Iron Mountain Incorporated is an information management services company. The Company’s information management services are divided into three service categories: records management services, data protection and recovery services, and information destruction services. It offers both physical services and technology solutions in each of these categories. These services are provided to address information management challenges, such as rising storage costs, litigation, regulatory compliance and disaster recovery. The Company’s North American Physical Business and International Physical Business segments offer physical records management services, data protection and recovery services and information destruction services, in their geographies. Its Worldwide Digital Business segment includes its online backup and recovery solutions for server data and personal computers, digital archiving services, e-Discovery services and intellectual property management services and is not limited to any particular geography.
In February, 2010, the Company acquired Mimosa Systems, Inc. (Mimosa). In August 2010, the Company divested the domain name management product line of its Worldwide Digital Business segment. In January 2011, it acquired the remaining 80% interest of its joint venture in Poland (Iron Mountain Poland Holdings Limited), in which the Company owns 100% of its Polish operations, which provide storage and records management services. Media formats can be divided into physical and electronic records. Physical records include paper documents, as well as all other non-electronic media, such as microfilm and microfiche, master audio and videotapes, film, X-radiation (X-rays) and blueprints. Physical records are divided into two categories: active and inactive. Active records relate to ongoing and recently completed activities or contain information that is frequently referenced. Inactive records consist of those records that are not needed for immediate access but which must be retained for legal, regulatory and compliance reasons or for occasional reference in support of ongoing business operations. In addition to its core records management services, it provides consulting, facilities management, fulfillment and other outsourcing services.
Electronic records include e-mail and various forms of magnetic media, such as computer tapes and hard drives and optical disks. Electronic records management focuses on the storage of, and related services for, computer media that is a backup copy of recently processed data or archival in nature. In addition to the physical rotation and storage of backup data that its physical business segments provide, its Worldwide Digital Business segment offers online backup services as an alternative way for businesses to transfer data to the Company, and to access the data they have stored with it. Online backup is a Web-based service that automatically backs up computer data from servers or directly from desktop and laptop computers over the Internet and stores it in one of the Company’s secure data centers. Core services consist primarily of the handling and transportation of stored records and information. In its secure shredding operations, core services consist primarily of the scheduled collection and shredding of records and documents generated by business operations. In addition, core services include hybrid services, recurring project revenues and maintenance fees associated with software license sales.
During the year ended December 31, 2010, the Company’s storage and core service revenues represented approximately 87% of its total consolidated revenues. In addition to the Company’s core services, it offers a range of complementary products and services, including special project work, data restoration projects, fulfillment services, consulting services and product sales, including software licenses, specially designed storage containers and related supplies. Iron Mountain is a partner to more than 150,000 corporate clients throughout North America, Europe, Latin America and Asia Pacific. The Company has a diversified customer base consisting of commercial, legal, banking, healthcare, accounting, insurance, entertainment and government organizations. As of December 31, 2010, it provided services in more than 35 countries on five continents and operated more than 1,000 facilities.
Records Management Services
The Company’s category of services, records management services consists primarily of the archival storage of records, both physical and digital, for long periods of time. Core to any records management program is the handling and transportation of those records being stored and the destruction of documents stored in records facilities upon the expiration of their scheduled retention periods. For physical records, this is accomplished through its service and courier operations. Other records management services include: the Company’s hybrid services, as well as Compliant Records Management and Consulting Services, Health Information Management Solutions, Film and Sound Archives, Energy Data Services, Discovery Services and other ancillary services.
Hard copy business records are stored in cartons packed by the customer for long periods of time with limited activity. For some customers it stores individual files on an open shelf basis and these files are more active. Storage charges are generally billed monthly on a per storage unit basis, usually either per carton or per cubic foot of records, and include the provision of space, racking, computerized inventory and activity tracking and physical security. Service and courier operations are an integral part of its records management program for all physical media. They include adding records to storage, temporary removal of records from storage, refiling of removed records, permanent withdrawals from storage and the destruction of records. Courier operations consist primarily of the pick-up and delivery of records upon customer request. As of December 31, 2010, the Company was utilizing a fleet of approximately 3,700 owned or leased vehicles.
