Cincinnati, 45225, OH,
United States
Meyer Tool Technographics
Discover the latest software purchases and digital transformation initiatives being undertaken by Meyer Tool and its business and technology executives. Each quarter our research team identifies on-prem and cloud applications that are being used by the 1500 Meyer Tool employees from the public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources.
During our research, we have identified that Meyer Tool has purchased the following applications: Google Cloud Platform (GCP) for Application Hosting and Computing Services in 2021, Malwarebytes for Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) in 2017 and the related IT decision-makers and key stakeholders.
Our database provides customer insight and contextual information on which enterprise applications and software systems Meyer Tool is running and its propensity to invest more and deepen its relationship with Google , Cloudflare , Malwarebytes or identify new suppliers as part of their overall Digital and IT transformation projects to stay competitive, fend off threats from disruptive forces, or comply with internal mandates to improve overall enterprise efficiency.
We have been analyzing Meyer Tool revenues, which have grown to $300.0 million in 2024, plus its IT budget and roadmap, cloud software purchases, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions for Meyer Tool intention to invest in emerging technologies such as AI, Machine Learning, IoT, Blockchain, Autonomous Database or in cloud-based ERP, HCM, CRM, EPM, Procurement or Treasury applications.
IaaS
Vendor |
Previous System |
Application |
Category |
Market |
VAR/SI |
When |
Live |
Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Legacy | Google Cloud Platform (GCP) | Application Hosting and Computing Services | IaaS | n/a | 2021 | 2021 |
In 2021 Meyer Tool deployed Google Cloud Platform (GCP) to host its public website and web-facing applications, aligning cloud infrastructure with its Application Hosting and Computing Services needs. The deployment of Google Cloud Platform (GCP) supports primary web hosting responsibilities for Meyer Tool, making the company name, application name, and Apps Category explicit in the hosting relationship.
Architecturally the implementation centers on cloud compute and scalable object storage for serving site content, combined with content delivery capabilities and edge caching to optimize global access. Standard Application Hosting and Computing Services capabilities such as load balancing, secure transport termination, autoscaling of web processes, and centralized logging and monitoring are described as part of the hosting profile to reflect typical category functionality.
Operational coverage is focused on the Meyer Tool public website and associated web assets, with ownership and operational control residing in corporate IT and web operations while supporting marketing and product catalog functions. Governance follows cloud hosting patterns, including centralized infrastructure management, access control for web deployments, and monitoring-driven operational workflows to manage uptime and content updates.
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Content Delivery Network | IaaS |
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2020 | 2020 |
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CyberSecurity
Vendor |
Previous System |
Application |
Category |
Market |
VAR/SI |
When |
Live |
Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malwarebytes | Legacy | Malwarebytes | Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) | CyberSecurity | n/a | 2017 | 2017 |
In 2017, Meyer Tool implemented Malwarebytes Endpoint Protection as part of an Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) strategy for its endpoints. The deployment targeted a subset of the company’s 1,530 endpoints that were used by roughly 50 users with administrative or executive system access, while the remainder of endpoints continued to be protected by VIPRE.
Malwarebytes Endpoint Protection was applied as the EDR layer, providing behavior-based detection and containment workflows common to Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) solutions, along with agent level real-time scanning and remediation. The architecture created a two tier endpoint security model, with an EDR-protected privileged tier for high risk accounts and a broader antivirus tier using VIPRE for general users, enabling focused policy and control on systems with elevated access.
When a Ryuk ransomware attack encrypted most endpoints, Meyer Tool’s IT team executed an incident response and engaged Malwarebytes for expert guidance, and the systems running Malwarebytes were the only endpoints that did not get hit by Ryuk. Governance and response processes were adjusted to leverage vendor-supported incident response and to prioritize containment and remediation activities around the EDR-protected privileged cohort, while coordinating recovery for the VIPRE-protected population.
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