The Growth Imperative. [NN affiliates and BAY references]
telecoms-mag.com
In the cut-throat world of networking, if you're not growing, you are `greying'. Customers today demand open, standards-compliant, multipurpose networks and to acquire the skills necessary and for delivering these solutions, networking companies have had to broaden their traditionally narrow areas of expertise. Typically, acquisition of new skills and products has occurred through acquisition of another, generally smaller, company. Sometimes, it is also through the merger of apparently complementary companies. But is the frantic merger activity in the industry actually benefiting networking companies? Is there a `good' or a `better' strategy when it comes to growing the networking business quickly? Telecommunications International features the opinions of two leading players: one a product of a high-profile and seemingly impossible merger which, recently, has itself been acquired; the other, a company which has resisted the merger and acquisition bug.
Stephen Pearse and Dave Vant
July 1998
The Art of the Deal
Bay Networks, Inc. was formed in 1994 through the merger of SynOptics Communications, Inc. and Wellfleet Communications, Inc., two leading data communication vendors founded in the mid-1980s. At the time, it was the biggest merger in the history of the datacoms industry.
Mergers and acquisitions present major challenges, which, in the case of Bay Networks, meant merging two distinct corporate cultures, two companies located on opposite coasts of the US and in different time zones, diverse distribution channels and multiple product sets, development teams and marketing strategies. Having learned the lessons of successfully merging two corporate entities, Bay was uniquely positioned to embark on an M&A strategy that is changing the face of the industry.
Eliminating Time and Distance
As markets have developed, a clear demarcation has come to be defined between traditional corporate enterprise customers and a new customer base comprising the emerging telecoms carriers and service providers. The service and telecoms carriers are, in fact, a major new growth area. But solutions far beyond the traditional `canned' approaches were needed to help Bay become the network solutions provider of choice in the 21st century.
Just as the mainframe, minicomputer and PC industries were revolutionised by changes in the marketplace, several new paradigm shifts in information access are driving the evolution of the networking industry. These fundamental market drivers include:
the boundaries of today's networks have been redefined and a new global, electronically linked business community has emerged;
emerging applications like data mining demand ever higher levels of network performance, availability and scalability;
heterogeneous networks abound with their multiple, incompatible communications protocols. Therefore, the ability to use the IP networking tools to dynamically change an adapt to traffic patterns and usage is critical.
As access boundaries disappear and users demand reliable, high-speed access to more bandwidth-intensive applications, it has become obvious that a more adaptive networking model is the only solution for both corporate enterprise customers and for service providers. To this end, Adaptive Networking is a concept that was pioneered at Bay to address the challenges making the IP-optimised network a place of open interoperability, where high-level services are provided even as network cost and complexity are reduced.
Competition and `Co-opetition'
Bay set about finding the right solutions to achieve its strategic objective of putting together all the building blocks for the Adaptive Network. But it hasn't always been easy. There is fierce competition in the realm of mergers and acquisitions, as a growing number of vendors seek to acquire `hot' new technologies and products in order to position themselves as major players in this fast-growing market. The great challenge for a company embarking on an M&A strategy is to know not only what to acquire, but when to acquire, when to invest, when to partner or co-operate and when to walk away. And, let's not forget the all-important ability to manage the integration of multiple raw technologies into leading business solutions.
One of the major factors contributing to Bay's success in this area has been the ability to differentiate between the key technologies and peripheral technologies. The company needed to bring certain critical hardware and software components in-house and make them an integral part of our core competency, which is building the IP-optimised networks of the future. At the same time, it would seek external partnerships for product components that only provided a more tangential part of the overall solution. In some cases, this would mean investing in companies that were developing complementary solutions; in other cases, it would mean partnering with our telco customers and service providers to ensure that our adaptive networking offerings could happily coexist with their solutions. Having a strategic plan against which to measure and make these critical decisions was instrumental in Bay's success and helped keep the business focused and to provide customers with best-of-breed solutions.
The Sum is Greater than the Parts
To accomplish the goals that Bay set for itself, the process began in early 1995 and was further refined in 1996 when a new CEO, Dave House, arrived on the scene. Acquisitions of remote access solutions, DSP modem technology, cable modems solutions and extranet access switching, coupled with investments in voice-over-IP providers were planned to bring the solution together.
There are four main categories into which all of Bay's products, acquisitions and technology partnerships fall: access, IP services, switching/routing and network management. In the Internet/telecom business unit, the M&A strategy is focused on finding products for the access and IP Services categories.
With the first of our acquisitions, that of Xylogics, in 1995, we began building the cornerstone of our Adaptive Networking suite. We started by keeping Xylogics a separate business unit to minimise the impact of the merger on ongoing R&D efforts. Over time, we took a fine enterprise technology and transformed it into a carrier-class remote access solution that not only met, but also exceeded the demands of our telecom and service providers in terms of robustness and performance. Our next two strategic acquisitions took place in late 1996, when we bought LANcity Corporation and Penril Datability Networks:
LANcity was a leader in cable modem and data-over-cable technology; and today we continue to strengthen and grow that market-leading position. With this product offering, we now have the ability to penetrate a huge, growing market segment of cable/broadband service providers as the demand for high-speed access from consumers and businesses exploded. Leveraging over a decade of experience in data-over-cable communications, Bay Networks has integrated this proven edge technology with infrastructure to provide an end-to-end data internetworking solution.
