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Enterprise Technology Market Review

Securities and Investment Banking Services offered through Waterford Capital Inc. member FINRA SIPC.
Market Review
This Newsletter offers SCP’s perspectives on the Enterprise Software market with commentary on developments and the impact on M&A
activity

Table of Contents
I.

Technology-Focused Market Overview ................................................................................................................................................................................ 4
i.

Performance of Large-Cap Enterprise Technology Companies: .................................................................................................................................. 4

ii.

Enterprise Technology IPO Market Overview ................................................................................................................................................................ 9

iii.

General M&A Market Overview .......................................................................................................................................................................................10

iv.

VCs Funding Trends ............................................................................................................................................................................................................12

II.

The News and Stories of the Year ........................................................................................................................................................................................15
i.

Dell Goes Private ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................15

ii.

The Year of the CMO..........................................................................................................................................................................................................16

iii.

The Fall of BlackBerry .........................................................................................................................................................................................................17

iv.

Pivotal Initiative ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................17

v.

Salesforce1 ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................18

vi.

New Partnerships ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................18
Oracle-Salesforce (June)...............................................................................................................................................................................................18
Oracle-Dell (June, September) ...................................................................................................................................................................................19
Salesforce-HP (November) .........................................................................................................................................................................................19

vii. Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes ....................................................................................................................................................20
CA (April) .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................20
Intel (May) ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................20
Microsoft (August) ........................................................................................................................................................................................................20
SAP (June-July) ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................20
Symantec (June) .............................................................................................................................................................................................................21
III.

Deals of the Year ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................22

i.

Oracle/Responsys .................................................................................................................................................................................................................22

ii.

Thoma Bravo/Intuit (Financial Services Division) – NCR/Digital Insight .............................................................................................................24

iii.

OpenText /GXS ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................25

iv.

Oracle/BigMachines ............................................................................................................................................................................................................26

v.

Microsoft/Nokia ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................27

vi.

IBM/Trusteer ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................28

vii. Cisco/Sourcefire ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................30
viii. Adobe/Neolane ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................31
ix.

SAP/hybris .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................32

x.

Salesforce/ExactTarget .......................................................................................................................................................................................................34

xi.

IBM/SoftLayer ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................35

xii. Various PE Investors/BMC Software ..............................................................................................................................................................................36
xiii. Silver Lake Partners/Dell ....................................................................................................................................................................................................37
xiv. Oracle/Acme Packet ............................................................................................................................................................................................................39
xv. Oracle/Eloqua .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................40
IV.

Predictions for 2014.................................................................................................................................................................................................................41

i.

Enterprise IPO debuts will slow down… because they can’t speed up ....................................................................................................................41

ii.

Carve Outs over Buy Outs..................................................................................................................................................................................................41

iii.

The Year(s) of the CMO .....................................................................................................................................................................................................41

iv.

Elliott will continue to Elliott .............................................................................................................................................................................................41

v.

Eloqua, Marketo or ExactTarget will distance itself to become the clear leader .....................................................................................................42

vi.

Mobile in 2014 .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................42

vii. Sales Enablement and Recurring Revenue Management will become ubiquitous ..................................................................................................42
V.

Bibliography and Thanks ........................................................................................................................................................................................................44
I. Technology-Focused Market Overview
i. Performance of Large-Cap Enterprise Technology Companies:
2013 represented a mostly positive year trading for the key large-cap enterprise IT providers on the public market,
although it was largely in-line with or slightly lagging the overall market. HP’s resurgence following an embattled 2012
was the top gainer out of the large-caps, while only IBM and EMC/VMware experienced share depreciation yearover-year.

Stock Price
Company

12/31/2012

3/31/2013

6/30/2013

YoY ∆
9/30/2013

12/31/2013

Adobe

$37.68

$43.52

$45.56

$51.94

$59.88

58.9%

CA

$21.98

$25.18

$28.62

$29.67

$33.65

53.1%

Cisco

$19.65

$20.90

$24.34

$23.43

$22.43

14.2%

EMC

$25.30

$23.89

$23.62

$25.56

$25.15

-0.6%
96.4%

HP

$14.25

$23.84

$24.80

$20.99

$27.98

$191.55

$213.30

$191.11

$185.18

$187.57

-2.1%

Microsoft

$26.71

$28.61

$34.55

$33.28

$37.41

40.1%

Oracle

$33.32

$32.33

$30.71

$33.17

$38.26

14.8%

Salesforce

$42.03

$44.71

$38.18

$51.91

$55.19

31.3%

SAP

$60.79

$62.65

$56.19

$54.67

$62.55

2.9%

VMware

$94.14

$78.88

$66.99

$80.90

$89.71

-4.7%

IBM

4
Adobe
Adobe continued to meet investor expectations, increasing subscription revenues while decreasing legacy
license/product-related revenues throughout 2013. The continued growth of Cloud revenue (in particular increasing
average revenue per subscriber) has been met positively in the public market as share prices reached record highs
despite declining aggregate y-o-y revenues and margins. Cloud adoption across two of Adobe’s most important
divisions (Creative and Marketing) is expected to drive revenue as Adobe looks to expand into new markets and
geographies. The Company also made its largest since the acquisition of Omniture in 2009, acquiring Neolane to help
build out the Marketing Cloud.
Acquisitions:
 08/01/13: Search Discovery – Website tag management SaaS (undisclosed)
 06/27/13: Neolane – Marketing Automation Software ($600mm / 8.6x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition
 05/22/13: Thumb Labs – Mobile software development services (undisclosed)
SCP on Other News and Notes:
 The Year of the CMO
CA
With new CEO Michael Gregoire at the helm, CA beat earnings estimates in three consecutive quarters in 2013 and
subsequently raised forward guidance on both earnings and revenues. CA has benefited from growth in its Cloud
initiatives, higher new sales in its Mainframe Solutions & Services segment and has been able to control costs and
grow its enterprise solutions business. Gregoire was hired to lead the Company into its next-generation as a Cloudsolution provider and his tenure is off to a solid start.
Acquisitions:
 04/22/13: Layer 7 – API management software ($155mm / 4.4x EV/Revenue)
 03/24/13: Nolio – Software development solutions provider ($42mm / 14.0x EV/Revenue)
SCP on Other News and Notes:
 Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes: CA
Cisco
Cisco saw lower than expected revenue growth in the first half of the year due to a significant slowdown in global
technology sales (most notably in China), and realized its first year-over-year profit decline in eight quarters.
Accordingly, sales and earnings growth projections were lowered for the next several quarters, including an expected
decline in overall sales for early 2014. The Company attempted to ease investor concerns with an increased buyback
program authorizing up to $97bn in stock repurchases. Cisco is facing further disruptions as the networking market
shifts from under its feet faster than expected due to the rapid adoption of software defined networking and network
functions virtualization technologies. Although Cisco was an aggressive acquirer in 2012 and 2013 (to build a
foundation for the coming changes), it is likely that the Company will need to increase the speed and magnitude of
acquisition in markets where its presence is threatened.
Acquisitions:
 12/17/13:
 09/10/13:
 07/23/13:
 06/20/13:
 05/29/13:
 04/03/13:
 03/25/13:
 01/29/13:
 01/23/13:

Kibits – Team collaboration software (undisclosed)
Whiptail – All-flash array storage ($415mm / 20.8x EV/Revenue)
Sourcefire – Intrusion detection & prevention ($2.7bn / 10.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition
Composite Softwware – Data integration software ($180mm)
JouleX – Energy management software ($107mm / 11.9x EV/Revenue)
Ubiquisys – Wireless base stations provider ($310mm)
Brainforce – IT service management SaaS ($22mm / 2.6x EV/Revenue)
Cognitive Security – NBAD software (undisclosed)
Intucell – Mobile network management software ($475mm / 15.8x EV/Revenue)
5
EMC
EMC fell short of expectations late in the year (despite previously lowering guidance) as profit decreased due to
increased operating costs and an overall tightening in IT spending. EMC is well positioned to capture increases in
data center spend, but overall outlook is still trending negative. VMware continued to provide a boost to growth topline growth, but investors began to question the overall size of the market opportunity for the Company. The Pivotal
Initiative and the potential IPO in 2014 should provide for a more streamlined product offering in addition to a
capital infusion.
Acquisitions:
 07/11/13:
 07/08/13:
 06/24/13:
 05/21/13:
 02/27/13:
 01/04/13:

ScaleIO – ECS VSAN software ($200-300mm1)
Aveksa – Access control and policy SaaS ($225mm2)
Stirof Technologies – Document management software and services (undisclosed)
Adaptivity – Application planning SaaS (undisclosed)
Trinity – Documentum consulting services (undisclosed)
iWave Software – Storage provisioning automation (undisclosed)

SCP on Other News and Notes:
 The Pivotal Initiative
HP
HP surprised the market by exceeding earnings expectations in consecutive quarters in early 2013 after a troublesome
2012 in which the Company took an $8.8bn charge related to its acquisition of Autonomy and another $8.0bn related
to EDS. Q4 (reported in November) provided another lift as the Company beat revenue estimates, giving hope that
product streamlining may be ahead of schedule. Most of the increases across HP were in the higher margin, businessrelated products groups such as servers, networking, and storage equipment, as well related services which show more
promise for HP’s future. HP ended up as the top gainer in all of the Diversified IT, with the stock up nearly 100% on
the year.
Acquisitions:
 None in 2013
SCP on Other News and Notes:
 New Partnerships: Salesforce-HP
IBM
IBM was the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s lone loser in 2013 while it struggled to meet investor expectations as the
Company focuses on driving towards 2015 goals set forth by Ginny Rometty in the 2011 annual report3. The
Company experienced successive quarters of revenue decline as it transitions from its legacy business (with a larger
focus on hardware sales) towards more recurring, Cloud-based offerings. IBM also made one of the most strategic
deals of the year in the acquisition of hosted services provider SoftLayer, to form a cornerstone of its vision in the
Cloud. IBM will look to provide a full-service Cloud offering with IBM Global Services providing preimplementation consulting, SoftLayer hosting and Cloud applications to cross-sell.
Acquisitions:
 12/19/13: Aspera – Data transfer software provider (undisclosed)
 11/13/13: Fiberlink – Mobile device management SaaS ($300mm / 6.0x EV/Revenue4)
 10/03/13: Xtify – Mobile messaging SaaS (undisclosed)
EMC Acquires Israeli Storage Startup ScaleIO For $200M-$300M To Compete Better With The Cloud Kings
The 451 Group estimate
3 50% of segment profit generated from software; 30% of revenue from growth markets; Spend $20bn on acquisitions between now and 2015,
in Emerging Markets, Business Analytics, Cloud and Smarter Planet; $70bn to be returned through shareholders between now and 2015: $50bn
through buybacks and $20bn through dividends
4 The 451 Group estimate
1
2

6









10/01/13:
09/19/13:
08/15/13:
07/09/13:
06/04/13:
04/22/13:
02/07/13:
02/01/13:

The Now Factory – Mobile device analytics software (undisclosed)
Daeja Image Systems – Multi-format document viewing (undisclosed)
Trusteer – Financial anti-fraud and endpoint security (~$1bn) SCP on acquisition
CSL International – Systems management and virtualization ($20mm5)
SoftLayer – Hosted services provider ($2bn / 4.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition
UrbanCode – Software development solutions provider (undisclosed)
StoredIQ – Unstructured data management provider (undisclosed)
Star Analytics – Data and application integration software (undisclosed)

SCP on Other News and Notes:
 The Year of the CMO
Microsoft
Microsoft beat estimates in its latest quarter (9/30) led by growth in search advertising and Cloud services. The
Company’s stock price benefited in 2013 from several public announcements, including the release of both a new
Xbox and tablet in addition to the retirement of long-time CEO Steve Ballmer. The next CEO of Microsoft will need
to make a decision regarding Microsoft’s vision going forward, including whether to continue its current focus on
both the consumer and the enterprise.
Acquisitions:
 10/23/13:
 09/03/13:
 03/19/13:
 03/14/13:
 03/05/13:

Apiphany – API distribution & management SaaS (undisclosed)
Nokia – Mobile phone designer and manufacturer ($5.0bn) SCP on acquisition
Netbreeze – Social media monitoring software (undisclosed)
Pando Networks – Download acceleration software (undisclosed)
MetricsHub – Cloud monitoring SaaS (undisclosed)

SCP on Other News and Notes:
 Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes: Microsoft
Oracle
Oracle saw a year of flattening revenue and earnings, but bright spots included SaaS and improvements in hardware
systems. The Company continues to invest heavily in its Cloud solutions both organically and inorganically. Oracle’s
recent fiscal Q2 (November ‘13) results offer an optimistic view that revenue growth can accelerate in 2014 while
executive leadership reiterated a focus on competing aggressively in Cloud-based applications versus the likes of
Marketo, Salesforce, SuccessFactors/SAP and Workday, and hosting versus the likes of Amazon.com, IBM and
Rackspace.
Acquisitions:
 12/20/13:
 11/15/13:
 10/23/13:
 10/17/13:
 03/25/13:
 03/13/13:
 02/04/13:
 12/20/12:

