S Central acquires Queensland-based Clariti

By
Follow google news

Australian services company S Central has made its seventh acquisition in less than twelve months after acquiring Brisbane-based Clariti to expand its security offering and presence in Queensland.

S Central acquires Queensland-based Clariti
The acquisition of Clariti caps an aggressive 12 months for S Central, which has also snapped-up NSW-based businesses Rich Computing alongside storage and virtualisation provider AGM IT.

With the deal expected to be signed and sealed in six weeks, S Central shows no sign of stopping its acquisition drive.

Peter Mavridis, managing director of S Central, said: “Clariti will boost our experience in security, infrastructure services and data management. Clariti will operate under the S Central brand from early next year, with Clariti executives Bruce McCurdy and Matt Chilcott to take senior roles at S Central. We have now established a strong presence in the Victorian and NSW market and are keen to push further into Queensland.”

Mavridis added the acquisition brings staff numbers at S Central to more than 200 people, doubling its 2006 figure.

Bruce McCurdy, managing director of Clariti, said: “Clariti has an established base of around 400 corporate and government customers in a diverse range of industries. Its key focus is government departments at both the state and local level. Other key vertical markets include finance and banking, telecommunications and manufacturing.”

Add iTnews as your trusted source

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Tags:

Most Read Articles

Gov to sustain key tech programs with new billions

Gov to sustain key tech programs with new billions

Australia Post's future IT estate to rely on 13 "platform ecosystems"

Australia Post's future IT estate to rely on 13 "platform ecosystems"

Vic gov invests $106m in communities and families IT transformation

Vic gov invests $106m in communities and families IT transformation

Telstra to drive AI into every part of its business

Telstra to drive AI into every part of its business

Log In

  |  Forgot your password?