What we do
We design, deploy, and run IBM Maximo for industrial and enterprise clients. Asset registers, work order workflows, preventive maintenance schedules, mobile field execution, integrations with ERP and historian systems — the whole thing, done with care.
We work across the full IBM Maximo Application Suite (MAS) — the core EAM application, plus Health, Predict, Visual Inspection, and Manage. New deployments, migrations from legacy Maximo, and the long-term care that turns a fresh install into a system that earns its keep. And, increasingly, the careful work of bringing AI into asset operations: anomaly detection on sensor data, predictive maintenance models, agentic workflows for routine work orders — adopted where they help, declined where they don't.
Industries
Manufacturing, utilities, transportation, oil and gas, pharmaceuticals, facilities. Wherever there are physical assets that need to be tracked, maintained, and accounted for, Maximo can help — and we can help with Maximo.
We've worked on plant-level deployments and group-wide rollouts. Greenfield implementations and decade-old systems being modernised. Audits, rescues, and quiet long-term care.
How we engage
Three typical shapes: a fixed-scope project (you know what you want built), a longer retainer (you want a Maximo team in your pocket), or an audit (you want fresh eyes on what you've already got).
Most engagements are senior, embedded, and hands-on. We don't sell roadmaps or transformations; we sell good Maximo, properly delivered. Where MAS calls for it we deploy on Red Hat OpenShift — on-premise, in the cloud, or hybrid — and we know our way around the operators, certificates, and storage classes that keep it healthy.
The first conversation is free and usually clarifies which shape fits. From there we put together a proposal — short, plain English, fixed numbers wherever possible.
About
Ipqii is the word my son made up for airplanes when he was first learning to talk. He'd hear the engines from inside the house, look up, and announce them.
That instinct — paying close attention, naming the moving thing — turns out to be a remarkably accurate description of asset management. The software is the easy part. Looking up is the work.