The Company’s digital archiving services focus on archiving digital information with long-term preservation requirements. These services represent the digital analogy to its physical records management services. It offers records management services for industries, such as health care, or to address the needs of customers with more needs based on the critical nature of their records. Healthcare information services principally include the handling, storage, filing, processing and retrieval of medical records used by hospitals, private practitioners and other medical institutions. Healthcare information services also include recurring project work and ancillary services. Recurring project work includes the on-site removal of aged patient files and related computerized file indexing. Ancillary healthcare information services include release of information (medical record copying and delivery), temporary staffing, contract coding, facilities management and imaging.
Vital records contain data, such as master audio and video recordings, film and other information, such as energy data. The Company provides the same ancillary services for vital records as it provides for its other storage operations. Discovery Services consists of solutions designed to address the legal discovery and corporate governance needs of its customers. Those services and solutions allow the Company’s customers to collect, prepare, process, review, and produce data that may exist in either paper or digital form in response to internal investigations, litigation or regulatory requests. Its e-Discovery services help its customers identify, organize, analyze and review particularly relevant or responsive information from within the universe of electronic data generated during the normal course of their business. The Company offers a range of additional services, which customers may request or contract for on an individual basis. These services include conducting records inventories, packing records into cartons or other containers, and creating computerized indices of files and individual documents. It also provides services for the management of active records programs. The Company can provide these services, which include document and file processing and storage, both off-site at its own facilities and by supplying its own personnel to perform management functions on-site at the customer's premises.
Other complementary lines of business that the Company operates include fulfillment services and professional consulting services. Fulfillment services are performed by its wholly owned subsidiary, Iron Mountain Fulfillment Services, Inc. (IMFS). IMFS stores customer marketing literature and delivers this material to sales offices, trade shows and prospective customers' locations based on current and prospective customer orders. In addition, IMFS assembles custom marketing packages and orders and manages and provides detailed reporting on customer marketing literature inventories. Digital print allows marketing materials, such as brochures, direct mail, flyers, pamphlets and newsletters to be personalized to the recipient with the variable messages, graphics and content. The Company provides professional consulting services to customers, enabling them to develop and implement records and information management programs. It also sells a line of specially designed corrugated cardboard storage cartons.
Data Protection and Recovery Services
The Company’s data protection and recovery services are designed with regard to the off-site vaulting of data for disaster recovery and business continuity purposes. As is the case with its records management services, the Company provides data protection and recovery services for both physical and electronic records. It also offers intellectual property management services in this category. Physical data protection and recovery services consist of the storage and rotation of backup computer media as part of corporate disaster recovery and business continuity plans. Computer tapes, cartridges and disk packs are transported off-site by its courier operations on a scheduled basis to secure, climate-controlled facilities, where they are available to customers 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, to facilitate data recovery in the event of a disaster. Frequently, back-up tapes are then rotated from the Company’s facilities back to its customers' data centers. The Company also manages tape library relocations and support disaster recovery testing and execution.
Online backup is the Company’s Web-based service that automatically backs up computer data from servers or directly from desktop or laptop computers over the Internet and stores it in one of its secure data centers. Customers use its Connected backup for personal computers (PC) and Macintosh (Mac) software product for online backup of desktop or laptop computer data, and its LiveVault server data backup and recovery product for online backup of server data. Customers can choose the Company’s off-site hosted Software as a Service solution or they can license the software from it as part of a customer on-site solution. Through its intellectual property management services, the Company safeguards technology assets, such as software source code, object code and data, in secure, access-protected escrow accounts. Acting in this intermediary role, the Company helps document and maintain intellectual property integrity.
Information Destruction Services
The Company’s information destruction services consist primarily of physical secure shredding operations. Secure shredding is a natural extension of its hardcopy records management services, completing the lifecycle of a record, and includes the shredding of sensitive documents for corporate customers that, in many cases, also use the Company’s services for management of archival records. These services include the scheduled pick-up of loose office records, which customers accumulate in specially designed secure containers it provides. Complementary to the Company’s shredding operations is the sale of the resultant waste paper to third-party recyclers. Through a combination of plant-based shredding operations and mobile shredding units consisting of built trucks, it offers secure shredding services to its customers throughout the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia/New Zealand and Latin America.
By the early 1990s, Iron Mountain offered a full range of services, including business records storage and management, software escrow, healthcare records storage and management, active file management, vital records protection, data security services, records management consulting, facilities management, film and sound archive services, destruction services, disaster recovery support, and storage cartons and supplies. By the mid-1990s, Iron Mountain was clearly the dominant company within the industry, and continuing to grow at a record pace. The firm had 30 million square feet of storage space, and was providing its services to over 25,000 customers, including an ever-increasing number of Fortune 500 firms.