Responsys – Marketing automation software ($1.6bn / 7.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition
Bitzer Mobile – Mobile application management software (undisclosed)
BigMachines – CPQ sales automation SaaS (undisclosed) SCP on acquisition
Compendium – Content marketing SaaS (undisclosed)
Tekelec – Wireless infrastructure software (undisclosed)
Nimbula – Cloud creation IaaS provider (undisclosed)
Acme Packet – Session border control provider ($2.1bn / 5.9x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition
Eloqua – Lead generation software provider ($956mm / 9.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition

SCP on Other News and Notes:
 The Year of the CMO
5

The 451 Group estimate
7
 New Partnerships: Oracle-Salesforce
 New Partnerships: Oracle-Dell
Salesforce
Salesforce benefited from continued growth in its traditional Sales Force Automation business in addition to added
revenue generated from the Marketing and Service Clouds. Salesfore’s SFA solution further solidified its position as
the default offering for sales teams and the Marketing Cloud received a substantive boost from the acquisition of
ExactTarget, the largest acquisition in the Company’s history. The Company delivered its first $1bn+ revenue quarter
in November, beating estimates and pushing shares to all-time highs. Salesforce will need to continue to innovate and
successfully sell solutions in areas that are both complementary and adjacent to Sales Force Automation to maintain
the success the Company has experienced since its founding.
Acquisitions:
 11/18/13:
 06/07/13:
 06/04/13:
 05/09/13:
 02/06/13:

Cloudconnect.com – Database integration and synchronization SaaS (undisclosed)
EdgeSpring – BI analytics software provider ($134mm)
ExactTarget – Marketing Automation SaaS ($2.5bn / 7.6x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition
Clipboard – Online social bookmarking services (undisclosed)
EntropySoft – Content integration SaaS (undisclosed)

SCP on Other News and Notes:
 The Year of the CMO
 Salesforce1
 New Partnerships: Salesforce-Oracle
 New Partnerships: Salesforce-HP
SAP
SAP spent 2013 focused on growing Cloud revenues and revenue related to HANA at the hands of its license
software business. After a string of disappointing quarters in 2012, SAP built on its vision for HANA and the strategy
of bundling complementary Cloud products with its existing sticky ERP customer base to deliver better results in
2013. SAP experienced turnover and consolidation within its internal organizational structure in 2013, which
ultimately should provide a more streamlined message for customers attempting to understand differences between
existing and acquired offerings. The Company is expected to continue to use mobility and HANA as its key
differentiators in 2014, selectively looking to acquire businesses in complementary adjacencies.
Acquisitions:
 09/10/13:
 06/05/13:
 05/15/13:
 03/07/13:
 02/22/13:
 01/31/13:

KXEN – Predictive analytics software ($40mm / 3.3x EV/Revenue6)
hybris – E-Commerce software provider ($1.3bn / 10.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition
KMS – Employee onboard SaaS (undisclosed)
Camilion Solutions – Insurance policy management software (undisclosed)
SmartOps – Inventory management software (undisclosed)
Ticket-Web – Event ticketing PoS software (undisclosed)

SCP on Other News and Notes:
 Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes: SAP

6

The 451 Group Estimate
8
VMware
VMware continues to capture the benefits of the Virtualization and Cloud movements and finished Q3 above
expectations. Revenues from both license and services are steadily increasing along with operating margins, but enduser computing lagged. The Company also faced questions about its total addressable market throughout the year as
it has largely penetrated a large component of its current market. The Pivotal Initiative should provide the
opportunity for VMware to benefit from a streamlined product portfolio and upside growth from a potential IPO.
VMware stands well positioned to continue this growth path with its stake in the adoption of the hybrid cloud and the
software defined data center, as well as realizing the full benefits of the integration of Nicira products and the
Desktone acquisition.
Acquisitions:
 10/15/13: Desktone – Desktop virtualization SaaS (undisclosed)
 02/11/13: Virsto Software – Storage virtualization software ($185mm / 92.3 EV/Revenue)
SCP on Other News and Notes:
 The Pivotal Initiative

ii. Enterprise Technology IPO Market Overview
The U.S. market saw its highest number of IPOs since 2000 with 222 companies going public.7 2013 proved to be the
busiest year in the Tech IPO market since 2007 with 45 Technology IPOs representing 14% of proceeds raised during
the year.
The Enterprise IPOs8
Company

Pricing
Date

Nimble Storage

12/13/2013

$168.0

$21.00

79.5%

115.7%

Mavenir Systems

11/7/2013

$54.5

$10.00

-4.5%

11.6%

Barracuda Networks

Offer
Amount

Price at
IPO

Change
1st Day

∆ as of
12/31/13

11/6/2013

$74.5

$18.00

19.7%

120.4%

10/16/2013

$260.9

$20.00

85.8%

60.5%

RingCentral

9/27/2013

$97.5

$13.00

40.0%

41.3%

Violin Memory

9/27/2013

$162.0

$9.00

-22.0%

-56.0%

Covisint

9/27/2013

$64.0

$10.00

26.3%

25.5%

FireEye

9/20/2013

$303.5

$20.00

80.0%

118.1%

Rocket Fuel

9/20/2013

$116.0

$29.00

93.4%

112.0%

Benefitfocus

9/18/2013

$130.8

$26.50

102.1%

117.9%

8/9/2013

$117.6

$21.00

56.8%

73.3%

RetailMeNot

7/19/2013

$190.9

$21.00

31.9%

37.1%

Gigamon

6/12/2013

$128.3

$19.00

49.8%

47.8%

Textura

6/7/2013

$75.0

$15.00

39.4%

99.6%

ChannelAdvisor

5/23/2013

$80.5

$14.00

31.7%

197.9%

Marketo

5/17/2013

$78.8

$13.00

77.7%

185.2%

Tableau

5/17/2013

$254.2

$31.00

63.7%

122.4%

Rally Software

4/12/2013

$84.0

$14.00

27.2%

38.9%

Marin Software

3/22/2013

$105.0

$14.00

16.1%

-26.9%

West Corporation

3/22/2013

$102.6

$20.00

-5.7%

28.6%

Model N

3/21/2013

$104.5

$15.50

23.9%

-23.9%

Silver Spring Networks

3/13/2013

$80.8

$17.00

29.4%

23.5%

Average:

42.8%

66.8%

Veeva

Cvent

7
8

Renaissance Capital. IPOs include companies with a market cap of at least $50mm
Notable exclusions include non-Enterprise Technology IPOs such as Twitter and Zulily
9
The IPOs that traded best post-pricing in 2013 were ChannelAdvisor and Marketo, whose shares increased 198% and
185% from their respective IPOs (as of 12/31/13). ChannelAdvisor and Marketo led a strong field of successful SaaS
IPOs that also included Cvent, RetailMeNot, Textura and Veeva. Infrastructure software/networking also performed
well in the public markets with Barracuda Networks, FireEye, Nimble Storage and Tableau.
Compared to the overall Technology IPO market which averaged 52.4% return, collectively Enterprise Technology
IPOs returned 68.8% (as of 12/31/13).
Although many firms saw tremendous appreciation in their stock prices, a smaller portion did not fare as well. Violin
Memory, Marin Software and Model N shares have dropped (56%), (27%), and (24%) respectively, since their IPOs.
Marin and Model N both declined after initial gains, badly missing revenue and gross margin expectations in their first
few quarters as public companies. Violin Memory’s IPO struggled from the beginning, losing 22% on its first day of
trading. Since then the Company, whose revenue relies on large customers, lost HP as client and has seen shares drop
even further while losing its CEO, COO, and CTO.
According to Renaissance Capital, the active pipeline for IPO’s rebounded strongly in 2013 (companies that have filed
an update within last 90 days) with a significant increase in companies in enterprise software. Key potential enterprise
IPOs 2014 include firms such as Alibaba, AppDynamics, Apptio, Arista Networks, Atlassian, Box, Domo, Dropbox,
Good Technology, Pivotal, SilkRoad, Square, Xactly and Zendesk.

iii. General M&A Market Overview

Total M&A Deal Value
$4,000

$3,669

$3,500
$733
$3,000
$2,500

$849

$1,277

$1,000
$500

$469

$1,711
$682
$677

$2,251

$708

$2,289

$2,215

$751

$571

$517

$2,090

$458

$2,000
$1,500

$2,408

$654

$561

$543

$588

$569
$493

$326

$581

$396
$810

$429

$592

$419

$459

$613

$461

$448

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

$0
2007

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Source: Mergermarket

Overall M&A activity decreased by 3.3% in 2013 over 2012 following a particularly weak Q4. In the second half of
2013, deal volume edged up 3.2%, but deal value ended down 3.2%. Despite a solid start to the year, Q4’s 12.7%
drop to $570.5bn in total deal value (from $653.7bn in Q3) caused the year to end relatively flat for the third
consecutive year.9
9

Mergermarket M&A Trend Report: 2013
10
U.S. M&A Deal Value
$1,400

$1,346

$1,200

$229

$1,000

$255
$752
$78
$501

$263

$243
$153

$400
$200

$266

$186

$145
2007

$199

$233
$186

2009

2010

Q1

Q2

Q3

$325

$188
$248

$146

2008

$0

$221

$207

$178

$361

$893

$312

$721

$205

$860

$183

$688

$98

$800
$600

$823

2011
Q4

$168

$127

$179

2012

2013

Source: Mergermarket

The U.S. M&A market ticked upward 3.8%, the fourth consecutive annual increase despite a particularly weak Q4
(down 29.2% y-o-y). However if not for the $124.1bn Verizon Wireless deal, U.S. M&A would have been the lowest
in terms of total deal value since 2010 ($769bn vs. $721bn). This would have represented a 10.6% decline compared
to 2012.2

U.S. Technology Deal Flow
$180

1,600

$160

1,400

$140

1,200

$120

1,000

$100
800
$80
600

$60
$40

400

$20

200

$0

0
2007

2008

2009
Deal Value ($bn)

2010

2011
Number of Deals Closed

2012

2013
Source: Mergermarket

Technology M&A increased 22.3% y-o-y, finishing the year at $166.3bn in total deal value. A pair of large PE deals
(Dell and BMC) inflated that number, yet there were fewer large ($2bn+) deals by strategic acquirers than 2012.
Strategic technology M&A looks strong heading into 2014 as large enterprises look to ignite growth and either
establish or maintain leadership positions through the acquisition of innovators.
11
IT Private Equity Deal Flow
95

$60

94

90

94

90
82

$50

90

82

79

77

$48
80

71

77
$39

$40

$41

65

64

64

49

51

70

73

70

68

62

60

63

62

58

55

$30

50

49
$20

40

42
$17

100

89

37

$15

$15
$9

$10

$5

$4

$4

$3

$3

$3

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q1

Q2

$5

$10
$7

$16
$15

$18

$16

$17

$15

20

$9

$8

30

$14

$12
$7

$5

10

$0

0
Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

2007

2008

Q3

2009

Q4

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q1

2010

Deal Value ($bn)

Q2

Q3

Q4

2011

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

2012

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

2013

Source: Pitchbook

Number of Deals Closed

Technology Private Equity deal volume experienced a particularly weak Q1 2013 (the lowest in terms of both deals
closed and capital invested since Q2 2010), but both Q2 and Q3 rebounded, with Q3 capital invested driven in large
part by BMC. Q4 was highly influenced by the Dell deal, but even with that removed, Q4 was the largest quarter in
IT PE since Q4 2007.

iv. VCs Funding Trends

Median % Acquired by Stock Series
50%

45%
40%
35%
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%

0%
'04 '04 '05 '05 '06 '06 '06 '07 '07 '08 '08 '09 '09 '09 '10 '10 '11 '11 '11 '12 '12 '13 '13
Series Seed

Series A

Series B

Series C

*As of 9/30/13

Series D or Later

Source: Pitchbook

In 2004, on average VCs acquired 40% of a company in Series A rounds and 24% of a company in Series D rounds.
For the first three quarters of 2013, those figures have fallen to 29% and 13%, respectively. This is largely a result of a
decrease in the amount needed to start a company. Founders require less capital to run an efficient and effective
business, resulting in the ability to raise less money and give up less ownership.
12
This has consequently resulted in two principal impacts:
 VCs investing less capital in more companies
 More angel investors providing early capital in place of Series A rounds

Quarterly Median Pre-Money Valuation ($M)
$30
$25
$20

$25.6

$17.8

$22.0

$15
$10

$8.5

$9.2

$4.9

$7.3

$5.3

$5

$2.5

$0

1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q
2009

2010
Series Seed

2011

2012

2013

Series A

Series B

Source: Pitchbook

The addition of less experienced investors has also contributed to valuation inflation in seed rounds. Moreover,
companies have had a difficult time receiving up-rounds in Series A due to high seed-stage valuations. Median premoney seed valuations have climbed 112% since the beginning of 2010, while Series A valuations have only increased
by 26%.

