We think that Tardis solutions speak for themselves. Yet sometimes, we like to let our clients do the talking.
Our case studies will give you all the information you need on how our solutions have improved our customers' businesses ... and their bottom lines.

| Fuji Xerox In its quest to operate a commercially sound, environmentally sustainable business, Fuji Xerox Australia demands that its IT infrastructure meets its high standards for the reduction of carbon emissions. To achieve this, Fuji Xerox Australia spent a number of years testing a virtualised environment with a two server, non-critical-application farm. This gave the company the opportunity to explore a more dynamic infrastructure that would improve service due to the clustered nature of the farm,reduce costs and manage risk. |


| Caritas Over recent years, an increase in the scale of natural disasters such as the Boxing Day tsunami and the East Timor crisis has led to higher awareness of aid and development issues in the community. At the same time, the improved effectiveness of aid agencies has increased public confidence in charitable organisations. Driven by those factors as well as stronger internal infrastructure and resources, Caritas Australia's revenue has more than doubled, enabling it to increase the scope and size of its projects to more than 200 programs across 34 countries. That growth meant that storage and IT infrastructure performance became key challenges and Caritas Australia needed to find a solution that would improve its responsiveness while reducing its costs |


| Geosciences Australia In 2008 Geoscience Australia needed an information storage system to turn 1.2 petabytes of low density seismic data tapes into a structured, organised information library that allowed easy access and facilitated long term storage without deterioration of the information held. |


| iNova iNova Pharmaceuticals was formed as a result of the buy-out of 3M Pharmaceuticals’ branded businesses in Asia Pacific and Africa in 2006. The new company had 12 months to detach from the 3M SAP® ERP system, leaving iNova with virtually no infrastructure at all. Given the size, timeframe and importance of this transition, iNova selected Tardis as its solution provider due to its excellent offer, extensive relationship with IBM and expertise across a broad range of IT solutions. |


| Moët Hennessy Moët Hennessy Australia went to market for managed IT services in 2005. Tardis Services was chosen to provide desktop, server and remote support to all staff in Australia and New Zealand. Eighteen months later, LVMH Group in France chose to consolidate its entire Windows domain and outsource to a single global services provider. That provider took ownership of Moët Hennessy Australia's business in 2007. Service levels fell dramatically, complaints from end users rose exponentially and after months spent trying to rectify the problems, Moët Hennessy went back to the marketplace, investigated its options and entered into a new agreement with Tardis. |
