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Friday, 04 September 2015 16:05

Dmax company in Germany Tedlog making headway in Reverse Logistics

TedlogTedlog.de is a German company based in Cologne that focusses on IT solutions for Reverse Logistics. This company was co-founded in 2013 and is partly owned by Dmax.tv together with Tomlog.de, a consulting firm specialising in waste management.  

Tedlog.de clients, which include sector leaders like Mammut, Logex, Ecocycle, Noventiz, GfR, are mainly recycling companies, generic or specialised collectors and logistics firms; these businesses operate under a strict German regime which necessitates constant legal compliance, system audits, checks and balances. This is where Tedlog.de’s software has tapped into by providing tried and tested solutions that automate processes, which will otherwise need a multitude of hours and technical input. Solutions like Core, Vertrag, Reporting, Stoffstrom, Dual, Meldung and Auftrag have been created in Malta with the main architecture and system analysis directed by leading experts in the field like Jens A. Thomas and Uwe Schoenfeld.
 
 “Together with Tedlog GmbH we successfully realised ECODATEX, a project for controlling and verifying mass flows. Tedlog is an important and professional contact person and partner who supported us excellently during the development of ECODATEX. Moreover, Tedlog did not only help us in running our system and taking care of the software development, but continues to be an important partner who gives us helpful advice for the creation of ECODATEX.” - Dirk Stolze, Director of Ecocycle GmbH, a specialised associate waste & logistics audit firm.Ray de Bono Tedlog

Ray de Bono, CEO for Dmax .tv in Malta sees Tedlog expanding in Germany with additional specialists employed in Cologne this year to compliment the existent team and bolster client support. ‘Our IT team in Malta is delivering and has over the past 10 years acquired outstanding - if not unique levels of knowledge - on Reverse logistics on the island; the future looks very exciting for Tedlog in Germany’.