VC Fundraising (#) by Fund Size
100%
90%
80%

$1B+

70%
60%

$500M-$1B

50%

$250M-$500M

40%

$100M-$250M

30%

$50M-$100M

20%

Under $50M

10%

0%
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Source: Pitchbook

13
VC funds are also decreasing in size. Two years ago, 53% of VC funds raised were at least $100mm in size, with 33%
coming in at $250mm or more. Today that figure has fallen to just around 40%, with 50% of all VC funds actually
below $50mm.

14
II. The News and Stories of the Year
i. Dell Goes Private
SCP analysis of Dell acquisition rationale and implications
After an eight-month battle with investors, Michael Dell and Silver Lake Partners took Dell private in September at a
valuation of $25 billion, the 10th largest LBO by deal size and the largest by revenue in history.10 The deal featured a
tennis match’s worth of back and forth (Michael Dell even used this tennis analogy to describe his sentiment with Carl
Icahn following the deal’s close; “It was like a tennis match where there’s all kind of trash-talking, and then afterwards
you’re telling each other ‘nice backhand’ and ‘great serve.’”10) and the ultimate outcome only came after months of
negotiations, proposals and counter-proposals and Michael Dell making a large bet that he was still the man to lead the
Company to its next iteration.
Michael Dell returned as CEO of Dell (the Company he founded in his University of Texas dorm room) in early 2007,
after a nearly three year hiatus. Upon Dell’s return, the Company (which derives half of its revenue from PC sales)
attempted to remake itself on the public market; to transform beyond sales of PCs and servers into a full-service
enterprise infrastructure vendor. Dell acquired over $10bn worth of companies in nearly every aspect of software
“including IT services (Perot Systems), security (SecureWorks, SonicWALL), networking (Force10), storage
(Compellent, AppAssure) and infrastructure software (Quest Software).”11 Despite the acquisitions and attempt to
transition core offerings, the Company lost half its value following his return.
According to Dell’s proxy filing, the first discussions on potentially going private began in June 2012 when Southeastern
Asset Management (Dell’s second-largest shareholder) proposed a buyout, but it was not until Egon Durban of Silver
Lake approached Michael Dell on the topic on July 17th that the discussions began in earnest. On August 14th, Dell
notified the Board of the proposed LBO with Silver Lake. Dell’s board formed a special committee to evaluate the
proposal and to solicit other strategic options for the Business.
Over the next several months, Dell’s Board:
 Demanded six price increases from Dell/Silver Lake before ever putting the proposal up for vote
 Attempted to put a COO in place to provide decision making checks and balances on Michael Dell
 Evaluated a complicated strategic alternative proposed by Carl Icahn that demanded Dell issue debt to fund a
$9 per share dividend or face a proxy fight for control over the board (ultimately teaming up with
Southeastern Asset Management)
 Entertained a tentative $14.25-per-share-offer from Blackstone and former Dell #2 Dave Johnson that would
potentially not include Michael Dell as CEO
 Hired a bank to talk to 72 potential bidders during a lengthy “go-shop” period
Michael Dell had to accept a discount on his shares in the Company twice to increase the offer when Silver Lake refused
to budge on price, ultimately agreeing with Silver Lake on a $13.75 “best and final” offer along with a $0.13 special
dividend. The final deal consisted of Michael Dell investing his 15.6% stake in the Company (about $3.4bn) and another
$500mm in cash along with $250mm from his family office, Silver Lake committing $1.4bn and a loan from Microsoft
of $2bn.

10
11

Dell’s Mitzvah Rescued Buyout as JPMorgan’s Lee Warned of Peril
The 451 Group
15
The deal captured headlines around the world for months, marked the end of Dell’s 25 year run on the public market,
the return of the mega-LBO and a significantly different, new chapter in one of enterprise technologies stalwarts.

ii. The Year of the CMO
With a limited number of exceptions12, most of the companies in the broader Marketing Automation space were
founded in the late 1990s or early 2000s (Aprimo, Constant Contact, Eloqua, ExactTarget, Responsys, Silverpop),
each taking slightly different approaches to the market. Some focused primarily on Email Marketing Automation,
enabling marketers to send out personalized emails to large numbers of potential customers in seconds. Others took
a more targeted approach to analyzing the utilization and effectiveness of resources in the marketing department.
In early 2012, Gartner declared that the CMO would have more control of the IT budget than the CIO by 2017. The
sales cycle had shifted dramatically over the years, with consumers educated about potential products and services well
before ever coming in contact with a sales rep. This shift made the need for compelling marketing content an
imperative for companies as each attempts to maintain a consistent brand experience across the various channels.
Both strategic acquirers and the public market took note of this opportunity in 2012 with a slew of fairly high-profile
Social Media Management acquisition (Salesforce-Buddy Media, Oracle-Vitrue, Google-Wildfire) and well-performing
IPOs (ExactTarget, Eloqua).
This Social Media Management consolidation was not the first round of acquisitions focused on CMO software. The
first wave occurred in 2010 with Teradata’s acquisition of Aprimo and IBM’s acquisition of Unica. Aprimo took an
analytic angle toward Marketing Resource Management while Unica provided largely on-premise license Marketing
Management software and related maintenance. The space then went untouched by Diversified IT strategics (the one
exception being Intuit’s acquisition of Demandforce for SMB marketing) through the end of 2012 until Oracle
acquired Lead Management provider, Eloqua. This acquisition had a domino effect that helped drive 2013 to become
“the Year of the CMO” in software.
Eloqua went public in early August 2012 and traded well on the public market before Oracle ultimately acquired the
Business on December 20, 2012 for a 104% premium over the price at which Eloqua priced its IPO. Eloqua was a
frequent partner of Salesforce and it is rumored that Salesforce never had the opportunity to look at a counter offer
on the Business. Oracle immediately looked to Eloqua to form its marketing platform. SCP analysis of Eloqua
acquisition
Largely in reaction to the Eloqua transaction, Salesforce quickly raised $1bn in debt, specifically earmarked for
marketing-related acquisitions. Rumored to have evaluated a number of providers (including Act-On, HubSpot,
Marketo and Neolane), Salesforce ultimately acquired ExactTarget, using its Marketing Automation capabilities to
form the cornerstone of the (new) Marketing Cloud and spinning off its Lead Generation capabilities (from the
acquisition of Pardot) to the Sales Cloud. SCP analysis of ExactTarget acquisition
Six weeks later, Adobe followed up with an acquisition of its own, purchasing French Marketing Automation
provider, Neolane. SCP analysis of Neolane acquisition
Finally, Oracle closed out the year with the acquisition of Responsys. SCP analysis of Responsys acquisition
All of this while Lead Generation provider, Marketo, traded up nearly 200% following its IPO in May and Social
Media Management providers HootSuite, Spredfast and Sprinklr all raised large rounds in preparation for an IPO or a
second wave of Social Management consolidation.

12

HubSpot – 2005, Marketo – 2006, Neolane – 2006, Unica – 1992
16
Larry Ellison and Mark Hurd at Oracle set off the year of the CMO on December 20, 2012 and ultimately ended it
exactly 365 days later, purchasing two different public Marketing Automation software providers.

iii. The Fall of BlackBerry
The Company that once dominated the corporate mobility market saw its fall from grace largely culminate in 2013.
Blackberry went from a 50% share of the smartphone market and an $80bn market cap in 2008 to less than a 2%
share of the smartphone market and a market cap under $3.9bn at the end of 201313. Shares of Blackberry dropped
over 50% in 2013 alone.
In January 2013, BlackBerry announced its much-delayed BlackBerry 10 system. The system was a major
disappointment with sales far below expectations and resulted in the Company subsequently announcing 4,500 layoffs
and reported a $1 billion write-down.
Fairfax Financial, the largest shareholder, attempted to force an LBO of BlackBerry, but was unable to find any
buyers. Unable to go private, on November 4, Blackberry announced $1 billion investment from Fairfax Financial, a
Qatar-based sovereign-wealth fund and several Canadian investment funds. A stipulation of this investment was that
CEO Thorsten Heins step down. John Chen (former CEO of Sybase) was named the interim CEO.
The Company also announced the departures of three top executives. CFO Brian Bidulka was replaced by SVP and
Controller, James Yersh while COO Kristian Tear and CMO Frank Boulben were dismissed without replacements14.
Upon assuming leadership, Chen reached out to former relationships from SAP/Sybase to join him in revamping
BlackBerry. Chen poached Jim Mackey (former SVP, Corporate Development at SAP) and Mark Wilson (SVP,
Corporate and Field Marketing at Sybase) from OpenText and Avaya, respectively. Mackey will serve as EVP of
Corporate Development and Strategic Planning and Wilson will serve as SVP of Marketing at BlackBerry. Chen also
named John Sims (President, SAP Mobile Services) President of BlackBerry Enterprise.

iv. Pivotal Initiative
Pivotal is a new business entity within the EMC federation, and was formed by assets owned by EMC and VMware.
Pivotal plans to be a platform for mainframe, client-server, and consumer grade computing. Its goal is to make cloudbased industrial software applications faster than anyone has before. If successful, Pivotal may be the first tech
company to make a lasting mark without passing through a small startup phase.
Its core offering is Pivotal One, a comprehensive solution that includes a set of application and data services that run
on top of Pivotal CF, a turnkey solution for agile development teams to rapidly update and scale applications on a
private cloud that can be instantly expanded and upgraded with no downtime, allowing enterprises to innovate with
disruptive speed.
The Pivotal strategy appears to be out of the playbook EMC employed in nurturing VMware to market dominance as
an independent subsidiary, and the motives seem to be similarly in line.
First, maintain Pivotal as a separate equity security with tremendous growth prospects so that EMC can use Pivotal
stock options to retain top engineering talent for those assets which will need the most innovation. VMware shares
have appreciated over 200% since the Company’s IPO, while EMC shares have returned less than 50% … much of
which is due to VMware’s rise.

13
14

ABI Research
Blackberry Announces Management and Board Changes
17
Second, keeping Pivotal at an arm’s length from its corporate parents will allow the Company to maintain some
semblance of neutrality in a field of complex coopetition among IT leaders. VMware’s similar position has facilitated
its ability to effectively sell into and alongside Storage and Security vendors that are very much competitive with EMC,
including Dell, HP, IBM, NetApp, and Symantec. In turn, Pivotal hopes that it will be able to peddle its big data
wares to that group as well as those who are competitive to VMware, notably Citrix, Microsoft, and Red Hat.

v. Salesforce1
At Dreamforce in November, Marc Benioff unveiled his vision for mobility with the announcement of Salesforce1.
Salesforce1 provides a CRM platform for developers and software vendors focused on mobile applications. The
positioning was broader than simply mobility with Salesforce latching onto the Internet of Thing utilizing the term
“the Internet of Customers.”
Salesforce1 required a major refactoring and expansion of Salesforce's APIs with the new APIs all publicly available
on the AppExchange. This vision integrates the Company’s Cloud platform, allowing Chatter, Force.com and
Heroku (Saleforce’s platform for Ruby and Java) to work together seamlessly. The near-term impact is that the
platform will enable Salesforce customers to more easily migrate applications to mobile devices. Customers will also
have the ability to customize and brand their own version of the Salesforce1 platform with Marc Benioff showing off
a Tesla-branded example at Dreamforce.
The Internet of Things positioning seems more conceptually aspirational than near-term impactful. It is Salesforce’s
attempt to reorient customers around the Internet of Customers because, as Marc Benioff stated, “there is a customer
behind every interaction on the Internet." Salesforce’s view is that mobility will be the center of all customer
relationships and CIOs need to focus on how to optimally connect devices to both employees and customers. How
this translates to the Internet of Things seems a bit of an unnatural extension. A cynic would say that for the first
time in a while Salesforce felt left out of a specific buzzword and tried to position its mobile platform around a hot
term.
The overall implications of the announcement remain to be seen, but it clearly has big implications for the Company.
Salesforce does not seem to view mobile as a standalone application market, but instead an extension of existing
solutions previously created for the web. This bet is in line with what large customers are demanding for mobility.
Salesforce’s large customers have development teams in-house with capabilities to build out and customize mobile
solutions much faster than Salesforce could on their behalf. That said, Salesforce’s traditional SMB-base will likely
need robust frameworks and support (more closely resembling pre-built applications) to move existing solutions to
the mobile world. It is unclear to what extent Salesforce1 will have capabilities tailored to this need.
Traditional leaders in mobility like SAP and IBM undoubtedly took notice, in addition to leading mobile upstarts like
Spring Mobile Solutions and Kony.