Ambitious as ever, and ready to take an even larger share of the market, management at the company decided to implement one of the most aggressive growth through acquisitions strategies in modern corporate history. During four years beginning in 1994, Iron Mountain acquired no less than 62 companies, enabling the firm to establish a new presence in 46 markets. In 1998 alone the company made 12 purchases, some of the more notable including the Arcus Group, Inc., which expanded Iron Mountain's data security service business and propelled it to number one within the industry; National Underground Storage, located in Pennsylvania, which significantly enhanced and strengthened the company's vital records and film and sound archive storage services; and a number of companies in the Pacific Northwest, which resulted in Iron Mountain becoming the leader in the region. All of these acquisitions were reorganized and incorporated into Iron Mountain's administrative and regional operations. In addition, Iron Mountain made a foray into Europe, acquiring British Data Management, Ltd., one of the two leaders in providing records storage and management services throughout the United Kingdom. Although Europe remained behind the United States in outsourcing records storage and management services, Iron Mountain's management saw the market as having great potential for the future and viewed the acquisition of British Data Management as a step toward further expansion on the continent, including France, Germany, and the Netherlands.
By the end of fiscal 1998, Iron Mountain could justifiably lay claim to the title of 'The World's Largest Records Management Company.' The company counted offices in nearly 70 cities across the United States, with additional offices planned due to the continuing acquisitions program. Most impressively, the company reported a 103 percent increase in revenues from 1997 to the end of 1998. Revenues for 1998 reached $423 million.
However, Iron Mountain did not stop there. In October 1999, the company announced a deal to merge with its chief rival, Pierce Leahy Corporation in a stock swap valued at around $1.1 billion. This 'reverse merger' was completed in February 2000, with Pierce Leahy assuming the Iron Mountain name. Together, the two powerhouses boasted over 115,000 clients through their 77 facilities in the United States, nine Canadian operations, and joint ventures in Mexico, South America, and Europe. The new Iron Mountain assumed its former rival's debt of about $570 million as well as the costs incurred in the transaction, while Pierce Leahy shareholders acquired about 35 percent of the new entity's stock. Prospects for the year 2000 looked just as bright. Early in the year, the company announced yet another acquisition, that of Data Storage Centers, Inc., of Jacksonville, Florida, which would give the company a greater presence in the southeastern states, particularly Florida. With the global business sector generating ever-greater amounts of data and information, whether paper or electronic, the demand for Iron Mountain's services can only grow.
Principal Subsidiaries: Comac Inc.; Arcus Data Security Inc.; British Data Management, Ltd.(U.K.)
Principal Competitors:Lason, Inc.; Administaff, Inc.
OVERALL
Beta: 0.99
Market Cap (Mil.): $6,466.93
Shares Outstanding (Mil.): 200.84
Annual Dividend: 0.75
Yield (%): 2.33
FINANCIALS
IRM Industry Sector
P/E (TTM): -- 9.29 16.98
EPS (TTM): -103.06 -- --
ROI: -0.00 2.83 3.28
ROE: -0.29 4.66 5.91
Statistics:
Public Company
Incorporated: 1951
Employees: 8,600
Sales: $519.5 million (1999)
Stock Exchanges: New York
Ticker Symbol: IMTN
NAIC: 49311 4225 General Warehousing and Storage
Key Dates:
1951: Iron Mountain opens for business in Boston.
1955: Company expands legal profession records storage and management services.
1960: Active file management services are expanded.
1970: Underground records storage facilities are enhanced.
1994: Major growth through acquisitions strategy begins.
1998: Company makes first oversees acquisition, British Data Management, Ltd., and reports revenues of $423 million at the end of the fiscal year.
1999: Iron Mountain acquires its top competitor Pierce Leahy.
Name Age Since Current Position
Reese, C. Richard 65 2011 Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer
McKeon, Brian 49 2007 Chief Financial Officer
Duale, Marc 58 2008 President - Iron Mountain International
Ebbighausen, Harold 56 2008 President, North America
Dauten, Kent 55 2009 Lead Independent Director
Ryan, Vincent 75 Director
Boden, Constantin 74 1990 Independent Director
Little, Arthur 67 1995 Independent Director
Bailey, Clarke 56 1998 Independent Director
Tucker, Laurie 54 2007 Independent Director
Lamach, Michael 47 2007 Independent Director
Halvorsen, Per-Kristian 59 2009 Independent Director
Verrecchia, Alfred 68 2010 Independent Director
Deninger, Paul 52 2010 Independent Director
Address:
745 Atlantic Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts 02111
U.S.A.
