IN Brief:
- IFS has completed the Softeon acquisition announced in December 2025.
- The combined unit targets tighter integration of ERP, WMS, and warehouse execution systems.
- IFS Softeon is pitching Industrial AI-driven orchestration across planning and floor execution.
IFS has completed its acquisition of Softeon and will operate the combined business as IFS Softeon, folding warehouse management and execution technology into its Industrial AI software portfolio.
The deal, first announced in December 2025, lands at a moment when many large operators are still running ERP and WMS as separate domains, with data latency and process handoffs creating blind spots in planning and execution. IFS is positioning the combined stack as an answer to that fragmentation, with unified visibility and control from planning layers through to warehouse-floor decisions.
IFS said the IFS Softeon unit will bring together IFS Cloud, built for asset-intensive industries, and Softeon’s warehouse management software and orchestration capabilities developed across more than two decades in tier-1 deployments. In its completion announcement, IFS said it already manages $2.4tn in critical assets, and that the combined organisation is processing millions of orders per month while supporting warehouse operations across 30 countries.
Softeon’s footprint adds credibility in complex warehouse environments, particularly where robotics and automation integration is no longer optional. The company’s customer base has included organisations spanning manufacturing, distribution, and service supply chains, and the platform has been used for warehouse management, warehouse execution, and distributed order management. For IFS, it is a direct expansion into a warehouse management systems market the company previously pegged at $8.6bn, while also tightening the link between production and distribution execution for manufacturers operating across multiple sites.
Mark Moffat, CEO of IFS, said: “The introduction of IFS Softeon means every enterprise wrestling with the complexity of modern supply chains now has access to something genuinely new: end-to-end supply chain intelligence, from strategic decision-making to physical execution on the warehouse floor. Industrial AI meets limitless warehouse execution. That’s a combination that will supercharge what’s possible for our customers.”
The warehouse-floor emphasis is also central to Softeon’s message about what changes under IFS ownership. Jim Hoefflin, CEO of IFS Softeon, said: “Joining IFS is the natural next step in Softeon’s journey. Our customers chose us because we deliver. Now, backed by IFS’s Industrial AI platform and global reach, we can deliver even more — AI-driven warehouse orchestration, robotics interoperability, and predictive inventory intelligence.”
IFS said the combined business will continue investing in the Softeon product set, with existing customers expected to see no disruption, while IFS customers gain access to a tier-1 WMS and execution layer without stitching together separate vendor roadmaps. For operators running high automation densities, the practical test will be whether the promised orchestration layer reduces integration overhead across robotics fleets, labour planning, yard visibility, and fulfilment priorities, while keeping deterministic execution in place when the AI layer is imperfect.