vi. New Partnerships
Oracle-Salesforce (June)
In one of the most head scratching announcement of the year, Larry Ellison and Marc Benioff held a call with media
and research analysts on June 27 to announce a strategic partnership. Both CEOs played nicely on the call:
Marc Benioff:
 “Larry and I both agree that salesforce.com and Oracle need to integrate our clouds. Salesforce.com's CRM
integrated with Oracle’s Fusion HCM and Financial Cloud is the best of both worlds: the simplicity of
salesforce.com combined with the power of Oracle”
Larry Ellison:
18
 “We're committed to working very closely with salesforce.com to continuously improve our database and our
Java middleware technology, so we can help salesforce.com deliver the highest level of security and reliability
to their Cloud customers. Our two Companies are going to work together to jointly develop out-of-the-box
integration between Salesforce's market-leading CRM applications and Oracle's Cloud applications”
 “Sure, Salesforce and Oracle have some overlapping products, but I think there are far more opportunities to
work together than to compete”
 “Virtually every time we buy a company, they're running -- I wouldn't say every time, but almost every time
we buy a company, they're running salesforce.com CRM”
Was this announcement mainly a publicity stunt between a former mentor-mentee? Did this mean that Salesforce and
Oracle would work together more strategically going forward and cease the cause and effect of acquisitions and
strategy that started when Oracle finally came around on the Cloud?
While customers may benefit from deeper integration between the solutions, neither Oracle nor Salesforce altered
strategic plans to accommodate the other. Oracle made two particularly aggressive acquisitions that cut directly
against Salesforce (SCP analysis of BigMachines acquisition; SCP analysis of Responsys acquisition).
Salesforce also announced a competitive partnership utilizing HP’s hardware and hired former 26 year Oracle veteran
Keith Block as President and Vice Chairman following his ouster from Oracle. It appears that this may have been
two great marketers making nice after the fallout in 2011, but seems to have limited implications from a strategy
standpoint.
Oracle-Dell (June, September)
Twice in 2013, Oracle and Dell announced plans to more tightly integrate enterprise management capabilities. Taken
individually each specific integration means very little, but collectively it shows a developing and deepening strategic
partnership between two of the largest vendors in IT.
Following its acquisition of Sun Microsystems in 2009, Oracle utilized and invested in the acquired SPARC-based
hardware (mainly competing with IBM), but largely let Sun’s server business (using Intel x86 chips) atrophy. The
formation of a strategic alliance with Dell indicates that Oracle will not attempt to compete in the x86 server market
(long expected) and acknowledges that Dell and Oracle each have access to customers that the other wants.
Marius Haas, the head of Dell’s Enterprise business, stated, “Oracle has a phenomenal engine into the top 500
enterprise accounts worldwide. They’d like to go after the broader market, and we’ve got a great relationship with
companies there.”
Oracle has the enterprise and Dell has the SMB and both would like more diversity. If successful, the loser in all of
this may be Mark Hurd’s old firm, HP.
Salesforce-HP (November)
At Dreamforce in November, Salesforce announced a new partnership with Hewlett-Packard, unveiling a jointlydeveloped "Superpod," which will provide a dedicated infrastructure for large customers to run Salesforce in the
Cloud. These dedicated servers will be housed and managed within Salesforce's data centers and running on HP’s
Converged Infrastructure.
This announcement, while not overly strategic from a partnership standpoint, is the first instance where Salesforce has
acknowledged that some customers may simply want dedicated servers. Marc Benioff pointed out that this is not a
single tenant model and that the software running on Superpod is exactly the same as that run on the rest of
Salesforce’s stack, but it is a big extension after years of attacking “fake clouds.”
This partnership also can be viewed as a counterstrike to the partnership from Oracle and Dell earlier in the year.
19
vii. Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes
CA (April)
Michael Gregoire, became the CEO of CA Technologies in December 2012, taking over for Bill McCracken.
Gregoire has a largely application software background (having served as CEO of Taleo and EVP of Global Services
at PeopleSoft) and it is his Cloud expertise that led to his selection as CEO. It is clear that CA must evolve past
mainframe and distributed systems and move quickly into the Cloud and CA is betting that Gregoire’s application
background provides him with the experience to do it.
Four months after arriving, Gregoire announced a $150MM reorganization that included:
 Layoffs of 1,200 employees, replacing them “with those that understand newer technologies”
 Restructuring of commission incentives to drive new business
 Balancing the shift into Cloud with the attractive higher margins of mainframe business
Gregoire’s first year has been met positively by the public markets with CA trading up over 50% in CY 2013.
Intel (May)
Brian Krzanich, a 30 year Intel veteran who began with the Company at twenty two as an engineer, was announced as
CEO of the Company in May following a six month search to replace Paul Otellini. In 2012, almost two-thirds of
Intel’s $53bn in revenue came from the PC market, which Krzanich states “is not growing, let’s be honest.”15
Krzanich’s vision for the Business is to move beyond the chip world because “the assets that made us great in PCs
and servers are even stronger in the mobile and cloud world.”15
To build on this vision, Kraznaich also promoted Renee James (who also was vying for the CEO role) to President,
from her role as EVP and GM of Software & Services.
Microsoft (August)
In August, it was made public that Steve Ballmer would be stepping down as CEO of Microsoft after 33 years with
the Company and 13 years as CEO. In an exclusive interview with the WSJ, Ballmer acknowledged that he and the
Board were in alignment that Microsoft needed to evolve and restructure, but the Board’s issue was the speed at
which it should be done. When Ballmer tried to change his traditional management style, he immediately received
pushback. Ballmer stated, "No matter how fast I want to change, there will be some hesitation from all
constituents—employees, directors, investors, partners, vendors, customers, you name it—to believe I'm serious
about it, maybe even myself."
Ballmer ultimately concluded that a new CEO would be able to enact the change that Microsoft needed at a faster
pace than he would. The list of potential candidates is rumored to include Ford CEO Alan Mulally (who
subsequently denied interest), Microsoft veteran Sataya Nadella, former Skype CEO Tony Bates and former Nokia
CEO Stephen Elop. Now that the search has moved into 2014, the list could be expanded to include various other
names as well.
SAP (June-July)
Lars Dalgaard, head of SAP’s Cloud operations and former CEO of SuccessFactors, left the Company in June to
become a General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz. He was expected to remain involved with SAP in an advisory
role with Ariba CEO Bob Calderoni assuming the position as President, SAP Cloud and becoming a member of the
SAP Global Managing Board. This announcement was coupled with consolidation within Corporate Development
with the previously separate SuccessFactors and SAP teams, merging under Arlen Shenkmen’s leadership.

15

New Chief at Intel Aims to Expand Chip Making
20
Calderoni ultimately also announced his departure in January 2014 with Shawn Price (former CEO of Savvion and
President at Zuora) assuming responsibility of SAP Cloud (including SuccessFactors and Ariba) in addition to onpremise CRM.
Jim Hagemann Snabe also announced that he will be stepping down from his role as Co-CEO in May 2014 to spend
more time with his family. The move will leave Bill McDermott as the sole CEO of SAP. Hagemann Snabe will join
the Advisory Board after a shareholder vote in May 2014.
Symantec (June)
CEO Steve Bennett utilized 2013 to restructure the Company that he assumed control of in July 2012. Bennett has
looked to rework the sales team, trim software products/reorganize business units, cut headcount and increase R&D
and marketing spend. Bennett has focused on selling customers on Symantec as a protector of networks and mobile
devices in addition to PCs.16
Bennett also announced a workforce reduction of up to 1,700 jobs, mainly focused on middle-management after
Bennett found that the average manager had only five people reporting to them.17 The public market has received
Bennett’s leadership well with the Company up over 50% since he assumed the role of CEO.

16
17

Symantec Replaces Technology Chief as CEO Leads Overhaul
Symantec Cutting up to 1,700 Jobs as Early as Today
21
III. Deals of the Year
Note: All multiples are LTM unless otherwise noted

i. Oracle/Responsys
/

12/20/13
Transaction Value: $1,607mm; Multiples: 7.7x EV/Revenue, 106.9x EV/EBITDA
Email marketing software provider
Deal Rationale


The acquisition came exactly 365 days following Oracle’s initial play in SaaS Marketing Automation with the
acquisition of Lead Generation provider Eloqua. In many ways this deal saddles Oracle with redundancies to
Eloqua, a solution that has been used as the cornerstone of Oracle’s Marketing Management offering



The principal technological addition that Oracle acquires with Responsys is B2C marketing expertise and
Email Marketing Automation, neither of which were particularly strong for Oracle historically



While Responsys does derive a significant portion (~32%) of its revenue from Professional Services, Oracle is
acquiring a Business that is on a $140mm run-rate for its Subscription business alone. This provides Oracle
with a sizable addition of Cloud revenue at a discount below other SaaS comps



The acquisition of Eloqua, BigMachines and Responsys all provide Oracle with strong technologies that are
complementary to its existing Sales Force Automation solution. As Salesforce has increasingly grabbed a
stranglehold on the SFA market, competitors have looked to differentiate offerings with Oracle focusing on
components that are in direct adjacencies to SFA

Implications


Oracle will likely continue to deploy Eloqua for B2B marketing and utilize Responsys for B2C marketing.
The lines between B2B and B2C only continue to blur and it will be interesting to see how Oracle’s sales reps
utilize each solution as the delineation B2B and B2C becomes increasingly ambiguous



Despite the very public partnership announcement, this deal is the second by Oracle (along with
BigMachines) in Q4 that seems particularly competitive to Salesforce (SCP analysis of BigMachines
acquisition). Although possessing Lead Generation functionality from the acquisition of Pardot,
ExactTarget’s core business was more directly competitive with Responsys than Eloqua (SCP analysis of
ExactTarget acquisition)



SAP was rumored to be involved in the bidding for Responsys, although this would stand in stark contrast to
many of the comments made by SAP leadership following the acquisition of hybris (SCP analysis of hybris
acquisition). SAP will ultimately need to acquire something in the Marketing department, but there remain
more targets than acquirers and should have its picking of the remaining offerings
22


Marketo entered the public market with the intention of remaining there and has continued to appreciate in
value for its shareholders. The Company is betting that the opportunity to own the CMO can be done
independently from any CRM system and so far the public market has certainly agreed. Responsys ultimately
found an offer too good to pass up – it remains to be seen if the same will happen for Marketo

23
ii. Thoma Bravo/Intuit (Financial Services Division) – NCR/Digital Insight
/

(Financial Services Division)

07/01/2013
Transaction Value: $1,025mm;
Multiples: N/A

/
12/02/2013

Transaction Value: $1,650mm;
Multiples: 5.0x EV/Revenue, 55.0x EV/EBITDA
Online banking & payments software

Deal Rationale


Brad Smith assumed the role of CEO at Intuit in 2008, after serving as SVP and GM of Intuit’s Small
Business Division. Under Smith’s leadership, Intuit divested its Real Estate Solutions business (acquired by
Vista Equity for $128mm in 2009), Commercial Banking business (acquired by Bottomline Technologies for
$20mm in 2012) and website development software assets (acquired by The Endurance International Group
for $60mm in 2012). In middle of 2013, Smith set out to divest the largest business to date; the Business
formerly known as Digital Insight, which it had acquired for $1,350mm in 2006



Intuit retained a bank that contacted a limited number of parties that could close quickly, which seemingly
eliminated all strategic acquirers. The process is rumored to have been extremely fast including a “30-day
final close (which ultimately caused Thoma Bravo to fund the acquisition via bridge loans, before later lining
up more traditional financing).” Thoma Bravo paid $1,025mm for the Business and retained the Digital
Insight name that it had on the public market



Upon seeing the announcement of the acquisition, NCR expressed interest in Digital Insight, having not been
able to participate in the previous sale process. The deal was diligenced, negotiated and closed within five
months of the announcement by Thoma Bravo for a $625mm increase (61%)



NCR saw an opportunity for Digital Insight to fundamentally change its Financial Services business,
providing customers with a consistent experience across various channels. According to the investor
presentation on the acquisition, NCR stated that the acquisition would increase its available market by ~$5bn

Implications


The deal represents an unprecedented return for Thoma Bravo with its team benefiting from aggressiveness
and the ability to act quickly



Lost in much of this is that Digital Insight represents an extremely strategic acquisition for NCR and its
vision for transforming its three core lines of business. Radiant and Retalix were highlighted as the
cornerstone for the Hospitality and Retail businesses, and NCR expects Digital Insight to be that for the
Financial Services businesses. NCR plans to utilize Digital Insight to become a global leader in an omnichannel retail banking transformation, enabling transactions across multiple touch points. This deal will likely
make NCR much more competitive with more traditional Financial Technology banking companies
24
iii. OpenText /GXS
/

11/05/2013
Transaction Value: $1,165mm; Multiples: 2.4x EV/Revenue, 8.4x EV/EBITDA
Electronic data interchange and file transfer software and services
Deal Rationale


Under CEO Mark Barrenechea’s leadership, OpenText rebranded from Enterprise Content Management
(considered by Barrenechea to be an antiquated business term) to Enterprise Information Management in the
last year. The acquisition of GXS builds upon this repositioning, providing software that links supply-chain
information between vendors/suppliers and complements the acquisition of EasyLink (acquired for $246mm
in 2012)



