Merrill Corp. has spent several years divesting its legacy printing businesses to remake itself as a virtual data room for those going through mergers and acquisitions.
On Tuesday, it changed its name to Datasite to reflect its primary product of the same name. The software allows mergers-and-acquisition professionals to collaborate and share documents via a secure online location.
"For us it's a five-year journey. The brand-name change is kind of the final step in the journey," said Rusty Wiley, president and CEO of Datasite.
The company over five years built the new technology platform to be a 100% service supported by SaaS technology with secure collaboration services while at the same time shedding its financial and regulatory printing businesses.
"We knew this [name change] was going to happen three years ago, but we didn't want a brand that wasn't completely aligned with what we are," Wiley said. "We had to get rid of all the businesses that weren't core to that."
With the final printing business sold in 2018 and a move from its longtime home in St. Paul to the Baker Center in downtown Minneapolis earlier this year, it was time to convert the company name to reflect its business.
Disruption caused by the coronavirus pandemic had them rethinking the timing of the name change.
"We went back and forth about should we stop this, but you put so much in motion to launch a new brand, pausing it is really painful," Wiley said. "Most know us, the people who use our product, as Datasite anyway."