EVIO Joins Altizon Partner Network as Industrial Automation Market Heats Up

By Ken Briodagh February 13, 2018

According to a recent release, Altizon, an IIoT platform company, and EVIO, an industrial automation engineering service provider, have joined forces to help their mutual clients accelerate delivery of IIoT projects. EVIO, which services a large client base of global brands in the chemical, automotive, manufacturing and energy management vertical industries, can now leverage the power of Altizon’s Datonis IIoT platform for large scale IIoT projects.

“IIoT is the upcoming technology for the industry to improve upon process, cost and profitability from a sustainability point of view,” said Atul Apte, Executive Director, EVIO. “We elected to partner with Altizon, a pioneer in IIoT, because of the rapid value the company and its team has created for global enterprises in smart manufacturing, modernizing asset performance management and delivering new business models for service. Their aggressive market approach, and priority support given to developing a robust partner ecosystem will enable us to meet the increased IIoT demand we are seeing from our clients in an accelerated fashion.”

The Internet of Things is a compelling investment for manufacturers: According to recent research from Statistica, Discrete Manufacturing, Transportation/Logistics, and Utilities will lead all industries in IoT spending by 2020, averaging $40 billion each.

“We are excited to have EVIO join our growing network of global partners,” said Vinay Nathan, CEO, Altizon. “Their depth of industry expertise lends itself perfectly to harnessing the power of Datonis IIoT Platform to support enterprises as they adopt IIoT for digital transformation.”

EVIO is a member of Altizon’s global partner network. Together with its partner ecosystem, Altizon is continuing the company’s mission to ease and accelerate IIoT adoption.


Ken Briodagh is a writer and editor with more than a decade of experience under his belt. He is in love with technology and if he had his druthers would beta test everything from shoe phones to flying cars.

Edited by Ken Briodagh


Original Page