In February, 2010, the Company acquired Mimosa Systems, Inc. (Mimosa). In August 2010, the Company divested the domain name management product line of its Worldwide Digital Business segment. In January 2011, it acquired the remaining 80% interest of its joint venture in Poland (Iron Mountain Poland Holdings Limited), in which the Company owns 100% of its Polish operations, which provide storage and records management services. Media formats can be divided into physical and electronic records. Physical records include paper documents, as well as all other non-electronic media, such as microfilm and microfiche, master audio and videotapes, film, X-radiation (X-rays) and blueprints. Physical records are divided into two categories: active and inactive. Active records relate to ongoing and recently completed activities or contain information that is frequently referenced. Inactive records consist of those records that are not needed for immediate access but which must be retained for legal, regulatory and compliance reasons or for occasional reference in support of ongoing business operations. In addition to its core records management services, it provides consulting, facilities management, fulfillment and other outsourcing services.
Electronic records include e-mail and various forms of magnetic media, such as computer tapes and hard drives and optical disks. Electronic records management focuses on the storage of, and related services for, computer media that is a backup copy of recently processed data or archival in nature. In addition to the physical rotation and storage of backup data that its physical business segments provide, its Worldwide Digital Business segment offers online backup services as an alternative way for businesses to transfer data to the Company, and to access the data they have stored with it. Online backup is a Web-based service that automatically backs up computer data from servers or directly from desktop and laptop computers over the Internet and stores it in one of the Company’s secure data centers. Core services consist primarily of the handling and transportation of stored records and information. In its secure shredding operations, core services consist primarily of the scheduled collection and shredding of records and documents generated by business operations. In addition, core services include hybrid services, recurring project revenues and maintenance fees associated with software license sales.
During the year ended December 31, 2010, the Company’s storage and core service revenues represented approximately 87% of its total consolidated revenues. In addition to the Company’s core services, it offers a range of complementary products and services, including special project work, data restoration projects, fulfillment services, consulting services and product sales, including software licenses, specially designed storage containers and related supplies. Iron Mountain is a partner to more than 150,000 corporate clients throughout North America, Europe, Latin America and Asia Pacific. The Company has a diversified customer base consisting of commercial, legal, banking, healthcare, accounting, insurance, entertainment and government organizations. As of December 31, 2010, it provided services in more than 35 countries on five continents and operated more than 1,000 facilities.
Records Management Services
The Company’s category of services, records management services consists primarily of the archival storage of records, both physical and digital, for long periods of time. Core to any records management program is the handling and transportation of those records being stored and the destruction of documents stored in records facilities upon the expiration of their scheduled retention periods. For physical records, this is accomplished through its service and courier operations. Other records management services include: the Company’s hybrid services, as well as Compliant Records Management and Consulting Services, Health Information Management Solutions, Film and Sound Archives, Energy Data Services, Discovery Services and other ancillary services.
Hard copy business records are stored in cartons packed by the customer for long periods of time with limited activity. For some customers it stores individual files on an open shelf basis and these files are more active. Storage charges are generally billed monthly on a per storage unit basis, usually either per carton or per cubic foot of records, and include the provision of space, racking, computerized inventory and activity tracking and physical security. Service and courier operations are an integral part of its records management program for all physical media. They include adding records to storage, temporary removal of records from storage, refiling of removed records, permanent withdrawals from storage and the destruction of records. Courier operations consist primarily of the pick-up and delivery of records upon customer request. As of December 31, 2010, the Company was utilizing a fleet of approximately 3,700 owned or leased vehicles.
The Company’s digital archiving services focus on archiving digital information with long-term preservation requirements. These services represent the digital analogy to its physical records management services. It offers records management services for industries, such as health care, or to address the needs of customers with more needs based on the critical nature of their records. Healthcare information services principally include the handling, storage, filing, processing and retrieval of medical records used by hospitals, private practitioners and other medical institutions. Healthcare information services also include recurring project work and ancillary services. Recurring project work includes the on-site removal of aged patient files and related computerized file indexing. Ancillary healthcare information services include release of information (medical record copying and delivery), temporary staffing, contract coding, facilities management and imaging.