With Penril Datability we gained the industry's most advanced DSP-based modems and remote access products. These software-programmable modems were then integrated into the Xylogics platform, and Bay's Versalar 5399 Remote Access Concentrator was born. The DSP is also critical component for delivering IP Services such as Voice-over-IP, and virtual private networks (VPN). Through a successful M&A strategy, we can now provide our customers with a flexible product that can be immediately and easily upgraded in the field as new line speeds and services become available.
1997 was another landmark year, a key component of our Adaptive Networking IP Services cornerstone came from the acquisition of ISOTRO. When we acquired ISOTRO, the NetID product was a leading IP address management and DNS/DHCP management tool that greatly simplified the administrative process of keeping track of and managing a fast-growing number of IP addresses dynamically. The integration with Bay Networks has resulted in a NetID product that not only provides IP address and DNS/DHCP management capability, but also provides the platform for directory services. With our partnerships with all directory providers (Microsoft, Netscape and Novell), this significantly enhances our telecom and service provider customers' ability to dynamically manage networks by assigning rights based on users, groups and/or applications with NetID.
In 1998 we have been able to round out our IP Services offerings with an additional acquisition and a partnership:
From the New Oak Communications acquisition, we acquired key enabling services with the industry's broadest and most comprehensive Extranet and VPN solutions. Branded the Bay Networks Contivity Extranet Switch family, the products provide secure, dedicated remote access to corporate resources for employees and business partners over the Internet -- without having to deal with modems on the corporate site. This one-box solution provides bandwidth management, security and directory services at the enterprise; but with added development for management and provisioning of these devices, the service providers can offer these value-added products as managed network services.
Our joint development partnership with Netspeak brought with it sophisticated, system-oriented voice-over-IP and fax-over-IP solutions for our service provider customers, to whom it represents a major revenue-generating opportunity. While existing solutions in the market today concentrate on toll bypass applications, our partnership with Netspeak also concentrates on the integration of voice, video and data from a systems standpoint.
What's Next?
Because we are only now seeing the tip of the iceberg in terms of the overall market potential, we view this as an ongoing process. With radical changes continuing to take place in the technology arena and the market, our M&A business model also needs to be adaptive as we move forward. We understand that the scope and pace of change in the industry is increasing dramatically each day. Given that, not only survival, but great success lies in store for those service providers who are quick to respond to changes in market requirements, able to grow with their customers and the networks they service, and who are best prepared to compete effectively.
To service this market, we, in turn, must continue to identify industry-leading, modular plug'n'play solutions that can be integrated easily into existing and evolving network infrastructures. Networks that provide speed, scalability, and efficiency at multiple levels and can adapt quickly to new technologies and business models are the information highways of the future.
With our considerable and successful M&A track record, we have put together a proven process for integrating new technologies and companies. As we move forward, we are uniquely positioned to bring in the best technologies and transform them into products and solutions that set the standard for the entire industry. t
Stephen Pearse is executive vice president of Bay Networks and leads the worldwide development and management of its products and services supporting the Internet, telecoms, data-over-cable and remote access markets.
Affiliates in Success
The climate within the carrier industry is highly competitive. The pressures of deregulation, privatisation and globalisation come at the same time as increasingly sophisticated services demanded by customers (as well as the effect of the web) are pushing carriers (and large corporates) towards a total change-out of core infrastructure. And that's expensive. If this were not enough, the increasing commoditisation of data services leaves carriers in danger of becoming undifferentiated `bit-haulers,' which is unsustainable in the longer term.
What does this situation mean for a company like Newbridge, who supply network infrastructure to telecoms carriers? Firstly, customers are looking for innovations that they can sell to their customers as value-added services. Secondly, they are looking to consolidate costs through using fewer suppliers. Thirdly, they are looking for total solutions from their equipment providers, so that they can offer flexible solutions around meeting their customers' business problems. For Newbridge this adds up to the need to consistently innovate across a broad range of products and product areas, so that customers can continue to develop the services and network packages that will keep them ahead.
Innovation: Make It, Buy It or Build It?
The question is, how does a company develop truly innovative solutions across all the technologies which go to make up an end-to-end network. Many companies try to develop in-house all the technology they are going to need throughout their product and service range. While this is possible, the bigger the company gets, the slower and more process-driven the R&D tends to become, and the easier it is for smaller and more aggressive companies to get ahead. A bigger danger though, is a loss of focus. Through trying to develop across too many areas, a company can lose focus very quickly, and soon fall behind in the area of their own core competence. (The history of IT is littered with the bodies.)
Finally, internal start-ups tend to become starved of funds when cash-flow gets tight. Such projects commence with massive enthusiasm and great fanfare, then stumble and frequently die.
