Jan 19 2010
IntraLinks, the leading provider of critical
information exchange solutions, announced today that Daiichi Sankyo has
selected IntraLinks as the company's information sharing solution. Daiichi
Sankyo now joins the world's top 10 pharmaceutical companies that already
leverage IntraLinks' solution.
With more than 100 years of scientific expertise across a wide range of
therapeutic categories, Daiichi Sankyo draws upon a rich legacy of
innovation and a robust pipeline of promising new compounds. Today Daiichi
Sankyo faces many new challenges including developing new innovative
pharmaceuticals and ongoing communication with global regulatory bodies.
Prior to selecting IntraLinks, Daiichi Sankyo considered a number of
information sharing platforms for managing their highly confidential
business information in a multi-lingual environment without imposing
additional demand on the company's IT resources. With IntraLinks, Daiichi
Sankyo now manages, organizes, tracks and shares critical information both
inside and outside the enterprise with 24/7/365 live system support around
the world.
"We are extremely pleased to introduce the IntraLinks solution to
facilitate secure and speedy information exchange inside and outside the
company's firewall. We plan to use IntraLinks strategically across diverse
departments in the near future to raise our standard of operational
efficiency," said Mr. Yasuhiro Ikeda, General Manager, IT Strategy
Department of Daiichi Sankyo.
"We are delighted that IntraLinks has been selected by Daiichi Sankyo. As a
Software-as-a-Service solution, IntraLinks requires no additional hardware,
software, or additional demands on IT resources. Hence our customers can
gain tremendous cost efficiencies with a solution that can be implemented
in near real-time. We believe the decision by Daiichi Sankyo is yet
another testament to the effectiveness of our solution, which has already
been widely deployed within the pharmaceutical industry," said Rob Mullen,
EVP of Worldwide Sales for IntraLinks.
SOURCE: IntraLinks