Vital records contain data, such as master audio and video recordings, film and other information, such as energy data. The Company provides the same ancillary services for vital records as it provides for its other storage operations. Discovery Services consists of solutions designed to address the legal discovery and corporate governance needs of its customers. Those services and solutions allow the Company’s customers to collect, prepare, process, review, and produce data that may exist in either paper or digital form in response to internal investigations, litigation or regulatory requests. Its e-Discovery services help its customers identify, organize, analyze and review particularly relevant or responsive information from within the universe of electronic data generated during the normal course of their business. The Company offers a range of additional services, which customers may request or contract for on an individual basis. These services include conducting records inventories, packing records into cartons or other containers, and creating computerized indices of files and individual documents. It also provides services for the management of active records programs. The Company can provide these services, which include document and file processing and storage, both off-site at its own facilities and by supplying its own personnel to perform management functions on-site at the customer's premises.
Other complementary lines of business that the Company operates include fulfillment services and professional consulting services. Fulfillment services are performed by its wholly owned subsidiary, Iron Mountain Fulfillment Services, Inc. (IMFS). IMFS stores customer marketing literature and delivers this material to sales offices, trade shows and prospective customers' locations based on current and prospective customer orders. In addition, IMFS assembles custom marketing packages and orders and manages and provides detailed reporting on customer marketing literature inventories. Digital print allows marketing materials, such as brochures, direct mail, flyers, pamphlets and newsletters to be personalized to the recipient with the variable messages, graphics and content. The Company provides professional consulting services to customers, enabling them to develop and implement records and information management programs. It also sells a line of specially designed corrugated cardboard storage cartons.
Data Protection and Recovery Services
The Company’s data protection and recovery services are designed with regard to the off-site vaulting of data for disaster recovery and business continuity purposes. As is the case with its records management services, the Company provides data protection and recovery services for both physical and electronic records. It also offers intellectual property management services in this category. Physical data protection and recovery services consist of the storage and rotation of backup computer media as part of corporate disaster recovery and business continuity plans. Computer tapes, cartridges and disk packs are transported off-site by its courier operations on a scheduled basis to secure, climate-controlled facilities, where they are available to customers 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, to facilitate data recovery in the event of a disaster. Frequently, back-up tapes are then rotated from the Company’s facilities back to its customers' data centers. The Company also manages tape library relocations and support disaster recovery testing and execution.
Online backup is the Company’s Web-based service that automatically backs up computer data from servers or directly from desktop or laptop computers over the Internet and stores it in one of its secure data centers. Customers use its Connected backup for personal computers (PC) and Macintosh (Mac) software product for online backup of desktop or laptop computer data, and its LiveVault server data backup and recovery product for online backup of server data. Customers can choose the Company’s off-site hosted Software as a Service solution or they can license the software from it as part of a customer on-site solution. Through its intellectual property management services, the Company safeguards technology assets, such as software source code, object code and data, in secure, access-protected escrow accounts. Acting in this intermediary role, the Company helps document and maintain intellectual property integrity.
Information Destruction Services
The Company’s information destruction services consist primarily of physical secure shredding operations. Secure shredding is a natural extension of its hardcopy records management services, completing the lifecycle of a record, and includes the shredding of sensitive documents for corporate customers that, in many cases, also use the Company’s services for management of archival records. These services include the scheduled pick-up of loose office records, which customers accumulate in specially designed secure containers it provides. Complementary to the Company’s shredding operations is the sale of the resultant waste paper to third-party recyclers. Through a combination of plant-based shredding operations and mobile shredding units consisting of built trucks, it offers secure shredding services to its customers throughout the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia/New Zealand and Latin America.
By the early 1990s, Iron Mountain offered a full range of services, including business records storage and management, software escrow, healthcare records storage and management, active file management, vital records protection, data security services, records management consulting, facilities management, film and sound archive services, destruction services, disaster recovery support, and storage cartons and supplies. By the mid-1990s, Iron Mountain was clearly the dominant company within the industry, and continuing to grow at a record pace. The firm had 30 million square feet of storage space, and was providing its services to over 25,000 customers, including an ever-increasing number of Fortune 500 firms.
