"Benhamou weighs in"
Network World, 12/14/98
3Com chairman and CEO Eric Benhamou took time out last week at the company's annual customer conference in blacked-out San Francisco to speak - in the dark -- with Network World Senior Editor Jim Duffy. Benhamou covered a host of topics, including the company's new joint venture with Siemens.
Q. Why a joint venture with Siemens instead of sticking with the original joint product development alliance?
A. We felt that the joint venture sends a much more clearer message to the market and to our joint customers. Also we've built up sufficient collaboration and trust, and we knew each other enough that we felt this was the structure that would work. And as you know, signing a joint venture with two partners who really knew each other is like getting married without dating. So we felt that the time was right, and we also found a reasonable way for us to address the issues of - they're always sensitive -- shared intellectual property. Implementing LAN telephony requires intimate sharing of data switching intellectual property and voice communications - the state machine inside a call processor, things like that. We found a reasonable way to work this out that would survive multiple generations of products. One of the secrets of joint ventures is to make them very tight with a clear goal, clear mission and parameters of investment.
Q. Any possibility that this joint venture could become a freestanding company in and of itself?
A. Technically, it's possible but it's not the most likely outcome.
Q. What's the likelihood of Siemens making an equity investment in 3Com?
A. It's nil. It makes no sense. They don't have that much cash to begin with.
Q. Does the joint venture make that even less likely?
A. It was never likely in the first place. What are the reasons why you make equity investments? Well, if you simply want to speculate on the stock market, you can do that. But typically, board of directors frown upon that. My board would not like me to use $1.5 billion in cash on an equity investment. Typically you do that in order to first of all symbolically tell your people and the market, 'We're serious about this partnership; we're putting our money where our mouth is.' The second is to get something in exchange for it. In exchange for this equity you're getting some preferential licensing terms or technology. That is quite legitimate, we do this often. But in this case, the technology Siemens wanted to have access to we were able to provide some focused access within the context of this joint venture. It was just a far easier way to package it.
Q. Of your four market segments - large enterprise, small/medium enterprise, consumer and service provider - is there any one or two that represent the potential for greatest growth for 3Com?
A. Yes, they're not all created equal, they have very different dynamics.
The one that we're the most excited about in the near term is the small/medium enterprise segment. I don't want to sound like we'll neglect the others, but that market segment has a native growth rate which is far greater than the large enterprise segment. It simply has to do with different points of maturation in these markets.
The large enterprise segment is much more mature, it is growing still. And our opportuntiy to grow in that segment is greater today than ever. We're just starting a strong product cycle. We just talked about Home Shopping Network as an example of a gigabit backbone. They're using the new CoreBuilder family. We have hundreds and hundreds of customers like that, using that kind of (technology) for structuring their backbone. So we feel the our opportunity is very strong there today. However, we know in the fullness of time, this market has peaked two years ago.
The SME market, on the other hand, is very early in its stage of life. Last time I looked I found that less than 20% of small businesses in this country were unnetworked. The percent is even lower outside of the US.
So it is basically a market which is in its early stages, and the pull is great for two reasons: small business have bought more PCs than large businesses in the last two or three years. So they have the compute power, they have leverage.
And second, the Internet and the Web are making it possible for small business to look like a large business, and to not be at a disadvantage when it comes to e-commerce. So they have many reasons to want to network at an accelerated rate. So today, who knows what the growth rates really are but I'd say roughly if the large enterprise market grows in the low teens, the small/medium business market grows 10 points higher than that or twice as much as the large enterprise market.
The carrier and ISP market really is growing fast also, faster than large enterprise. We don't address the full market there. We don't focus on creating the core backbone. This is a market that is fought for by a number of large companies, including Siemens, Lucent, Nortel and Cisco.
And we find that while this market is large it is not one we can address successfully. And it is not one that is the most strategic. Because the way public networks are built, the intelligence clearly has moved to the edge. This is where the strategic points of the public networks are.
The core is increasingly turning into a dumb, very high-speed aggregated transport on fiber. The products to build the core networks are large and expensive, but they don't play a strategic role.
Different services actually use different cores and that does not really change their complexion.
The edge piece, on the other hand, is where all the exciting things are happening. This is where all these methods of access are processed and mediated; this is where all of the new services are hosted like voice over IP. And we've had a corroboration of our assumption in the last few months when we saw that all the large VoIP procurements initiated by large ISPs and carriers made no mention of the core. They have no figured out yet which core to use and which transport is best. This is a way of defining where we focus and where we don't focus.
And where we focus, we expect this market has a very strong growth opportunity for the many, many years, 10 years probably. And while this market will be very competitive, the unit growth rate and the number of ports that have to be deployed with this kind of intelligence has to grow so fast that overall this market will be a lucrative market.
Finally, the market of networks for consumers is a very exciting market because eventually it will be the biggest market of all. The market is still embryonic today, people are just positioning themselves.
We are positioning ourselves to be the clear leaders in that space because our analysis suggests that this market will recognize companies that can offer a complete solution and have mastered skills of volume manufacturing and retail distribution, and have developed a brand which is trusted. We score very high in all of these skills.