Additionally, the deal doubles OpenText’s Cloud revenue (nonexistent prior to the purchase of EasyLink),
expands its geographic reach (specifically Latin America and Asia-Pacific), diversifies application software
from its traditional focus on SAP and expands its industry focus (specifically adding more of a presence in
Financial Services, Manufacturing, CPG and Retail)



OpenText is also able to capitalize on the favorable debt markets (taking on $800mm in new debt to pay off
$777mm in GXS debt, bringing its own long-term debt to $1.3bn), while Francisco Partners, Golden Gate,
Cerberus and Norwest Venture Partners are able to exit a deal that has been in portfolios since 2001

Implications


The most interesting and immediate implication from the acquisition is with regard to OpenText’s
relationship with SAP. OpenText has traditionally been sold as part of SAP's price-listed products and this
acquisition puts OpenText more squarely in competition with aspects of SAP/Ariba. OpenText cited IBM as
its principal competitor with the acquisition and Barrenechea stated that “in relation to SAP they are a strong,
strategic partner. I am hopeful that our relation with GXS will bring us closer together as companies. We
value the relationship that we have built over the last decade highly, and I suspect this will bring us closer, not
further apart.” It remains to be seen if SAP will view the acquisition in a similar way



The integration of GXS (the largest acquisition in Company’s history) will likely keep OpenText from making
large acquisitions in 2014 and potentially 2015. In the investor call with research analysts, Barrenechea stated
OpenText would onboard GXS within two years

25
iv. Oracle/BigMachines
/

10/23/2013
Transaction Value: N/A; Multiples: N/A
CPQ Sales Automation SaaS
Deal Rationale


Oracle spent much of 2013 adding components complementary to Sales Force Automation, differentiating its
CRM solution from Salesforce and to a lesser extent SAP. Whereas Eloqua served as a key differentiating
quiver on the front-end (SCP analysis of Eloqua acquisition), BigMachines offers technology to drive deals at
the back-end of the sales cycle



Salesforce is both a key partner of and investor in BigMachines, and therefore in addition to differentiating
Oracle’s offering, the acquisition of BigMachines also strikes a blow to one of its principal competitors

Implications


Oracle likely will look to move BigMachines’ CPQ solution even more upmarket as the solution is particularly
tailored for the Fortune 500. A focus on selling to the largest enterprise clients has been the blue-print of
post-acquisition planning for Oracle under Mark Hurd’s leadership. Hurd has consistently cited that 60% of
Oracle’s revenue come from the top 2000 customers and that should be the focus of sales reps



This deal comes on the heels of the $37mm raise in September by APTTUS (BigMachines’ principal
competitor) from K1 Capital, ICONIQ Capital and Salesforce. APTTUS should see the opportunity to
greatly expand its footprint in the enterprise as Oracle focus on its largest customers



Subscription billing/recurring revenue management possibly represents the next area of
consolidation/acquisition at the back-end of the sales cycle with Oracle and SAP likely consolidators in the
market

26
v. Microsoft/Nokia
/

09/03/2013
Transaction Value: $5,010mm; Multiples: N/A
Mobile phone designer & manufacturer
Deal Rationale


This deal cements a partnership that Microsoft and Nokia put together in February 2011, where the device
vendor built its smartphone products around the Windows Phone OS. Microsoft is acquiring almost all of
Nokia’s Devices & Services business, including its Mobile Phones and Smart Devices portfolio and its
Devices & Services production facilities, sales and marketing activities and support functions. About 32,000
Nokia staff will transfer to Microsoft, including 4,700 staff in Finland



The Windows Phone was losing ground to Nokia’s Lumia and Microsoft needed to find a way to “accelerate
growth” amidst competition with Google and Apple (and do so without losing Nokia, the only OEM
committed to Windows, once the partnership was up for renewal). The risk of losing the Nokia alliance
ultimately is greater than less than 10% of Microsoft's international cash holdings



Microsoft also gets a 10-year non-exclusive license to Nokia’s patents, including the Nokia brand (with an
option to extend the license)

Implications


While the traditional computing model remains under threat, buying Nokia appears to do little more than to
delay deciding on a strategic vision and avoid the “nuclear” option (Nokia partnering with Google). This
allows Microsoft more time to build its presence in mobile and to try to convince both consumer users and
enterprise businesses of the value of its suite of a multi-device experience powered by Windows (similar to
Apple’s model)



This acquisition solidifies Microsoft’s number-three position in the smartphone OS market and leaves Steve
Ballmer’s successor somewhat handcuffed with Ballmer’s vision for Microsoft in the near-term



Microsoft also gains opportunities in both emerging markets via inexpensive entry-level phones, and in
developed enterprise markets with an expansion of Windows-powered smart devices

27
vi. IBM/Trusteer
/
08/15/2013
Transaction Value: ~$1,000mm; Multiples: N/A
Financial anti-fraud & endpoint integrity software
Deal Rationale


The rise of networked services and the proliferation of devices has caused a corresponding rise in cyber
security threats with hackers becoming increasingly more creative in ways to infiltrate systems. Together with
existing capabilities in advanced threat detection, analysis and remediation, Trusteer will allow IBM to offer
customers several additional layers of defense against sophisticated attackers. Trusteer has 7 of the top 10
banks in North America using the Company’s SaaS to detect malware used for financial fraud



The deal marks IBM’s first move in the broader security space since the acquisition of Q1 Labs in 2011. It
provides Big Blue with advanced endpoint malware detection in addition to threat intelligence and mobile
protection capabilities to help build a cybersecurity leadership position. IBM had historically been selling
Trend Micro’s endpoint security suite18



Brendan Hannigan, GM of IBM Security Systems, stated in a press release, “The acquisition of Trusteer
builds on more than 40 years of IBM's rich contribution to the security space. Trusteer will extend our data
security capabilities further into the cloud, mobile and endpoint security space. This acquisition helps provide
our clients with comprehensive network and endpoint anti-malware solutions"

Implications




The success of the acquisition will not only require successful integration with IBM’s existing solutions, but
also the ability to accommodate other vendors’ offerings. Cybersecurity still remains a highly fragmented
market where “best-of-breed” appears to be the option of choice (for securing networks, systems, endpoints,
and data) and provides a target rich environment for IBM to continue to acquire



18

This deal adds capabilities to help IBM become a large-cap leader in the market. Combining Trusteer’s
advanced endpoint protection capabilities with the software from BigFix (acquired by IBM in 2010) provides
IBM with fairly robust solutions

The deal will be combined with various aspects of IBM’s existing security/counter-fraud solutions including
i2, BigFix, QRadar, SPSS and InfoSphere and sit within the Security Systems Group. Before the transaction
there were some rumors that IBM could get out of the security market entirely and this obviously represents a
big move to the contrary

The 451 Group
28


IBM will likely look to take Trusteer beyond the financial sector and into the broader enterprise security
market. While financial services was the principal use case for Trusteer, having proven its solutions
capabilities in one of the most critical security markets should allow for IBM to fairly easily take the solution
more horizontally



IBM also plans to form a cybersecurity software lab in Israel that consists of 200 Trusteer and IBM
researchers/developers and focuses on creating solutions for "mobile and application security, advanced
threat, malware, counter-fraud, and financial crimes"

29
vii.

Cisco/Sourcefire
/
07/23/2013
Transaction Value: $2,700mm; Multiples: 10.7x EV/Revenue, 160.5x EV/EBITDA
Intrusion detection & prevention and anti-malware
Deal Rationale


With the third largest deal in the history of the Security market, Cisco bolstered its position in network
security and is banking on leveraging the Sourcefire brand in making a broader push into enterprise security



Security has been an on-again, off-again focus for Cisco, but at CiscoLive in June, CEO John Chambers
stated that Cisco is not “customers’ primary security vendor” and “that’s got to change.” Cisco will now
focus on a “threat-centric” security model moving forward, meaning that Cisco will focus attention on the
threats themselves more so than policy and controls

Implications


Cisco will likely attempt to utilize Sourcefire’s brand to make a significant mark in the enterprise Security
space (to compete with vendors like HP, IBM, Intel and Symantec). In Sourcefire, Cisco immediately gets an
established network security architecture, an anti-malware solution and additional security intelligence to form
the cornerstone of the new-look Cisco Security Group. Sourcefire will immediately contribute market leading
network security products and services to Cisco’s existing assets like TrustSec and ISE



The future of Software Defined Networking and a redefined perimeter is perhaps the greatest opportunity for
Cisco. Combining Cisco’s SDN solution and utilizing the strength of Sourcefire’s software security
applications leads to a natural opportunity to embed security in the network intelligence fabric (which would
be consistent with the Application-Centric Infrastructure vision announced by Cisco earlier in the year)



The Sourcefire team will become a part of the Cisco Security Group with founder and CTO Martin Roesch
becoming VP and Chief Architect for the Security Department

30
viii. Adobe/Neolane
/
06/27/2013
Transaction Value: $600mm; Multiples: 8.6x EV/Revenue
Web & mobile marketing software
Deal Rationale


Following rumored unsuccessful bids for hybris and ExactTarget, Adobe ultimately acquires French
Marketing Automation provider, Neolane to add Marketing Automation capabilities to the Adobe Digital
Marketing Suite. Adobe will look to pair Neolane’s solution with the software assets from Omniture, Day
Software and Context Optional (by way of the Efficient Frontier acquisition)



Adobe looks to approach the CMO from more of a web-based focus prior to the acquisition of Neolane,
utilizing Omniture and Day Software (making it somewhat curious HubSpot was not the ultimately
acquisition). Neolane and Context Optional provide Adobe with strong CRM-based Marketing functionality
and the most robust Social Media Management platform of all the leaders in CRM

Implications


While a bit reactionary to the acquisition of Eloqua and ExactTarget, Neolane provides Adobe with the
functionality that CMOs are increasingly expecting from CRM providers



This deal makes it very likely that Act-On, HubSpot, Marketo, Responsys and Silverpop need to focus on
becoming standalone companies in the public market, potentially becoming acquirers instead of acquired



After addressing Marketing Automation, Adobe may still look to make an acquisition in E-Commerce
although there are far fewer providers of scale that address the enterprise segment

31
ix. SAP/hybris
/
06/05/2013
Transaction Value: $1,341mm; Multiples: 10.7x EV/Revenue
E-commerce software provider
Deal Rationale


Once considered a foregone conclusion, the acquisition of hybris is finally cemented after SAP ultimately
scrapped its on-going efforts to build an E-Commerce platform. SAP’s organically built E-Commerce
platform significantly trailed the industry leaders and was viewed as lacking appropriate integration
functionality with non-SAP CRM offerings



E-Commerce represents a front office capability that should be able to leverage HANA’s in-memory
capabilities, so that SAP can perform various differentiated functions like predicting demands and trade
promotions that will help drive customer insight



SAP has attempted to position Salesforce as its principal competition (vs. Oracle) and used the M&A Call
with Research Analysts to highlight the deal’s differentiation vs. ExactTarget a day earlier
Co-CEO Bill McDermott:
 “And for those of you that probably already know this, I don't want to be repetitive, but I think you and
all the CEOs I talked to already get enough emails, and they put them directly into the trash folder, so
some of the moves that we saw others make are quite puzzling”
 “I just can't push the email blasts as strategic to any other CEOs I met”
Co-CEO Jim Hagemann Snabe:
 “This is not about the email world of CRM. This is about the real-time interaction with consumers in
billions in volume.”
 “Now coming to the competitive situation, you kind of begin to see a pattern here, a little bit like we saw
with our other competitor. There's either the strategy where you consolidate the past, and that's about
sales force automation and it's about sending emails out in marketing, or you define the future, which is
about individualized consumerization, the change of the experience for the consumer, understanding
each individual consumer's individual requirement and be able to analyze, predict and upsell. That's
where we are going. And so in many ways, you could say this is not about a catch-up. This is about
defining the next-generation CRM. And it's not about email, I can assure you.”

