Kingslake has been named a 2014 Progress Business Focus Award winner. The Progress Global Partner Awards is an elite programme highlighting Progress partners that have turned their ideas into business reality.
Kingslake, a Progress partner since 1996, helps mid to large businesses in the manufacturing, distribution, banking and finance sectors in Asia grow by increasing efficiency, productivity and customer service by providing innovative solutions built on the Progress suite of platforms by Kingslake and other Progress partners.
In 2014, Kingslake setup Asia Pacific’s first-ever aPaas platform, www.smartapps.lk, built entirely on Progress OpenEdge and Rollbase.
“In-depth understanding of our technology, creativity, functionality, end-user experience and overall commitment are some of the elements that set Kingslake apart from any other,” said Progress Vice President Channels Kimberly King.
“This year the standard of partner excellence was truly incredible and the example of success set forth by Kingslake only scratches the surface of what is possible, when you turn your ideas into action.”
Progress and its ecosystem of more than 2,000 Partners support more than four million users. The Progress Global Partner Awards programme was established to honour those partners that rise above and beyond, in a variety of categories, to not only meet, but exceed the needs of the end-user community. This year’s awards were extremely competitive, with more than 150 partners evaluated. Awards were presented in nine categories including – Partner of the Year, SaaS Excellence, Partner Collaboration, Business Focus, Innovator’s Award and more.
“Our longstanding relationship with Progress combined with the technology that is future proof has helped us remain relevant today and with our cloud-based solutions built on Progress will continue to keep us relevant,” said Kingslake Chairman Dr. S. Dharmavasan.
“The recognition given by Progress with the Business Focus Award is a fantastic reward for all the hard work of not only our team but also the Asia Pacific Progress team.”