History
Anacomp boasts a forty year legacy of experience and a passionate commitment to client services and success. Throughout our storied history, it is the people of Anacomp that have served as the foundation of our success and longevity, as we've grown our relationships with our loyal customers, some of whom have been with us for decades. We're proud of our rich legacy, and look forward to building upon this solid foundation as we move forward into the next forty years of success.
1968: Anacomp is founded in Indianapolis, Indiana, by a trio of
professors at Purdue University seeking to provide the city with its
first computer services company. They formed the name of the company by
combining the words "ANAlyze" and "COMPute."
1970: Anacomp is a public corporation and pursues an aggressive
campaign of growth through acquisition.
1971: A pair of acquisitions brings the company into the field of
Computer Output to Microfiche (COM), a field that would fuel its
expansion in the years to follow. During the following decade, Anacomp's
micrographics business thrives through internal growth and additional
acquisitions.
1987: Anacomp acquires DatagraphiX, which invented the COM
recorder in 1954, established its presence in San Diego, California.
This acquisition solidifies Anacomp's position as a world leader in COM
equipment and services.
1988: The company acquires Xidex Corporation, adding magnetics,
dupe film, readers and reader/printers, and floppy and rigid disks to
its product line. Although Anacomp's focus remains on COM, it branches
out into many other fields.
1997: The acquisition of Data/Ware Development adds high-volume
CD production systems and services.
1998: The acquisition of First Image strengthens the company's
leadership in document management services, Anacomp's original mainstay.
In Switzerland, the company acquires Cominformatic in an effort to
expand CD services and digital imaging solutions into regions in Europe.
On the maintenance side, the company's move to establish a multi-vendor
service offering gained ground when agreements were signed with Sony
Electronics and IBM Corporation. Also that year, Anacomp launches its
Internet Document Services to provide document management through the
Internet.
1999: Anacomp divests its magnetic media business to strengthen
its focus on its core document-management services business. Later that
year, Anacomp acquired Adesso Software from Litton Industries to
continue building its digital document services capabilities.
2000: Anacomp merges Internet Document Services with the new
technology and infrastructure acquired from Adesso to form docHarbor, an
application service provider (ASP) focused entirely on providing
Internet-based document management. Anacomp discontinues the
manufacturing of new hardware systems and contract manufacturing for
third parties as part of the restructuring of its DatagraphiX business.
The restructuring results in three autonomous business units: docHarbor,
Anacomp Document Solutions and Anacomp Technical Services.
2001: The docHarbor business unit is integrated into Anacomp's
Document Solutions business as a new service offering (Web Presentment).
2002: Anacomp focuses on managing the decline of COM by growing
its digital and renewal service offerings. It reorganizes its operations
to accelerate revenue from new services and reduce costs, while
continuing to deliver superior service to customers and value to
shareholders. Under the reorganization, the company's two independent
business units are integrated into one entity based upon a global
marketing strategy and unified sales force, combined operations and a
focused support organization.
2006: Anacomp acquires Imaging Acceptance Corporation (IAC), a
strong player in the federal government sector performing scanning and
other document services. The acquisition affords the company production
synergies and expanded capabilities in government operations.
2007: Anacomp acquires CaseLogistix, the leading provider of
evidence and litigation management software for the legal community.
CaseLogistix, when combined with Anacomp's docHarbor hosted repository
services, enterprise capture solutions and secure scanning and
conversion data centers, provides law firms and corporate legal
departments with access to one of the broadest litigation support
platforms in the industry. Also in 2007, Anacomp introduces new
enterprise information capture and business process management (BPM)
services.

