Forbes article on BAY. The Art of the Comeback. [ASND positive reference]
Excerpt: "The best long-term opportunity, however, may be in the carrier space. "That's going to be a huge strong market over the next five years," Armstrong says.
But right now the carrier space is Bay's weakest area. Its product line is incomplete compared with those of Cisco and Ascend Communications Inc., and analysts doubt that Bay can catch up."
forbes.com
By Daniel Lyons
Can Bay Networks Inc.'s top-notch products save the day? In the booming networking industry, the Santa Clara, Calif. company is forced to play second fiddle to Cisco Systems.
The question is not just academic. Bay (BAY) knows how to develop great networking gear, but Cisco knows how to sell. "We have prospects where the guy in the lab will do a side-by-side comparison and decide that Bay is the best. But when he takes that recommendation to the CIO or the CEO, the Cisco sales rep is up there selling to those guys--and we're not," says Lloyd Carney, executive vice president at Bay.
That is one reason why Cisco has sales of more than $6 billion a year, compared with Bay's $2 billion. For many customers Cisco is the safe choice.
Carney says Bay is targeting top management in a subtle shift away from the geekier technology vice presidents. The company is also putting together slick advertising on TV and in business magazines, hoping to build brand awareness among people other than the nerds in the lab.
But Bay is hoping that its better products and not its sales techniques triumph in the end. Recently the company was first to market with a new kind of switch that combines features of both routing and switching. (Switches rely on hardware and are faster and cheaper, while routers use software and can handle more types of data.) These so-called Layer 3 switches are the Next Big Thing in networking, since they can do what a router does, at 1/10th the cost.
"Shame on us for setting expectations too high."
Cisco is still relying heavily on old-fashioned routers, and is being slow about making the transition. Although it has announced a Layer 3 switch product, "they're not going to ship until this summer, and that's based on what they've preannnounced. Who knows when they'll actually ship?" Carney says.
Bay's Layer 3 switch, called Accelar, has another advantage because it can handle Gigabit Ethernet, the newest version of the networking standard. Gigabit Ethernet moves data at 1,000-megabits-per-second--100 times faster than ordinary (10-mbps) Ethernet, and 10 times faster than so-called Fast Ethernet, which moves data at 100-mbps.
Accelar sales have been strong, Carney says. But not as strong as some had hoped. Although 55% of the company's revenues in the latest quarter came from "new" products, roughly 29% of its sales are still derived from its local area network switch line, which is subject to constant price drops.
Bay results disappointed Wall Street. Third-quarter earnings came to 4 cents per share (before charges) compared with 10 cents per share in the year-earlier period. Add in a $154 million charge for R&D costs related to two acquisitions, and Bay ended up with a third-quarter loss of 66 cents per share.
Revenues also came in at $547 million, which was 50% less than the company had previously forecast.
"Shame on us for setting expectations too high," Carney says.
Shame indeed. That's the kind of goof that Cisco never would have made. Which helps explain why Cisco's market capitalization is 15 times greater than Bay's even though its sales are only three times greater.
Still, some analysts like Bay stock, which at a recent $23 is trading at about 33 times expected earnings for the current fiscal year, which ends June 30. "It's very reasonable to expect that shares can appreciate from here," says David Raezer, analyst with Montgomery Securities.
Raezer's rationale is that the Accelar is going to spark sales for the next several quarters. Last year Bay drove its business by being first to market with a 10/100 Ethernet switch (one that can communicate with 10-mbps Ethernet devices and 100-mbps Fast Ethernet devices) called the BayStack 350.
"The 350 has really dominated that market over the past 12 months. And now they have a nice installed base into which they can sell the Accelar," Raezer says.
So why the shortfall in the most recent quarter? Customer indecision with respect to gigabit ethernet routers. "The product cycle is still going to be there," Raezer says.
Building morale and market share
| continued from "Gray day for Bay" |
Acquiring for the future
Bay got a jump on its rivals with the 350 and the Accelar by acquiring the technology rather than trying to develop it in-house. The 350 came from a company called NetICS, and the Accelar came from a company called Rapid City.
A keen eye for acquisitions has been the trademark of David House, Bay's chairman, president and CEO, who joined the company in 1996, after 22 years at Intel.
Bay was in the doldrums when House took over. The company, formed in 1994 through the merger of SynOptics Communications Inc. and Wellfleet Communications Inc., was losing market share to Cisco. Employees were jumping ship. So were customers.
Since then House has shored up morale and regained share in some markets. He's also contained costs, and boosted sales, which are expected to grow 14 percent this year, to $2.4 billion, after hovering at about $2 billion for the previous two years.
And he's acquiring like crazy. In its most recent quarter Bay acquired two companies--one develops so-called extranet technology, the other makes network management software--and invested in a company that develops voice-over-IP technology, which lets people talk over the Internet.
Whether Bay can buy its way into the future remains to be seen. The company is a leader in various areas--ATM, hubs, cable modems, low-end Ethernet switches--but doesn't have the kind of end-to-end product breadth that Cisco has.
Whether Bay can buy its way into the future remains to be seen.
There are three product segments in the network market: enterprise products; low-end products; and products for carriers and Internet service providers (ISPs).
Cisco owns the enterprise space. But Bay may be able to succeed in the low end, with products designed for workgroups and branch offices. Trouble is, 3Com Corp. already owns that market.
Still, "Bay has a better opportunity to unseat 3Com in the low end than they do to unseat Cisco in the enterprise," says John Armstrong, networking analyst at Dataquest Inc., a market research firm in San Jose, Calif.
The best long-term opportunity, however, may be in the carrier space. "That's going to be a huge strong market over the next five years," Armstrong says.
But right now the carrier space is Bay's weakest area. Its product line is incomplete compared with those of Cisco and Ascend Communications Inc., and analysts doubt that Bay can catch up.
Even Raezer, who rates Bay stock a "buy," describes the long-term outlook this way: "3Com gets the low end, Cisco gets the high end and the carriers, and Bay and Cabletron get squeezed."
So where will Bay end up? A likely endgame involves acquisition. Telecom companies like Lucent Technologies and Nortel are shopping for data networking expertise as the worlds of voice, video and data converge.
Carney says Bay can succeed on its own and compete not only against Cisco but against Lucent and Nortel as well. The key, he says, will be making the world more aware of Bay's technology, through savvier sales and marketing.
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See also:
The race for market share Bay Networks versus the rest of the pack.
Neo Networks Some little guys are getting ready to take on the industry giants.
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