Products Surveyor 6 Founded 2001 | Industry Computer software Website Verdiem.com Parent organization Aptean | |
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Key people John Scumniotales (CEO) Headquarters Seattle, Washington, United States |
Verdiem part 3 creating policies with surveyor 6
Verdiem is a software corporation based in Seattle, Washington. The company is privately owned and backed by venture capital. Verdiem produces the Surveyor 6 enterprise-class PC power management software. Verdiem Surveyor enables customers to centrally control and reduce the energy used by PCs, Macs, and network devices running Cisco EnergyWise without impacting end users. Nearly 700 corporations, government agencies and universities have deployed Surveyor on over 2 million devices. Verdiem was acquired by Aptean in January 2015. Aptean sells software for the financial, manufacturing and other vertical markets integrating Customer Relationship Management (CRM), Customer Experience Management (CEM), Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Supply Chain Management (SCM), and Knowledge Management (KM).
Contents
- Verdiem part 3 creating policies with surveyor 6
- Verdiem surveyor introduction
- Surveyor
- Case studies
- References
Verdiem surveyor introduction
Surveyor
Surveyor is Verdiem’s enterprise class PC Power Management software. The product allows the central administration of power management settings for networked PCs. Intelligent policies maximize energy savings by placing machines into a lower power states without interfering with end-user productivity, desktop maintenance or upgrades. More recent releases include a Sustainability Dashboard.
Verdiem announced the Surveyor 6 Spring Edition on March 6, 2012, which allows companies to "more accurately track and manage energy consumption and costs across international boundaries, rates, and currencies"
Case studies
Verdiem has had a number of clients with varying amounts of success in energy reduction, including:
Cadbury, with a 30% reduction of energy costs
The City of Boston, with a 44% reduction in PC power consumption, saving between $24,000 and $72,000 per year.
National Institutes of Health, saving an average of 953,678 kWh of electricity or about $71,000 annually.