Implications


Although positioning itself vs. Salesforce/ExactTarget a day earlier, the more direct implication is putting
SAP in a more competitive position vs. Oracle's ATG Commerce Suite and IBM's WebSphere Commerce

32


Although expected to be left as a standalone company within SAP, hybris will look to leverage the core
differentiators that SAP brings to CRM: mobility and HANA’s in-memory database capabilities



SAP has backed itself into a bit of a corner with regard to Marketing Automation, speaking very disparagingly
about the ExactTarget acquisition by Salesforce. Like many of its competitors before, SAP will ultimately
need to find a way to position these comments as non-contradictory if and win it purchases into Marketing
Automation (likely by unfairly calling ExactTarget simply Email Marketing)

33
x. Salesforce/ExactTarget
/
06/04/2013
Transaction Value: $2,500mm; Multiples: 7.6x EV/Revenue
Marketing automation SaaS provider
Deal Rationale


Marc Benioff historically spoke fairly disparaging about Email technology, stating “Email will be dead. Many
teenagers today think of email as their parents’ way to communicate and as they enter the workforce, business
apps will have to change if they are to hold the attention of a new generation.” Benioff began to soften his
language at Dreamforce ’12, which ultimately resulted in the acquisition of ExactTarget



Following the acquisition of Eloqua by Oracle, Salesforce quickly began to evaluate Marketing vendors
(rumored to include Act-On, Marketo, Neolane and Silverpop), finally settling on ExactTarget due to both its
Marketing Automation and Lead Generation capabilities (from the acquisition of Pardot)



The deal represents an extremely successful outcome for ExactTarget management team and investors. After
initially filing for an IPO in 2007, ExactTarget withdrew its application to invest in its platform, raising money
from TCV, Battery and Scale Ventures. The Company (with a legacy focus on SMB Email Marketing)
emerged from the investment with a more robust offering built for enterprise businesses

Implications




The ExactTarget team will largely remain intact, operating as a fairly standalone entity within Salesforce that
includes its own Corporate Development department, focused on marketing acquisitions



19

Following the acquisition, ExactTarget immediately will become the core offering of the Marketing Cloud
with Buddy Media and Radian6 serving lesser, complementary roles in the suite. Scott Dorsey (CEO of
ExactTarget) will assume the head of Salesforce’s Marketing Cloud

The deal also adds to the perspective that there are three separate approaches19 to how Marketing
Automation technology will be utilized going forward:
 Sales Force Automation-driven, ie. Oracle and Salesforce
 Web/Inbound-led, ie. Adobe and HubSpot
 Standalone platform (agnostic to CRM/Web Presence), ie. Marketo and Silverpop

The 451 Group
34
xi. IBM/SoftLayer
/
06/04/2013
Transaction Value: $2,000mm; Multiples: 4.7x EV/Revenue
Hosted services provider
Deal Rationale


SoftLayer provides IBM with a cornerstone for its vision in the Cloud. Together with SoftLayer, IBM can
offer the flexibility, automation, and agility of the public Cloud with the security, reliability, and management
of the private Cloud. IBM should now be able to provide customers with the environment necessary to meet
their needs for security and pricing



This deal allows IBM to leverage the suite of its products and services to become a full service provider as
businesses look to develop next-generation Cloud strategy. IBM now has the high-end, strategic consulting
services to advise on options (IBM Global Business Services), SoftLayer to host in the desired environment
and applications/products to cross- and up-sell

Implications


SoftLayer immediately becomes the central infrastructure of IBM’s Cloud strategy and will be the catalyst for
consolidation of IBM’s family of Cloud products. Hosting is increasingly becoming commoditized, but the
ability for IBM to provide a “one-stop shop” for customers evaluating Cloud solutions makes SoftLayer
particularly strategic



The also deal immediately puts IBM in direct competition with Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and
Rackspace and may increasingly pull IBM into the mid-market as many of SoftLayer customers are smaller
than IBM’s traditional base



The acquisition of SoftLayer could also lead to further commoditization of Cloud services offerings,
potentially resulting in additional acquisitions with various providers approaching with slight differentiation

35
xii. Various PE Investors/BMC Software

/
05/06/2013
Transaction Value: $6,900mm; Multiples: 3.2x EV/Revenue, 10.0x EV/EBITDA
Systems management software provider
Deal Rationale


In what has increasingly become a blueprint for Elliott Management in technology, the firm identified a
middling public technology company and provoked an evaluation of strategic options. Similar to the
outcome with Novell (and what appears the case with Elliott’s involvement in Compuware), the outcome was
not likely the one for which Elliott initially hoped when it set out to “unlock shareholder value”



The Enterprise Service Management group has long weighed down BMC’s growth20, causing the Business to
trade at a multiple below many of its peers in the software industry. The transaction will also allow BMC to
evaluate its various lines of Business in a more private setting and appropriately invest in its SaaS business
without a focus on near-term profits, something that has moved from desirable to imperative with the
success of new competitors like ServiceNow, AppDynamics and New Relic

Implications




Three of the four principal players in IT Management experienced disruption or underwhelming results in
2012 and 2013. BMC, HP and IBM have all struggled at various points throughout the period while CA
emerged largely unscathed. CA and new CEO Michael Gregoire will need to continue to stay ahead of the
curve (particularly with regard to the Cloud) in its core Business to avoid the hard-times that have fallen on its
direct competitors



20

The LBO makes it likely that the Enterprise Service Management business will ultimately be divested and
allow BMC to focus on the higher growth core businesses

The deal trails only Dell as the largest post-recession PE transaction and is one of the first large “club deals”
since the recession. There are quite a few businesses with “legacy” offerings that could benefit from life off
the public market and sponsor capital to invest in more modern technologies. The success of BMC could
segue to more large take privates featuring various clubbing together to provide capital

The 451 Group
36
xiii. Silver Lake Partners/Dell
/
02/05/2013
Transaction Value: $24,811mm; Multiples: 0.4x EV/Revenue, 5.2x EV/EBITDA
Computer & IT systems provider
SCP on the Dell story over 2013
Deal Rationale
Michael Dell and Silver Lake Partners


Dell fell hard from its position as one of the preeminent stocks of the late 1990s, particularly in the last five
years as the proliferation of smartphones and tablets cut into its leadership position in the PC market.
Following a brief hiatus, Michael Dell returned as CEO to the Company in 2007 and attempted to acquire his
way into businesses with higher margins than PCs (including IT services, security, networking, storage and
infrastructure software) all while managing shareholder expectations every three months. Michael Dell
ultimately concluded that the Business would be most efficiently and effectively transformed without an eye
towards monthly results, but instead a long-term investment horizon



Michael Dell found in Egon Durban and Silver Lake a partner with the capital and vision to invest in Dell for
returns in five-to-eight years.21 Throughout the negotiations, Silver Lake remained disciplined in the price it
was willing to pay for the Business, ultimately forcing Michael Dell to twice discount the price of his shares to
increase the overall price of the bid. The price Silver Lake is paying reflects a 25% premium on Dell’s stock
from before leaks of the LBO (with an overall higher deal premium due to Michael Dell’s stock discount), but
well below the level where Dell has traded since the end of the recession. The multiples (0.4x LTM Revenue
and 5.2x LTM EBITDA) are much more closely in-line with its legacy nature as a PC provider than its vision
as an enterprise infrastructure software provider



Ultimately it was extremely unlikely that any realistic bid would emerge without Michael Dell’s support, a
conflict which Carl Icahn lamented throughout the process. The alliance between Silver Lake and Michael
Dell never received a credible counter-proposal and was forced to insignificantly increase the price a few
times, before ultimately receiving board sign-off

Microsoft


21

Microsoft has been a partner of Dell’s for nearly 30 years and provided a loan up to $2bn to help Michael
Dell and Silver Lake take the Company private. It was rumored to be Egon Durban at Silver Lake who used

Dell’s Mitzvah Rescued Buyout as JPMorgan’s Lee Warned of Peril
37
his close ties with Microsoft CEO Steven Ballmer (having sold Ballmer Skype) to bring in Microsoft as a
partner22


Microsoft is walking a thin-line with this investment, unwilling to take equity (for fear of upsetting other
partners),7 but able to support its long-time partner and gain more influence over its partner and the PC
sector in general



Microsoft may also be looking to Dell for support as it moves further into the enterprise market including
potentially virtualization and datacenter space

Implications




23

Despite PCs being a declining market with eroding margins, Dell has stated that plans to stay in the market
and intends to be aggressive in regaining global market share, in particular going after China



22

The most obvious and immediate implication is that under new private ownership structure, Dell will be able
to completely focus on its core platform for the future. Michael Dell specifically stated that the LBO would
allow the Company “to grow in cloud, mobile, Big Data, without thinking about the next quarter.” The Dell
software platform already includes three converging pillars: Systems Management (Quest, KACE, Wyse and
AppAssure), Security (SonicWall, SecureWorks, Quest) and Information Management (Boomi, TOAD,
Kitenga).22 It remains likely that Dell will attempt to build on its position in each of these areas through both
organic investment and M&A. Several of the aforementioned Dell acquisitions are large purchases of older
technology, and thus appear to be motivated by a desire to show rapid growth in Software revenues of any
strip. We expect Dell’s acquisition strategy to be more targeted going forward, focused on earlier-stage nextgen technologies in key areas (Cloud, Big Data, Security, Storage), and for Dell to attempt to partially offset
the total cost of acquisition via more activity out of Dell Ventures

Sources have indicated that Silver Lake will have ultimate sign-off on all important management decisions and
can veto any transaction or spending exceeding $500 million23

The 451 Group
Dell’s Mitzvah Rescued Buyout as JPMorgan’s Lee Warned of Peril
38
xiv. Oracle/Acme Packet
/
02/04/2013
Transaction Value: $2,063mm; Multiples: 5.9x EV/Revenue, 67.8x EV/EBITDA
Session border control provider
Deal Rationale


Oracle’s acquisition of Acme Packet represents a landmark transaction that will enable Oracle to integrate
more deeply into service providers’ infrastructure. Acme Packet provides session border controller solutions
that provide security and management for multimedia traffic, including subscriber authentication capabilities
that govern the types of access and quality of service that users receive



Like many providers to the telecom market, Acme Packet has struggled to grow its top line revenue recently
as service providers delayed or cut orders for new equipment. Oracle’s bid is approximately half of the level
at which Acme Packet traded in 2011



Network equipment vendors have been increasingly focused on integrating with the network services that
their customers are providing, and Oracle is striving to play a greater role in next-generation services
including VoLTE

Implications


A deal that seemingly came out of nowhere, the addition of Acme Packet could serve as one the more
strategic deals for Oracle in recent memory. The acquisition builds out Oracle’s Unified Communications
offering and makes it more directly competitive against companies like Cisco, Huawei, Alcatel-Lucent and
Sonus



Oracle can now play a role in accelerating the migration of service providers and enterprises to all-IP
networks and is poised to innovate with software-based technologies for monetizing network services. This
deal seems particularly strategic and, if integrated effectively, could prove transformative for Oracle

39
xv. Oracle/Eloqua
/
12/20/2012
Transaction Value: $956mm; Multiples: 9.7x EV/Revenue
Marketing automation SaaS provider
Deal Rationale


Oracle is looking to couple Eloqua’s Lead Generation capabilities with its existing CRM platform and
RightNow’s Customer Service offering to build a Customer Experience Cloud suite to help companies
transform the way they market, sell, support and serve customers



The combined offering is expected to enable organizations to provide a highly personalized and unified
experience across channels, creating brand loyalty through social and online interactions, providing superior
service at every touch-point

Implications


The deal represents the first move into software for the CMO following the failed Social Media Management
acquisitions earlier in 2012 and a return to Enterprise Marketing Automation following acquisitions by IBM
(Unica) and Teradata (Aprimo) in 2010



Eloqua has been a historically strong partner of Salesforce and the deal puts Salesforce in an unusual position,
having one of its largest partners fall into the hands of one of its biggest competitors. This deal trigged
Salesforce raising $1bn in convertible debt with an eye towards acquisitions in Marketing Automation



The acquisition of Eloqua currently looks like a steal for Oracle with the nearest director comparable
company, Marketo, trading at close to north of 15.0x off of a nearly identical revenue base as Eloqua at the
time of the acquisition

40
IV. Predictions for 2014
i.

Enterprise IPO debuts will slow down… because they can’t speed up
Have enterprise IPOs been underpriced? At least in part, finishing up 42.8% on the first day trading in 2013
(Enterprise Technology IPO Market Overview). Both institutional and retail investors clamored for enterprise stocks
as they entered the public market, acquiring unprofitable businesses with high top line growth that were looking to
become leaders in various markets. We expect 2014 to correct this with underwriters becoming more aggressive in
pricing, with fears of “Facebooking” an IPO becoming a memory of the past. VCs and other selling shareholders are
leaving money on the table post-pricing and will likely pressure lead bookrunners to aim higher with initial trading.

ii.

Carve Outs over Buy Outs
Dell and BMC headlined a number of software-focused LBOs in 2013 along with Active Network, Keynote and
Websense. Elliot Capital Management also attempted to force new (private) directions at both Compuware and
Riverbed. Vendors on the public market with more antiquated technology will continue go private at the hands of
software-focused PE firms, but we expect the larger trend to look more similar to Thoma Bravo’s acquisition of
Digital Insight and Vista Equity’s acquisition of Omnitracs. We expect PE firms to increasingly look to large
diversified IT companies with potential businesses that would benefit from life without the parent company.
Diversified IT firms will likely be more receptive to these strategies as they look to streamline product portfolios to
counter the transformative trends that have disrupted technology in the last decade.

iii.