Ambitious as ever, and ready to take an even larger share of the market, management at the company decided to implement one of the most aggressive growth through acquisitions strategies in modern corporate history. During four years beginning in 1994, Iron Mountain acquired no less than 62 companies, enabling the firm to establish a new presence in 46 markets. In 1998 alone the company made 12 purchases, some of the more notable including the Arcus Group, Inc., which expanded Iron Mountain's data security service business and propelled it to number one within the industry; National Underground Storage, located in Pennsylvania, which significantly enhanced and strengthened the company's vital records and film and sound archive storage services; and a number of companies in the Pacific Northwest, which resulted in Iron Mountain becoming the leader in the region. All of these acquisitions were reorganized and incorporated into Iron Mountain's administrative and regional operations. In addition, Iron Mountain made a foray into Europe, acquiring British Data Management, Ltd., one of the two leaders in providing records storage and management services throughout the United Kingdom. Although Europe remained behind the United States in outsourcing records storage and management services, Iron Mountain's management saw the market as having great potential for the future and viewed the acquisition of British Data Management as a step toward further expansion on the continent, including France, Germany, and the Netherlands.
By the end of fiscal 1998, Iron Mountain could justifiably lay claim to the title of 'The World's Largest Records Management Company.' The company counted offices in nearly 70 cities across the United States, with additional offices planned due to the continuing acquisitions program. Most impressively, the company reported a 103 percent increase in revenues from 1997 to the end of 1998. Revenues for 1998 reached $423 million.
However, Iron Mountain did not stop there. In October 1999, the company announced a deal to merge with its chief rival, Pierce Leahy Corporation in a stock swap valued at around $1.1 billion. This 'reverse merger' was completed in February 2000, with Pierce Leahy assuming the Iron Mountain name. Together, the two powerhouses boasted over 115,000 clients through their 77 facilities in the United States, nine Canadian operations, and joint ventures in Mexico, South America, and Europe. The new Iron Mountain assumed its former rival's debt of about $570 million as well as the costs incurred in the transaction, while Pierce Leahy shareholders acquired about 35 percent of the new entity's stock. Prospects for the year 2000 looked just as bright. Early in the year, the company announced yet another acquisition, that of Data Storage Centers, Inc., of Jacksonville, Florida, which would give the company a greater presence in the southeastern states, particularly Florida. With the global business sector generating ever-greater amounts of data and information, whether paper or electronic, the demand for Iron Mountain's services can only grow.
Principal Subsidiaries: Comac Inc.; Arcus Data Security Inc.; British Data Management, Ltd.(U.K.)
Principal Competitors:Lason, Inc.; Administaff, Inc.
OVERALL
Beta: 0.99
Market Cap (Mil.): $6,466.93
Shares Outstanding (Mil.): 200.84
Annual Dividend: 0.75
Yield (%): 2.33
FINANCIALS
IRM Industry Sector
P/E (TTM): -- 9.29 16.98
EPS (TTM): -103.06 -- --
ROI: -0.00 2.83 3.28
ROE: -0.29 4.66 5.91
Statistics:
Public Company
Incorporated: 1951
Employees: 8,600
Sales: $519.5 million (1999)
Stock Exchanges: New York
Ticker Symbol: IMTN
NAIC: 49311 4225 General Warehousing and Storage
Key Dates:
1951: Iron Mountain opens for business in Boston.
1955: Company expands legal profession records storage and management services.
1960: Active file management services are expanded.
1970: Underground records storage facilities are enhanced.
1994: Major growth through acquisitions strategy begins.
1998: Company makes first oversees acquisition, British Data Management, Ltd., and reports revenues of $423 million at the end of the fiscal year.
1999: Iron Mountain acquires its top competitor Pierce Leahy.
Name Age Since Current Position
Reese, C. Richard 65 2011 Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer
McKeon, Brian 49 2007 Chief Financial Officer
Duale, Marc 58 2008 President - Iron Mountain International
Ebbighausen, Harold 56 2008 President, North America
Dauten, Kent 55 2009 Lead Independent Director
Ryan, Vincent 75 Director
Boden, Constantin 74 1990 Independent Director
Little, Arthur 67 1995 Independent Director
Bailey, Clarke 56 1998 Independent Director
Tucker, Laurie 54 2007 Independent Director
Lamach, Michael 47 2007 Independent Director
Halvorsen, Per-Kristian 59 2009 Independent Director
Verrecchia, Alfred 68 2010 Independent Director
Deninger, Paul 52 2010 Independent Director
Address:
745 Atlantic Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts 02111
U.S.A.