OpenText has grown through acquisition — Documentum, Micro Focus, and many content and information-management lines — leaving estates with overlapping products, mixed metrics and shelfware. Advisory work untangles and right-sizes that; this directory lists multi-vendor firms that do it, each with balanced pros and cons, in neutral order.
Last reviewed: 5 June 2026 · Reviewed quarterly · A directory, not a ranking
OpenText is one of the most acquisition-built portfolios in enterprise software: Documentum, Content Suite and Extended ECM, the former Micro Focus lines, plus analytics, security and B2B products absorbed over years. The licensing consequence is complexity — multiple metrics (named users, concurrent users, capacity, instances), overlapping products that do similar jobs, and entitlements inherited from deals signed by companies OpenText later bought. Advisory and optimization work is the buyer-side discipline of mapping what is actually deployed and used against that tangle of entitlements, then right-sizing before a renewal or a compliance review.
The recurring findings are shelfware from acquisitions (modules paid for but never rolled out), duplicate capability across overlapping products, metric mismatches where the licensed measure no longer reflects how the product is used, and maintenance running on entitlements that should have been retired. Because OpenText renewals and support are a meaningful annual line, trimming unused entitlement and consolidating onto the right metric compounds year over year.
No firm in the directory is OpenText-exclusive; OpenText advisory is delivered by experienced multi-vendor independents who handle complex, acquisition-built estates. They take no OpenText resale margin, so the advice on what to keep, drop or consolidate is not tied to a sale.
An engagement inventories the deployed OpenText products and their metrics, reconciles them against the contract and against real usage, and models the consolidated, right-sized position ahead of renewal. It pairs with a OpenText compliance assessment for the licence position and feeds the OpenText renewal.
Listed in neutral alphabetical order with balanced pros and cons — a directory, not a ranking.
German licensing consultancy offering multi-vendor SAM and audit-management support across the DACH region.
Canada-native independent boutique combining audit defense with data-driven license optimization across IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, Adobe and VMware.
Buyer-side independent licensing advisory with one of the broadest multi-vendor footprints, covering Oracle, Microsoft, SAP, IBM, Broadcom, Salesforce, ServiceNow and Workday.
DEMO — listings are compiled from public information and labelled demo until the verified registry is live. Firms are listed alphabetically, never ranked. Independence is shown as a pro; a reseller, Big-Four or vendor-side audit relationship is shown as a con — each a factual trade-off for you to weigh.
Indicative only — the levers that shape the number, not a promise of any specific result.
The figures below are indicative and illustrate where value typically sits in OpenText optimization. They are not quotes, not guarantees, and no specific outcome figures are published until the verified registry is live.
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The OpenText licensing world and the firms →
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EA, M365 and Azure right-sizing →
Soft-partitioning and licence design →
Indirect access and S/4HANA design →
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Direct answers to the questions OpenText buyers ask most.
OpenText has grown largely through acquisition — Documentum, Micro Focus, Content Suite and many other lines — so a single estate often carries multiple products that do similar things, several licensing metrics, and entitlements inherited from the companies OpenText bought. Untangling that is exactly what advisory and optimization work does.
Few do. OpenText advisory is normally delivered by experienced multi-vendor independents who handle complex, acquisition-built estates and know how to reconcile mixed metrics against real usage. The firms listed here cover OpenText as part of a broader multi-vendor practice, which is how this work is usually bought.
For most estates it is shelfware and overlap: modules and whole products inherited from acquisitions that were paid for but never fully deployed, plus duplicate capability across overlapping products. Retiring those and consolidating onto the right metric compounds because OpenText support and renewals are an annual line. Figures are indicative and depend on your estate.
A reseller can advise but earns margin on what you renew or buy, which is a conflict to weigh on right-sizing recommendations. Independent advisors take no resale margin, so the advice to drop or consolidate is not tied to a sale. This directory states that relationship as a factual trade-off, never as a verdict.
No. This is a directory, not a ranking. Firms are listed in neutral alphabetical order with balanced pros and cons so you can weigh them yourself. The matching service routes your brief to firms covering OpenText advisory; it never tells you who is best.
Yes. Browsing the directory and using the matching service are free for buyers. We publish no prices or fees and take no money from software publishers.
Acquisition-built estates hide overlap and unused modules. Tell us your situation and we route your brief to multi-vendor firms that right-size OpenText buyer-side. The directory and matching are free for buyers — no markup, no referral pressure, no firm is recommended over another.