The Year(s) of the CMO
We named 2013 the Year of the CMO with acquisitions by Adobe, Oracle and Salesforce, Marketo’s IPO and highprofile raises in the Social Media Management space. We expect 2014 to continue with this momentum in the Front
Office. Look for potential consolidation in Social Media Management, specifically companies that have proven
capabilities to scale in the Enterprise. Vitrue and Buddy Media did not meet the original acquisition theses in large
part due to the heavy services components each required. For the next wave of consolidation, Adobe, IBM, Oracle,
Salesforce and SAP will seek to avoid mistakes that were made in the summer of 2012 and will ensure that companies
have the software platform to meet the needs of the largest enterprises.
There also stand a few companies in the broader Marketing Automation space that could enter the public markets in
2014 including Act-On and HubSpot.

iv.

Elliott will continue to Elliott
Elliott Capital Management used 2013 to cement its position as the leader in who enterprise technology CEOs fear
acquiring a large stake in their business. Elliot invested became nearly synonymous with management will face a
contentious period in the near future. The Company has seen mixed results from its recent strategy in enterprise
software, but do not expect the team to slow down now, highlighted by a January 2014 investment in Juniper.
41
v.

Eloqua, Marketo or ExactTarget will distance itself to become the clear leader
History has shown “to the victor go the spoils,” particularly in the SaaS market with network effects leading to a clear
market leader… and then almost everyone else. This has proven true in SaaS CRM (NetSuite), ERP (NetSuite),
HCM/Financial Management (Workday), ITSM (ServiceNow), Web Analytics (Omniture), B2B/Procurement (Ariba)
and Customer Service Management (RightNow). We expect 2014 to be the year that one of the three company’s truly
distances itself from the others and will either benefit from innovation as a standalone (Marketo), established position
in SFA (ExactTarget) or size and strength of sales force (Eloqua).

vi.

Mobile in 2014
A favorite investor of ours once said, “We were all over mobile… but that was in 2000. We were investing in mobile
before people were ready.” Well, mobile is definitely here and now the question is what it will look like.
Mobile CRM
Is mobile a standalone market? Do customers want pre-built applications or a platform to migrate existing desktop
and SaaS-based offerings? The answer for each of these appears to be both yes and no. A bi-furcation is occurring
between what an enterprise and SMB customer are seeking from mobile solution. Enterprises want a platform that
allow developers to build out from existing framework, while SMBs are seeking pre-packaged applications with less
customization. The winning providers will be the companies that can provide the appropriate platform for the
enterprise with the appropriate applications from SMBs. Salesforce1 has the potential transformative in this regard
and 2014 should prove if Salesforce has appropriately articulated its vision for mobile, or if the talk of “internet of
customer” confuses the message. SCP on Salesforce1
Enterprise Mobility Management
MDM continued to gain steam in 2013 with a host of companies led by AirWatch, Good Technology and MobileIron
each seeking ways to differentiate from one another. That trio appears to have a collective finger poised on the power
button in a sector-wide game of musical chairs, as many IT incumbents wait to see if those vendors will choose to go
public, can go public, and can do so at a compelling valuation, before making major entries into the sector. Some,
most notably Citrix with their acquisition of Zenprise and IBM via their purchase of Fiberlink, have chosen not to
wait, though their remains a large and eclectic group of potential acquirers that appear to need to build an Enterprise
Mobility Management position in one form or another. These include Device Manufacturers, Mobile Carriers, IT
Service Management players, Security vendors, Semiconductor shops, and the Virtualization leaders, among others.

vii.

Sales Enablement and Recurring Revenue Management will become ubiquitous
Every year certain buzzwords and phrases seem to take off with companies repositioning themselves around the
success of the first movers. Transformative trends such as Cloud, Social, Big Data and the Internet of Things each
were evangelized by leading companies orienting customers around the opportunity and large-caps eventually
followed suit through marketing, investment or acquisition. Sales Enablement and Recurring Revenue Management
are two terms that gained steam in 2013 and we expect to be ubiquitous in 2014. Companies like SAVO, ClearSlide,
42
Bloomfire, Qvidian and Brainshark positioned around Sales Enablement in 2013, while Aria Systems and
ServiceSource latched onto Recurring Revenue Management. Look for strategics in CRM to begin to market around
these terms and to eventually acquire in companies in the broader universe.

43
V. Bibliography and Thanks
We would like to thank all of the people that have provided us with insights over the course of 2013. There are a
number of people at private and public companies, in the research community and at both private equity and venture
capital firms with which we have been fortunate enough to interact.
We want to be clear that any uncited information is a compilation of our own proprietary insights and that we
maintained the utmost care to ensure that we not cross any confidentiality bestowed upon us. SCP also maintains
access to various research and data providers whose analysis and information has contributed to our understanding of
various sectors and industries over time. These include:






Gartner
The 451 Group
S&P Capital IQ
Mergermarket
CB Insights

We would especially like to thank each of these firms for their contributions to our brand building since our founding
5 years ago.

44

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SCP - Enterprise Technology Market Review 2013

