DMD Systems Recovery has detailed an aggressive, multi-phase acquisition strategy in the IT asset disposition (ITAD) space and confirmed that the first deal under that framework involves acquiring the Lifespan ITAD business from Bluum Technology.
Lifespan is a services-focused ITAD provider founded in 2002 that has historically worked with large enterprise customers and was operated as an ITAD subsidiary within Bluum prior to the divestiture. In a discussion with Resource Recycling’s David Daoud, DMD CEO Aaron Zaper characterized Lifespan as one of the original pioneers in the enterprise ITAD market, with a client base that includes Fortune 1000 organizations.
Lifespan holds certifications including R2v3, NAID, ISO 9001, ISO 14001 and ISO 45001, and both companies have emphasized recovery, reuse and “ITAD done right” as core to their models, according to emails detailing the acquisition and public certification listings.
DMD noted that both organizations share a services-led approach to enterprise ITAD, built around a governed, programmatic model that aims to cover “all assets [and] all locations” for large customers through structured programs rather than one-off pickups. That framing aligns with DMD’s broader Reuse-First positioning and its focus on enterprise clients as presented in marketing materials and recent analyst coverage.
Three-phase M&A roadmap
The Lifespan deal is the first acquisition DMD plans to publicly announce under its new roadmap. Indeed, DMD CEO Aaron Zeper laid out a three-bucket M&A framework that starts with smaller regional ITAD firms and extends to adjacent services and potential “game changer” targets. The first phase focuses on acquiring “standard ITAD companies that are typically smaller or regional” whose core business is either data center or end user compute and whose customers align with the Fortune 5000 or Cloud 500.
DMD stated that these targets must be “services oriented,” with their business model relying on services delivered, and indicated it is “not overly concerned with business performance [or] operational expertise” in this bucket, describing the play as “rinse and repeat” and suggesting it could complete four to eight such deals per year across North America.
The second phase targets adjacent service offerings once the initial consolidation is underway. Zeper cited repair, lifecycle services, vertical-specific offerings, and some degree of vertical integration toward demanufacturing or retail sales as examples of this category. These acquisitions would be evaluated more heavily on talent, expertise and the incremental services they bring into DMD’s portfolio.
The third phase, described as “game changer” opportunities, covers some of the largest ITAD providers globally that may be exploring a sale. DMD said that these companies are often larger than DMD itself but that it believes its services-centric, programmatic approach could extract additional value if such a deal occurred.
Zeper emphasized that these large-platform transactions are not the foundation of its strategy but are included so the company can react quickly if they materialize. He noted that such deals are “unlikely” and that DMD would operate in a “reactionary mode” with respect to them.
Scale through systems and governance
DMD’s acquisition strategy is intertwined with how it defines scale in the ITAD business. In the strategy discussion, Zeper noted that “geographic reach, consistent delivery, and the efficiencies that come with scale are extremely important and will allow recursive growth,” but drew a distinction between scaling physical processing and scaling programmatic, systems-driven functions. He noted that “processing of a single asset” does not generate much scale because physical labor requirements increase in a mostly linear fashion as asset volumes grow.
He also added that the efficiencies that DMD is targeting come from reporting functionality, integrations into platforms like ServiceNow and other IT service management tools, and repair and redeployment capabilities housed in larger, purpose-built facilities. DMD also pointed to the compounding effect of brand awareness and the “natural synergies from geographic coverage and larger organizations with span of control and specialization” as it adds more locations and capabilities.
The company said it is building its service catalog, program management, tools and systems with “modularity in mind,” so newly acquired operations can be added more easily into a governed enterprise ITAD framework.
Private equity backing and buy-and-build context
The Lifespan acquisition comes after Tailwind Capital, a New York-based private equity firm, acquired a majority stake in DMD Systems Recovery in 2025. Tailwind and DMD described that deal as a “strategic investment” that positions DMD as a platform for further expansion in ITAD. In public comments about the DMD transaction, Tailwind and its financing partners highlighted plans to accelerate DMD’s growth, expand its services portfolio and pursue an acquisitive platform strategy in ITAD. Against that backdrop, DMD’s three-phase roadmap and the Lifespan deal represent early steps in executing a buy-and-build thesis in enterprise-focused ITAD.
Enterprise programs and market implications
Both DMD and Lifespan market themselves as enterprise ITAD providers capable of managing multi-location, multi-asset programs for large organizations. Lifespan’s materials highlight a full range of IT asset disposition services, including hardware recycling and disposal, data destruction and value recovery, backed by certifications such as R2 and NAID AAA. DMD emphasizes Reuse-First ITAD built around governance, transparency and adherence to R2v3, ISO 9001, ISO 14001, ISO 45001, ISO 27001 and NAID AAA standards.
As Zeper noted in a strategy discussion, “ITAD done right should be programmatic covering all assets [and] all locations” — a view shared by growing numbers of large enterprises and public-sector customers that ITAD providers integrate with IT asset management workflows, sustainability reporting frameworks and data protection requirements. The Lifespan acquisition adds another enterprise-focused, certified provider into that structure and continues a broader trend of consolidation and private equity activity in the ITAD sector.





















