delivery networks to ensure that you provide superior customer service at the lowest possible cost.
Download Today!
From the February 2023 Logistics Management Issue
全球供应链将继续被抓between politics, economics and ecology in the future. Whether there will be more regionalization or nearshoring remains to be seen. The question will linger: Who will win and who will lose in this increasingly tense competition?
Putting the retail supply chain in reverse gear
Medline builds on success with mobile robotics
View More From this Issue
Latest Webcast
2023 Rate Outlook Webcast: Will shippers catch a break?
In this annual webcast, group editorial director Michael Levans hosts our panel of logistics and freight transportation analysts who share their insights on rate patterns in all the major transport modes in an effort to help shippers prepare their freight transportation budget for the coming year.
Register Today!
EDITORS' PICKS
Global Logistics 2023: Supply chains under pressure
全球供应链将继续被抓between politics, economics and ecology in the...
2023 Rate Outlook: Will Shippers Catch a Break?
Our annual gathering of freight transportation industry analysts reveals some common themes, largely...

Top Logistics News Stories of 2022
The Logistics Management editorial team presents the top 10 logistics stories of 2022.
2022 Trade Update: Who’s on first?
Here are a few highlights of the key regulatory changes that took place over the course of 2022 that...