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Rubicon based Documatics has announced today (14 June 2013) that it has successfully concluded a rigorous tender process to secure the Revenue Commissioners contract, side-lining national and international competition to secure the prestigious account. This is the latest in a string of global Public Sector successes for the company which include The Medical Council of Ireland, The Office of The State Public Defender (California, USA), The Department of Adoption & Child Custody Advocacy (Cook County, Illinois, USA), Department of Roads, (Queensland, Australia), The Department Water (New South Wales, Australia) and over 400 High Street and Corporate Legal clients around the world.

Under this new contract Documatics will provide a comprehensive case management platform to the Legal department of the Revenue Commissioners for the management of their active case files. Features of the system include: Document Management, Precedent Libraries, Brief Generator, Work Flow Management, Advanced Search, Risk Module, Integrated Scanning, Advanced Scheduling/Task Management, Automatic Time recording and Reporting.

Making the announcement, David McCarthy, Documatics General Manager (Ireland) said: ‘We attribute our success to a relentless focus on customer service, cutting edge technology, rapid deployment and competitive pricing. A significant amount of our new business comes from current client referrals, we believe this comes about through a combination of hard work from our dedicated team here in Documatics, the effort we put into on-going R&D and the great support of our enthusiastic user base’.

Welcoming the announcement, Leo McAdams, Enterprise Ireland, said: “Ireland’s indigenous software sector employs over 10,000 people, generates €1.7billion in annual revenue and has delivered double digit growth in exports for the last 3 years. Documatics is a great example of an innovative, dynamic software company in this sector. I hope this deal will help draw attention to the high level of technology developed by Irish owned companies here in Ireland and encourage more government bodies to use world class software made in Ireland.”