Many companies choose to innovate by acquisition. Small companies with brilliant technology are bought and integrated into the offering of the buyer. But there can be problems of culture and thus staff retention. And that's assuming that there are no compatibility problems on the technical level. Acquisitions need a great deal of effort on both sides to work, and are fraught with pitfalls. And they are expensive. Figure 1 contrasts the costs of the acquisition programme of some of Newbridge's competitors with the affiliate programme.
So what is the third option? Newbridge has, since 1992, developed an innovative and flexible strategy that offers comprehensive end-to-end solutions while allowing it to concentrate on core networking solutions it does best: a programme in which companies are affiliated to, rather than merged with, Newbridge. The idea was conceived when a major US carrier needed an urgent solution to its network management needs which Newbridge could not fulfil in-house in the time allowed. Terry Matthews, founder and chairman, suggested to the board that Newbridge help found an entrepreneurial company separate from itself to carry out the development. That company, CrossKeys, which made its IPO last year, set a trend for the future. The model was so successful, that it has been repeated 19 times in the succeeding five years.
When you acquire a technology, you have to make it work with your existing products. Our affiliate companies, on the other hand, design their products from the beginning to be part of a total Newbridge solution.
Bert Whyte, president of affiliate ACC says the company's award-winning Tigris remote access concentrator was the product of just such a synergy. Tigris started as a joint development between Newbridge and ACC. Over time the technology and the process has been transitioned to ACC, but it's still a team. In fact, Newbridge has now taken on the Tigris as an OEM product of their own. This example illustrates one of the key advantages of the affiliate programme; an extended R&D arm. Imagine over 1000 additional R&D engineers (from a total of 1600 employees) all working on complementary, leading-edge technologies, while at the same time sharing both the risks and the costs with other investors.
What are the risks? Venture capitalists know all too well that, on average, eight out of ten start-ups will fail. Newbridge has 20 affiliates and the programme is highly successful. None have failed.
Making affiliation work
For an affiliate to be successful, the new company needs to be working in an area which is close enough to Newbridge's core business to be synergistic, but, generally speaking, not close enough to be that core business itself. Under the affiliate programme Newbridge holds equity, typically one third, in the affiliated company, and has proportionate representation on the board of the directors.
Rather than being absorbed into a larger structure, the managements of the affiliates are encouraged to retain their independence while maintaining corporate co-operation. The affiliate programme also safeguards the management of Newbridge from the demands of organising a take-over, of the resulting restructuring, and of simply controlling an over-extended company. Newbridge is thus free to concentrate on product development and customer service.
Expanding Portfolio
This family of dedicated affiliates has therefore increased Newbridge's product breadth. It has done so, moreover, cost effectively, in terms both of money and of managerial commitment. Newbridge has pursued an active policy of assessing its customers' needs, and then investing in companies developing those solutions. The policy of Newbridge is to get involved at or soon after start-up, or at an early stage in the development cycle. This ensures that the affiliate's products are designed for maximum interoperability with those of Newbridge. A fully integrated solution can therefore be achieved at a fraction of the normal industry cost.
The products of these companies have been developed to integrate seamlessly into a total Newbridge network solution. CrossKeys' service level agreement software, for instance, fully complements the Newbridge Network Manager and enables carriers and service providers to differentiate themselves in the market.
An area with massive growth is that of IP telephony, allowing carriers to offer low-cost telephone services. Another affiliate, Vienna Systems' gateways and brand new client IP telephone sets have changed the telephone industry dramatically. Other leading applications include satellite communications using SpaceBridge switches linked into the central core, and Newbridge Wireless ATM connecting up to Starvision's interactive distance learning systems. LAN/WAN applications include TimeStep's SVPN's (secure virtual private networks), Castleton's voice over frame relay and access devices, Telexis' networked video for remote surveillance and West End's advanced cable modems and hybrid fibre coax system. A particular customer can be provided with a tailored solution to suit their exact networking needs, in which each component is not only best of breed but has been designed to work with all the other components.
Phase by Phase to Success
In the first phase, Newbridge provides all the services the new company needs to run (finance, IT, HR, purchasing etc) with the exception of R&D. This typically allows affiliates to get their products to market within a year. As the company develops its own infrastructure, Newbridge's role becomes as a channel to market and investor. By year three, only half of the revenue of the company should be Newbridge-related, and by year five, the company should be ready for its initial public offering. The graph below shows the typical development of an affiliate from investment through to volume shipment, and positions some current affiliates in the lifecycle.
Newbridge's affiliate programme has brought many benefits to Newbridge. But perhaps the ultimate judgement on the success of the programme should be the success of the affiliate companies themselves. The financial picture is rosy. The affiliates now have a market capitalisation of more than US$ 823 million, and are growing their sales well in excess of 100 per cent year on year. Perhaps most significant of all, the highest growth is through non-Newbridge channels, an excellent indicator of industry acceptance of these advanced technologies.
And the future? Newbridge has every intention of continuing along this highly successful and innovative path. Their two latest affiliates announced in June 1998, PixStream and ImagicTV, are both focussed on the rapidly growing area of video in telecoms applications. t
Dave Vant is director of affiliates marketing at Newbridge Networks.
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