ANX Named Winner of 2011 Hot Companies and Hot Technologies Awards by Network Products Guide

ANX announced today that Network Products Guide, the industry’s leading technology research and advisory guide, has named ANX a winner in both the Hot Companies and Hot Technologies categories at the Annual 2011 Hot Companies and Best Products Awards. This coveted program recognizes the world’s best in organizational performance, products and services, executives and management teams, successful deployments, product management, product engineering, and customer satisfaction in every area of information technology. ANX joins an elite group of companies that has won the Hot Company Award multiple times.

ANX provides solutions to thousands of companies in industries such as healthcare, retail, acquiring banks, and automotive, including:

  • Integrated security and compliance solutions for large and medium enterprises
  • Risk management and compliance consulting services
  • Secure connectivity and transaction delivery services supporting collaboration in communities of interest

In addition to winning the Hot Company Award, ANX was recognized with a Hot Technology award for TruComply, ANX’ flagship solution for governance, risk and compliance (GRC). Given growing regulatory burdens and more complex business and IT environments, organizations need a common technology platform for managing these activities to eliminate duplication of effort. TruComply is an easy-to-use software-as-a-service solution that provides enterprise-wide visibility into risks, and ensures optimal resource allocation based on strategic business priorities. Unlike other GRC solutions, TruComply delivers benefits very quickly and does not require capital investment or complex implementation.

Hot Companies   ANX

(Source: anx.com)

This article is republished from Xconomy.com

Once upon a time in Detroit, automobiles were built using all U.S.-made parts, put together by an all-American crew working a U.S. assembly line.

Well, no. As the first four words of this story indicate, the idea of a completely independent American auto industry is largely a fairy tale. Even the Ford Model T at the beginning of the last century was also produced on assembly lines in Europe, South America, and Asia.

Today, of course, you can tell which auto companies are “American” only by where their headquarters are located. Where the parts come from, and where the car is assembled, could be anywhere in the world. That means a great deal of data streams around the world, including large pieces of critical information like CAD drawings. The company in charge of handling the pipeline for collaboration in this part of the world is the Automotive Network Exchange (ANX), based in Southfield, MI.

Recently, ANX announced that it has established a secure, fast connection with its counterpart across the pond, the European Network Exchange (ENX). ANX says it allows members of the separate networks to be “collaboration ready” with each other, forming new supply chain partnerships with less worry over how to connect.

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