Startups

Why Bucks County’s EPAM acquired this Boston design firm

Continuum designed the Swiffer 30 years ago, among other consumer touchstones. Now the firm is part of Newtown Square's EPAM.

EPAM employs 1,600 in the U.S. (Video by EPAM)

Bucks County software company EPAM has added a second Boston office after acquiring design firm Continuum.

The acquisition adds 150 staffers to EPAM’s U.S. workforce of 1,600, the majority of whom are based in its Newtown, Conshohocken and Philadelphia locations.

Including its offices in Europe and Asia, EPAM employs close to 26,000. No financial terms from the deal were immediately disclosed.

The Boston company is known for designing in prototyping and designing products like the Swiffer, which it developed for Procter & Gamble in the 1990s. It also put a modern spin on the shopping cart for Target.

Why did the move make sense? Per the company, Continuum’s spaces for collaboration will allow EPAM to combine advanced prototyping technologies including mechanical, electrical and robotics engineering, along with AR/VR experimentation tools.

“The addition of Continuum expands our global presence in strategic markets in North America, Europe and Asia and brings to EPAM a deeper and more transformational, human-centered design approach, which will help us to better connect our customers’ physical and digital business,” said Arkadiy Dobkin, EPAM’s CEO and president.

EPAM works with “120 companies from the Fortune 1000 list,” and has provided companies like Sephora and Vodafone with digital solutions.

Companies: EPAM
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Donate to the Journalism Fund

Your support powers our independent journalism. Unlike most business-media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational contributions.

Trending

I know civic technology. This is not civic technology.

Philly restaurant analytics startup ClearCOGS raises $3.8M — thanks to its Chicago presence

State-run immigrant support offices are stuck in limbo across the mid-Atlantic

How to build AI people actually want, according to the product lead for Amazon Alexa

Technically Media