And we have made substantial investments. We expect home networks, for example, to appear in three categories: home networks that use new wires - these ones are less interesting because they tend to look very much like a small business. My home network is exactly the same as a SOHO home network.
The more interesting segments are the wireless and the existing wire. For wireless, we may have to wait a little while before wireless solutions really become broadly accepted but obviously they offer the most flexibility. Existing wires is going to be the bulk of the market for a long time.
You have two kinds of existing wires in your home: you have power wires and you have telephone wires. While both could work, it's far easier to make it work on telephone wires than power wires. So we have invested in the phone wire (method).
Another segmentation is how fast you want to go. So we think there will probably be two classes of industry standards for home phone wires. One around 1M bit/sec, the second around 10M bit/sec. In the next few weeks we will be introducing a line of (1M bit/sec) products.
More recently, we have made an investment in Epigram that has really very attractive technology for 10M bit/sec. Very Ethernet-like technology.
So these are just different ways of slicing and dicing the market, but the important thing is to offer a complete networking solution for the home.
It's not just a bunch of network interface cards. You have to be able to connect the home to the Internet. If there is one killer app for the home, it is that. And there is more than one way to do that. So we have to look at all of these technologies and figure out ways to integrate them into another set of technologies to connect to the Internet.
You can connect with plain analog lines, many multiple phone lines to increase bandwidth; you could do this with a flavor of DSL, you could do this with cable modems, you'll eventually be able to do this with wireless. So our HomeConnect product line, as it will be branded, will in fact incorporate variations on those two dimensions: how you connect to the Internet and how you connect inside.
We've positioned the company to have complete ownership of all of the technologies to do that. We're bringing out a variety of combinations with the most important ones.
Q. Do you see 3Com becoming more of a consumer-oriented company? Is that where most of your growth will come from in the next 5 to 10 years?
A. I would say not most but certainly this will be one of the key dimensions of growth. We will do nothing more than mirror what the market does. The market will eventually be extremely large, larger than all of the others. If we want to be true to our mission, our mission has not changed in 20 years: connect people to in formation. These are the people we should turn to next. But it would be wrong to think of 3Com as a home networking company. Right now it's less than 1% of the revenue. Within five years it will still be a small amount of our revenues. But it is very clear we are focused on that.
We have a developed alliances so we are not going it alone. We have chosen to be very close partners with Microsoft in this area because we found that if you really want to achieve breakthroughs in simplicity and ease-of-use you have to figure out how the software interacts with the hardware and simplify it as much as possible. Basically ensuring that there is never, ever a need to visit a home user to fix things. To achieve that we have to agree on some important configuration approaches.
Q. The opportunity at the service provider edge, does that give 3Com the opportunity to re-enter the high-end router market?
A. We continue to build up our routing technology and expertise but it is not to address the small focused terabit router market. The fundamental point that you were making however is correct. With all of the MSOs who are serious about deploying Internet over cable are turning to 3Com as one of two leading providers - and today the leading provider -- of data over cable solutions. It's both the infrastructure proposition and the CPE proposition.
If you take TCI, for example, TCI selected 3Com as its exclusive provider of headend and switching equipment for its infrastructure, and selected us for cable modems for their subscribers. And this was a case where there was a clear synergy between the two because it's the same cable modem solution on both ends. And we're leveraging our ISP sales force and our retail sales force together. You cannot find that combination of skills in any other networking company. This is one of the reasons why we won that procurement.
Q. Do you see the large enterprise market going back to the growth rates in enjoyed in the early and mid-1990s?
A. I do think it will accelerate again as a result of convergence becoming real for these customers. I'm convinced it will because what's going to happen in the next few years is basically the PBX market for the large enterprise is going to be swallowed up. Just this alone will give a kick to the growth rate of the large enterprise market.
That joint venture with Siemens is going to address that. Siemens is very strong in SMEs but even stronger in the high-end of the PBX market. So today I gave you a growth rate in the low-teens; I do think it could pass 20% in a couple of years.
Q. You mentioned wireless as a growth opportunity in the home/SOHO market… what about medium and large enterprises?
A. If you talk about wireless LANs, I do think it's now a good segment to invest in. Up until now, multiple times we've come this close to introducing a line of wireless LAN products and we'd say, 'No, why do we want to get into this now? Why do you want to all go vie for a $100 million market segment?' But things are changing. There is now much more certainty around the IEEE 802.11 standards. So we see wireless as a much more natural technology for the large enterprise. Another kind of wireless which is very important is fixed wireless for long haul. There have been such advances in technology there. I remember the time when we just couldn't figure out a way to the rainy day phenomenon. You had line of sight (products) and on a day like this, forget it. Today you can get around that. In Europe, there's a new generation of GSM technologies that will be deployed in the next two or three years to achieve megabits per second transmission. That's quite a phenomenon.
Q. So are we likely to see 3Com get into the wireless LAN and WAN markets?
A. Oh yeah, we will be fully engaged with a line of products. nwfusion.com
Mang |