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Making Its Presence Felt
Ciscos acquisition of Tandberg would help it strengthen its telepresence strategy and pose a challenge to Polycom
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
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In the midst of an expected recovery from the slowdown, the global IT scenario is undergoing major consolidation. This quarter is perhaps one of those which saw a sudden spurt of mergers and acquisitions globally. With consecutive news of Adobe acquiring Omniture, Dell acquiring Perot, and Xerox acquiring ACS, the unified communications space also sees a major breakthrough. This time it is Cisco that has made a recommended offer to acquire Norway based Tandberg for $3 bn. This acquisition will help Cisco expand its collaboration portfolio to offer more solutions to its customers. What made this alliance possible was the feedback from customers for both Ciscos and Tandbergs high-end collaborative systems and solutions. Reflecting on the offer, Fredrik Halvorsen, CEO, Tandberg believes that customers are adopting technologies across the board from high-end telepresence to desktop and PC applications. The combination of two organizations would even allow to innovate at a higher pace than the companies working independently.

The combination of two organizations would even allow to innovate at a higher pace than the companies working independently

Fredrik Halvorsen, CEO, Tandberg

According to the 2009 annual report of Cisco, sales of unified communications products soared up by approximately $30 mn because of increased adoption of web based collaborative tools. Considering this, the alliance with Tandberg will be an added feather in the cap for Cisco to deliver web based collaborative tools to its customers more efficiently. Another factor that could have possibly led to this merger is the decrease in other product revenues in FY 09, compared with FY 08, such as decline in the sales of cable, optical and service provider video products, partially offset by increased sales of emerging technology products such as telepresence. On the other hand, the 2008 annual report of Tandberg suggests revenue growth of 18.9% for videoconferencing endpoints. The market growth in terms of units sold was 8.5%. Add to it Tandbergs Telepresence T3, a product that made it possible for anyone to join a telepresence meeting using a standards-compliant video system, bridging the gap between videoconferencing and telepresence. In a nutshell, this acquisition would see Cisco leverage its financial strength through its build, buy, and partner innovation framework.

A key macro transition of Ciscos businesses has been in increased usage of video, collaborative tools, and data center, and virtualization. The acquisition of Tandberg is positioned at the intersection of both video and collaboration. Another key trend is the shift of consumers from traditional basic voice communications to true multimedia experience. With this, Cisco will also leverage on its already existing strong balance sheet. The way people communicate and collaborate has completely changed. According to Tandberg, innovation power of both the organizations will disrupt the collaborative market.

Apart from being the market giants in telepresence and videoconferencing, data storage has been another key vertical for both the organizations. However the bad news for them in the last financial year was a weak balance sheet in data storage solutions business. Tandberg Datas revenue for Q3 FY08 was $41 mn, a decline of $8 mn compared to Q3 FY07. On the other hand, Ciscos storage area networking products saw a dip in sales by approximately $85 mn because of lower sales of MDS 9,000 product lines. This vertical could probably be the one where both the companies would consolidate and build up product value in the long-run.

Despite such assumptions, it is still to be seen how far would this acquisition affect Polycoms telepresence and videoconferencing business in reality? Or is the company really up for the competition? With such alliances following one after the other, the industry needs to figure out whether such consolidations and M&As are leading the market to recovery? Or is it the other way round, that the expected recovery from the slowdown is helping enterprises to consolidate and leverage their existing businesses?

PC Suraj
surajp@cybermedia.co.in

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