User:Kemples/subpage

''I work for Booz Allen Hamilton's marketing & communications team. I am interested in helping the Wikipedia community keep the Booz Allen page up to date by providing factual information backed up by third-party resources. Given that my contributions will be seen as a conflict of interest, I would appreciate having someone proofread my proposed suggestion to make sure it is appropriate and neutral. I would like to add some information to the History/Organization section about our split with Booz & Co and recent acquisitions. Some of this language is taken directly from the Booz & Co Wikipedia page.''

In 2008, Booz & Company was spun off from Booz Allen Hamilton, in conjunction with a private equity takeover by The Carlyle Group. At the time, Booz & Company consisted of the commercial portion of Booz Allen Hamilton's consulting business, as well as all consulting operations with government entities outside the United States. After the spin-off, Booz Allen Hamilton then focused exclusively on U.S. government consulting endeavors. In 2011, however, when the three-year noncompete provision expired, Booz Allen Hamilton began building out its commercial consulting practice, focusing on technology integration and cybersecurity.

In 2010, Booz Allen went public again with an initial offering of 14,000,000 shares at $17 per share.

In 2012, Booz Allen acquired the defense systems engineering and support division of ARINC Inc. to build on existing engineering capabilities and broaden in technical areas such as C4ISR.

In 2014, Booz Allen expanded its health analytics capabilities with Epidemico, an informatics company providing early insights, continuous monitoring and consumer engagement for varied aspects of population health, including disease outbreaks, drug safety, supply chain vulnerabilities.

In 2015, Booz Allen acquired the software services unit of the Charleston, S.C. technology firm SPARC to grow capabilities in Agile software development.

In 2016, Booz Allen acquired Aquilent, an architect of .gov solutions for the Federal government to support Booz Allen’s capabilities in building citizen-focused digital services.

In 2017, Booz Allen acquired Morphick, extending services in advanced cyber defense services.

Kemples (talk) 06:19, 12 September 2018 (UTC)