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Cantor Fitzgerald, a Kyriba Treasury customer evaluated GTreasury

Citigroup, a VestmarkONE customer evaluated BlackRock Aladdin Wealth

Swedbank, a Temenos T24 customer evaluated Oracle Flexcube

Westpac NZ, an Infosys Finacle customer evaluated nCino Bank OS

Moog, an UKG AutoTime customer evaluated Workday Time and Attendance

Wayfair, a Korber HighJump WMS customer just evaluated Manhattan WMS

Michelin, an e2open customer evaluated Oracle Transportation Management

Cantor Fitzgerald, a Kyriba Treasury customer evaluated GTreasury

List of DSpace Software Customers

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Logo Customer Industry Empl. Revenue Country Vendor Application Category When SI Insight Insight Source
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Education 2080 $161M United States DSpace Software DSpace Software Document Management 2002 n/a In 2002, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Libraries developed and launched DSpace Software as DSpace@MIT to capture, preserve and provide open access to MIT’s scholarly outputs. The DSpace Software implementation in the Document Management category went live in fall 2002 and served as the original reference implementation of the DSpace repository platform for theses, technical reports, datasets and faculty publications, supporting institutional research and knowledge management functions. The implementation concentrated on core repository capabilities aligned with Document Management functionality, including digital object ingestion, metadata management, preservation workflows and public access delivery. Configuration supported multiple scholarly object types with collection-level organization and institutional branding to accommodate theses, technical reports, research datasets and faculty publications. Operational ownership remained with MIT Libraries in Cambridge Massachusetts, positioning the service as an institutional repository for research and knowledge management across academic departments. The fall 2002 go live and reference implementation role documented an operational architecture and deployment patterns that informed broader DSpace community adoption.
University Of Cambridge United Kingdom Education 11500 $3.2B United Kingdom DSpace Software DSpace Software Document Management 2003 n/a In 2003, the University Of Cambridge United Kingdom established its institutional repository Apollo underpinned by DSpace Software. Apollo serves the research and knowledge management process and was implemented as a Document Management solution to preserve and share the University’s research outputs from Cambridge, UK. The deployment uses DSpace Software as the core repository platform, configured for metadata management, long term digital preservation, content ingestion workflows and discovery indexing to improve findability. Configuration work focused on repository object modeling, controlled metadata schemas and ingest pipelines to support institutional deposit and researcher-driven submissions. Apollo has been upgraded over time and integrated with Symplectic Elements for research information workflows, ORCID for author identity linkage, and DOI minting for persistent identifiers, enabling synchronized metadata flow and automated identifier assignment across systems. These integrations position the DSpace Software implementation to support provenance, citation linking and external discoverability of Cambridge research outputs. Operational ownership is aligned with research and knowledge management, with repository governance emphasizing stewardship, metadata standards and staged upgrade rollouts to improve discoverability and interoperability across university departments and external research services.
World Bank Banking and Financial Services 13122 $5.0B United States DSpace Software DSpace Software Document Management 2012 n/a In 2012, World Bank deployed DSpace Software to power its Open Knowledge Repository as its Document Management solution for research and knowledge management. The DSpace Software implementation based in Washington, D.C. was configured to publish, preserve, and disseminate the Bank’s research outputs, providing standardized metadata, OAI-PMH interoperability, and mechanisms to improve discoverability and downloads worldwide. The implementation emphasized core Document Management capabilities including content ingest and curation, metadata normalization and controlled vocabularies, preservation workflows, access control and rights management, and an OAI-PMH endpoint for harvestable records. DSpace Software was configured to expose standardized metadata schemas to enable interoperability with external harvesters and repositories, and to support global dissemination of research content. Operational ownership was aligned with World Bank research and knowledge management teams, with policy controls for metadata standards and open access publishing embedded into repository workflows. The deployment centralized publication and preservation processes for the Bank’s research outputs, enabling consistent metadata governance and global access through the Open Knowledge Repository launched on DSpace Software.
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