Interesting. I worked on output devices (and some very specialized ones at that) so I didn't really see a lot of the "software" side of the business. But I have seen some "not invented here" and rivalry between the Creo and Scitex teams. Part of the problem there was actually maintaining parallel products and teams that targeted the same markets.
Acquisitions are just tough. There were good people with good intentions and teams did try to work together. I spent some of my time trying to bridge the teams, with some success. What was missing is a good idea of how to restructure things to eliminate the duplicate efforts which is super tough when you're also dealing with large install bases. There were a few technical attempts to bridge the architectures and bit and pieces from "Creo" machines found their way into "Scitex" machines.
Acquisitions are just tough. There were good people with good intentions and teams did try to work together. I spent some of my time trying to bridge the teams, with some success. What was missing is a good idea of how to restructure things to eliminate the duplicate efforts which is super tough when you're also dealing with large install bases. There were a few technical attempts to bridge the architectures and bit and pieces from "Creo" machines found their way into "Scitex" machines.