InterVision, also a provider of managed IT services, bought out Infiniti with the help of Huron Capital. Huron, a Detroit-based private equity firm, invested in InterVision in May 2016. This is InterVision’s fourth deal with the backing of Huron; it has also merged with or acquired Bluelock, Netelligent and Independent Technology Group..
Folsom-based Infiniti provides a range of services including DevOps, cloud and hybrid storage architecture and security. The company has official partner status with both Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, two of the largest cloud infrastructure providers on the market.
“Infiniti has one of the deepest benches of AWS and Azure experts in the U.S., with 15 years of experience delivering advanced cloud services to hundreds of organizations,” said InterVision CEO Aaron Stone in a press release. “They bring with them the added benefit of extensive expertise in the public sector space.”
Infiniti got its start 15 years ago working for the California State Teachers Retirement System as well as the state’s Department of Transportation, and has gone on to do work for several other departments. It has also worked for the Alabama Office of Information Technology, according to its website.
The California Department of Technology recently approved Infiniti as a member of its vendor pool for agile development, part of an ongoing push at the state level to rethink its technology procurement and work more iteratively on the kinds of large, multiyear system projects that have failed in the past.
InterVision, which has headquarters in Santa Clara and St. Louis, provides many of the same services and has some experience working with government as well, according to a California contracting database.
Editor's note: The number of companies InterVision has acquired has been corrected.