  • 1. Enterprise Technology Market Review Securities and Investment Banking Services offered through Waterford Capital Inc. member FINRA SIPC.
  • 2. Market Review This Newsletter offers SCP’s perspectives on the Enterprise Software market with commentary on developments and the impact on M&A activity Table of Contents I. Technology-Focused Market Overview ................................................................................................................................................................................ 4 i. Performance of Large-Cap Enterprise Technology Companies: .................................................................................................................................. 4 ii. Enterprise Technology IPO Market Overview ................................................................................................................................................................ 9 iii. General M&A Market Overview .......................................................................................................................................................................................10 iv. VCs Funding Trends ............................................................................................................................................................................................................12 II. The News and Stories of the Year ........................................................................................................................................................................................15 i. Dell Goes Private ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................15 ii. The Year of the CMO..........................................................................................................................................................................................................16 iii. The Fall of BlackBerry .........................................................................................................................................................................................................17 iv. Pivotal Initiative ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................17 v. Salesforce1 ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................18 vi. New Partnerships ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................18 Oracle-Salesforce (June)...............................................................................................................................................................................................18 Oracle-Dell (June, September) ...................................................................................................................................................................................19 Salesforce-HP (November) .........................................................................................................................................................................................19 vii. Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes ....................................................................................................................................................20 CA (April) .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................20 Intel (May) ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................20 Microsoft (August) ........................................................................................................................................................................................................20 SAP (June-July) ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................20 Symantec (June) .............................................................................................................................................................................................................21 III. Deals of the Year ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................22 i. Oracle/Responsys .................................................................................................................................................................................................................22 ii. Thoma Bravo/Intuit (Financial Services Division) – NCR/Digital Insight .............................................................................................................24 iii. OpenText /GXS ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................25 iv. Oracle/BigMachines ............................................................................................................................................................................................................26 v. Microsoft/Nokia ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................27 vi. IBM/Trusteer ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................28 vii. Cisco/Sourcefire ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................30 viii. Adobe/Neolane ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................31 ix. SAP/hybris .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................32 x. Salesforce/ExactTarget .......................................................................................................................................................................................................34 xi. IBM/SoftLayer ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................35 xii. Various PE Investors/BMC Software ..............................................................................................................................................................................36
  • 3. xiii. Silver Lake Partners/Dell ....................................................................................................................................................................................................37 xiv. Oracle/Acme Packet ............................................................................................................................................................................................................39 xv. Oracle/Eloqua .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................40 IV. Predictions for 2014.................................................................................................................................................................................................................41 i. Enterprise IPO debuts will slow down… because they can’t speed up ....................................................................................................................41 ii. Carve Outs over Buy Outs..................................................................................................................................................................................................41 iii. The Year(s) of the CMO .....................................................................................................................................................................................................41 iv. Elliott will continue to Elliott .............................................................................................................................................................................................41 v. Eloqua, Marketo or ExactTarget will distance itself to become the clear leader .....................................................................................................42 vi. Mobile in 2014 .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................42 vii. Sales Enablement and Recurring Revenue Management will become ubiquitous ..................................................................................................42 V. Bibliography and Thanks ........................................................................................................................................................................................................44
  • 4. I. Technology-Focused Market Overview i. Performance of Large-Cap Enterprise Technology Companies: 2013 represented a mostly positive year trading for the key large-cap enterprise IT providers on the public market, although it was largely in-line with or slightly lagging the overall market. HP’s resurgence following an embattled 2012 was the top gainer out of the large-caps, while only IBM and EMC/VMware experienced share depreciation yearover-year. Stock Price Company 12/31/2012 3/31/2013 6/30/2013 YoY ∆ 9/30/2013 12/31/2013 Adobe $37.68 $43.52 $45.56 $51.94 $59.88 58.9% CA $21.98 $25.18 $28.62 $29.67 $33.65 53.1% Cisco $19.65 $20.90 $24.34 $23.43 $22.43 14.2% EMC $25.30 $23.89 $23.62 $25.56 $25.15 -0.6% 96.4% HP $14.25 $23.84 $24.80 $20.99 $27.98 $191.55 $213.30 $191.11 $185.18 $187.57 -2.1% Microsoft $26.71 $28.61 $34.55 $33.28 $37.41 40.1% Oracle $33.32 $32.33 $30.71 $33.17 $38.26 14.8% Salesforce $42.03 $44.71 $38.18 $51.91 $55.19 31.3% SAP $60.79 $62.65 $56.19 $54.67 $62.55 2.9% VMware $94.14 $78.88 $66.99 $80.90 $89.71 -4.7% IBM 4
  • 5. Adobe Adobe continued to meet investor expectations, increasing subscription revenues while decreasing legacy license/product-related revenues throughout 2013. The continued growth of Cloud revenue (in particular increasing average revenue per subscriber) has been met positively in the public market as share prices reached record highs despite declining aggregate y-o-y revenues and margins. Cloud adoption across two of Adobe’s most important divisions (Creative and Marketing) is expected to drive revenue as Adobe looks to expand into new markets and geographies. The Company also made its largest since the acquisition of Omniture in 2009, acquiring Neolane to help build out the Marketing Cloud. Acquisitions:  08/01/13: Search Discovery – Website tag management SaaS (undisclosed)  06/27/13: Neolane – Marketing Automation Software ($600mm / 8.6x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition  05/22/13: Thumb Labs – Mobile software development services (undisclosed) SCP on Other News and Notes:  The Year of the CMO CA With new CEO Michael Gregoire at the helm, CA beat earnings estimates in three consecutive quarters in 2013 and subsequently raised forward guidance on both earnings and revenues. CA has benefited from growth in its Cloud initiatives, higher new sales in its Mainframe Solutions & Services segment and has been able to control costs and grow its enterprise solutions business. Gregoire was hired to lead the Company into its next-generation as a Cloudsolution provider and his tenure is off to a solid start. Acquisitions:  04/22/13: Layer 7 – API management software ($155mm / 4.4x EV/Revenue)  03/24/13: Nolio – Software development solutions provider ($42mm / 14.0x EV/Revenue) SCP on Other News and Notes:  Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes: CA Cisco Cisco saw lower than expected revenue growth in the first half of the year due to a significant slowdown in global technology sales (most notably in China), and realized its first year-over-year profit decline in eight quarters. Accordingly, sales and earnings growth projections were lowered for the next several quarters, including an expected decline in overall sales for early 2014. The Company attempted to ease investor concerns with an increased buyback program authorizing up to $97bn in stock repurchases. Cisco is facing further disruptions as the networking market shifts from under its feet faster than expected due to the rapid adoption of software defined networking and network functions virtualization technologies. Although Cisco was an aggressive acquirer in 2012 and 2013 (to build a foundation for the coming changes), it is likely that the Company will need to increase the speed and magnitude of acquisition in markets where its presence is threatened. Acquisitions:  12/17/13:  09/10/13:  07/23/13:  06/20/13:  05/29/13:  04/03/13:  03/25/13:  01/29/13:  01/23/13: Kibits – Team collaboration software (undisclosed) Whiptail – All-flash array storage ($415mm / 20.8x EV/Revenue) Sourcefire – Intrusion detection & prevention ($2.7bn / 10.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition Composite Softwware – Data integration software ($180mm) JouleX – Energy management software ($107mm / 11.9x EV/Revenue) Ubiquisys – Wireless base stations provider ($310mm) Brainforce – IT service management SaaS ($22mm / 2.6x EV/Revenue) Cognitive Security – NBAD software (undisclosed) Intucell – Mobile network management software ($475mm / 15.8x EV/Revenue) 5
  • 6. EMC EMC fell short of expectations late in the year (despite previously lowering guidance) as profit decreased due to increased operating costs and an overall tightening in IT spending. EMC is well positioned to capture increases in data center spend, but overall outlook is still trending negative. VMware continued to provide a boost to growth topline growth, but investors began to question the overall size of the market opportunity for the Company. The Pivotal Initiative and the potential IPO in 2014 should provide for a more streamlined product offering in addition to a capital infusion. Acquisitions:  07/11/13:  07/08/13:  06/24/13:  05/21/13:  02/27/13:  01/04/13: ScaleIO – ECS VSAN software ($200-300mm1) Aveksa – Access control and policy SaaS ($225mm2) Stirof Technologies – Document management software and services (undisclosed) Adaptivity – Application planning SaaS (undisclosed) Trinity – Documentum consulting services (undisclosed) iWave Software – Storage provisioning automation (undisclosed) SCP on Other News and Notes:  The Pivotal Initiative HP HP surprised the market by exceeding earnings expectations in consecutive quarters in early 2013 after a troublesome 2012 in which the Company took an $8.8bn charge related to its acquisition of Autonomy and another $8.0bn related to EDS. Q4 (reported in November) provided another lift as the Company beat revenue estimates, giving hope that product streamlining may be ahead of schedule. Most of the increases across HP were in the higher margin, businessrelated products groups such as servers, networking, and storage equipment, as well related services which show more promise for HP’s future. HP ended up as the top gainer in all of the Diversified IT, with the stock up nearly 100% on the year. Acquisitions:  None in 2013 SCP on Other News and Notes:  New Partnerships: Salesforce-HP IBM IBM was the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s lone loser in 2013 while it struggled to meet investor expectations as the Company focuses on driving towards 2015 goals set forth by Ginny Rometty in the 2011 annual report3. The Company experienced successive quarters of revenue decline as it transitions from its legacy business (with a larger focus on hardware sales) towards more recurring, Cloud-based offerings. IBM also made one of the most strategic deals of the year in the acquisition of hosted services provider SoftLayer, to form a cornerstone of its vision in the Cloud. IBM will look to provide a full-service Cloud offering with IBM Global Services providing preimplementation consulting, SoftLayer hosting and Cloud applications to cross-sell. Acquisitions:  12/19/13: Aspera – Data transfer software provider (undisclosed)  11/13/13: Fiberlink – Mobile device management SaaS ($300mm / 6.0x EV/Revenue4)  10/03/13: Xtify – Mobile messaging SaaS (undisclosed) EMC Acquires Israeli Storage Startup ScaleIO For $200M-$300M To Compete Better With The Cloud Kings The 451 Group estimate 3 50% of segment profit generated from software; 30% of revenue from growth markets; Spend $20bn on acquisitions between now and 2015, in Emerging Markets, Business Analytics, Cloud and Smarter Planet; $70bn to be returned through shareholders between now and 2015: $50bn through buybacks and $20bn through dividends 4 The 451 Group estimate 1 2 6
  • 7.         10/01/13: 09/19/13: 08/15/13: 07/09/13: 06/04/13: 04/22/13: 02/07/13: 02/01/13: The Now Factory – Mobile device analytics software (undisclosed) Daeja Image Systems – Multi-format document viewing (undisclosed) Trusteer – Financial anti-fraud and endpoint security (~$1bn) SCP on acquisition CSL International – Systems management and virtualization ($20mm5) SoftLayer – Hosted services provider ($2bn / 4.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition UrbanCode – Software development solutions provider (undisclosed) StoredIQ – Unstructured data management provider (undisclosed) Star Analytics – Data and application integration software (undisclosed) SCP on Other News and Notes:  The Year of the CMO Microsoft Microsoft beat estimates in its latest quarter (9/30) led by growth in search advertising and Cloud services. The Company’s stock price benefited in 2013 from several public announcements, including the release of both a new Xbox and tablet in addition to the retirement of long-time CEO Steve Ballmer. The next CEO of Microsoft will need to make a decision regarding Microsoft’s vision going forward, including whether to continue its current focus on both the consumer and the enterprise. Acquisitions:  10/23/13:  09/03/13:  03/19/13:  03/14/13:  03/05/13: Apiphany – API distribution & management SaaS (undisclosed) Nokia – Mobile phone designer and manufacturer ($5.0bn) SCP on acquisition Netbreeze – Social media monitoring software (undisclosed) Pando Networks – Download acceleration software (undisclosed) MetricsHub – Cloud monitoring SaaS (undisclosed) SCP on Other News and Notes:  Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes: Microsoft Oracle Oracle saw a year of flattening revenue and earnings, but bright spots included SaaS and improvements in hardware systems. The Company continues to invest heavily in its Cloud solutions both organically and inorganically. Oracle’s recent fiscal Q2 (November ‘13) results offer an optimistic view that revenue growth can accelerate in 2014 while executive leadership reiterated a focus on competing aggressively in Cloud-based applications versus the likes of Marketo, Salesforce, SuccessFactors/SAP and Workday, and hosting versus the likes of Amazon.com, IBM and Rackspace. Acquisitions:  12/20/13:  11/15/13:  10/23/13:  10/17/13:  03/25/13:  03/13/13:  02/04/13:  12/20/12: Responsys – Marketing automation software ($1.6bn / 7.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition Bitzer Mobile – Mobile application management software (undisclosed) BigMachines – CPQ sales automation SaaS (undisclosed) SCP on acquisition Compendium – Content marketing SaaS (undisclosed) Tekelec – Wireless infrastructure software (undisclosed) Nimbula – Cloud creation IaaS provider (undisclosed) Acme Packet – Session border control provider ($2.1bn / 5.9x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition Eloqua – Lead generation software provider ($956mm / 9.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition SCP on Other News and Notes:  The Year of the CMO 5 The 451 Group estimate 7
  • 8.  New Partnerships: Oracle-Salesforce  New Partnerships: Oracle-Dell Salesforce Salesforce benefited from continued growth in its traditional Sales Force Automation business in addition to added revenue generated from the Marketing and Service Clouds. Salesfore’s SFA solution further solidified its position as the default offering for sales teams and the Marketing Cloud received a substantive boost from the acquisition of ExactTarget, the largest acquisition in the Company’s history. The Company delivered its first $1bn+ revenue quarter in November, beating estimates and pushing shares to all-time highs. Salesforce will need to continue to innovate and successfully sell solutions in areas that are both complementary and adjacent to Sales Force Automation to maintain the success the Company has experienced since its founding. Acquisitions:  11/18/13:  06/07/13:  06/04/13:  05/09/13:  02/06/13: Cloudconnect.com – Database integration and synchronization SaaS (undisclosed) EdgeSpring – BI analytics software provider ($134mm) ExactTarget – Marketing Automation SaaS ($2.5bn / 7.6x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition Clipboard – Online social bookmarking services (undisclosed) EntropySoft – Content integration SaaS (undisclosed) SCP on Other News and Notes:  The Year of the CMO  Salesforce1  New Partnerships: Salesforce-Oracle  New Partnerships: Salesforce-HP SAP SAP spent 2013 focused on growing Cloud revenues and revenue related to HANA at the hands of its license software business. After a string of disappointing quarters in 2012, SAP built on its vision for HANA and the strategy of bundling complementary Cloud products with its existing sticky ERP customer base to deliver better results in 2013. SAP experienced turnover and consolidation within its internal organizational structure in 2013, which ultimately should provide a more streamlined message for customers attempting to understand differences between existing and acquired offerings. The Company is expected to continue to use mobility and HANA as its key differentiators in 2014, selectively looking to acquire businesses in complementary adjacencies. Acquisitions:  09/10/13:  06/05/13:  05/15/13:  03/07/13:  02/22/13:  01/31/13: KXEN – Predictive analytics software ($40mm / 3.3x EV/Revenue6) hybris – E-Commerce software provider ($1.3bn / 10.7x EV/Revenue) SCP on acquisition KMS – Employee onboard SaaS (undisclosed) Camilion Solutions – Insurance policy management software (undisclosed) SmartOps – Inventory management software (undisclosed) Ticket-Web – Event ticketing PoS software (undisclosed) SCP on Other News and Notes:  Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes: SAP 6 The 451 Group Estimate 8
  • 9. VMware VMware continues to capture the benefits of the Virtualization and Cloud movements and finished Q3 above expectations. Revenues from both license and services are steadily increasing along with operating margins, but enduser computing lagged. The Company also faced questions about its total addressable market throughout the year as it has largely penetrated a large component of its current market. The Pivotal Initiative should provide the opportunity for VMware to benefit from a streamlined product portfolio and upside growth from a potential IPO. VMware stands well positioned to continue this growth path with its stake in the adoption of the hybrid cloud and the software defined data center, as well as realizing the full benefits of the integration of Nicira products and the Desktone acquisition. Acquisitions:  10/15/13: Desktone – Desktop virtualization SaaS (undisclosed)  02/11/13: Virsto Software – Storage virtualization software ($185mm / 92.3 EV/Revenue) SCP on Other News and Notes:  The Pivotal Initiative ii. Enterprise Technology IPO Market Overview The U.S. market saw its highest number of IPOs since 2000 with 222 companies going public.7 2013 proved to be the busiest year in the Tech IPO market since 2007 with 45 Technology IPOs representing 14% of proceeds raised during the year. The Enterprise IPOs8 Company Pricing Date Nimble Storage 12/13/2013 $168.0 $21.00 79.5% 115.7% Mavenir Systems 11/7/2013 $54.5 $10.00 -4.5% 11.6% Barracuda Networks Offer Amount Price at IPO Change 1st Day ∆ as of 12/31/13 11/6/2013 $74.5 $18.00 19.7% 120.4% 10/16/2013 $260.9 $20.00 85.8% 60.5% RingCentral 9/27/2013 $97.5 $13.00 40.0% 41.3% Violin Memory 9/27/2013 $162.0 $9.00 -22.0% -56.0% Covisint 9/27/2013 $64.0 $10.00 26.3% 25.5% FireEye 9/20/2013 $303.5 $20.00 80.0% 118.1% Rocket Fuel 9/20/2013 $116.0 $29.00 93.4% 112.0% Benefitfocus 9/18/2013 $130.8 $26.50 102.1% 117.9% 8/9/2013 $117.6 $21.00 56.8% 73.3% RetailMeNot 7/19/2013 $190.9 $21.00 31.9% 37.1% Gigamon 6/12/2013 $128.3 $19.00 49.8% 47.8% Textura 6/7/2013 $75.0 $15.00 39.4% 99.6% ChannelAdvisor 5/23/2013 $80.5 $14.00 31.7% 197.9% Marketo 5/17/2013 $78.8 $13.00 77.7% 185.2% Tableau 5/17/2013 $254.2 $31.00 63.7% 122.4% Rally Software 4/12/2013 $84.0 $14.00 27.2% 38.9% Marin Software 3/22/2013 $105.0 $14.00 16.1% -26.9% West Corporation 3/22/2013 $102.6 $20.00 -5.7% 28.6% Model N 3/21/2013 $104.5 $15.50 23.9% -23.9% Silver Spring Networks 3/13/2013 $80.8 $17.00 29.4% 23.5% Average: 42.8% 66.8% Veeva Cvent 7 8 Renaissance Capital. IPOs include companies with a market cap of at least $50mm Notable exclusions include non-Enterprise Technology IPOs such as Twitter and Zulily 9
  • 10. The IPOs that traded best post-pricing in 2013 were ChannelAdvisor and Marketo, whose shares increased 198% and 185% from their respective IPOs (as of 12/31/13). ChannelAdvisor and Marketo led a strong field of successful SaaS IPOs that also included Cvent, RetailMeNot, Textura and Veeva. Infrastructure software/networking also performed well in the public markets with Barracuda Networks, FireEye, Nimble Storage and Tableau. Compared to the overall Technology IPO market which averaged 52.4% return, collectively Enterprise Technology IPOs returned 68.8% (as of 12/31/13). Although many firms saw tremendous appreciation in their stock prices, a smaller portion did not fare as well. Violin Memory, Marin Software and Model N shares have dropped (56%), (27%), and (24%) respectively, since their IPOs. Marin and Model N both declined after initial gains, badly missing revenue and gross margin expectations in their first few quarters as public companies. Violin Memory’s IPO struggled from the beginning, losing 22% on its first day of trading. Since then the Company, whose revenue relies on large customers, lost HP as client and has seen shares drop even further while losing its CEO, COO, and CTO. According to Renaissance Capital, the active pipeline for IPO’s rebounded strongly in 2013 (companies that have filed an update within last 90 days) with a significant increase in companies in enterprise software. Key potential enterprise IPOs 2014 include firms such as Alibaba, AppDynamics, Apptio, Arista Networks, Atlassian, Box, Domo, Dropbox, Good Technology, Pivotal, SilkRoad, Square, Xactly and Zendesk. iii. General M&A Market Overview Total M&A Deal Value $4,000 $3,669 $3,500 $733 $3,000 $2,500 $849 $1,277 $1,000 $500 $469 $1,711 $682 $677 $2,251 $708 $2,289 $2,215 $751 $571 $517 $2,090 $458 $2,000 $1,500 $2,408 $654 $561 $543 $588 $569 $493 $326 $581 $396 $810 $429 $592 $419 $459 $613 $461 $448 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 $0 2007 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Source: Mergermarket Overall M&A activity decreased by 3.3% in 2013 over 2012 following a particularly weak Q4. In the second half of 2013, deal volume edged up 3.2%, but deal value ended down 3.2%. Despite a solid start to the year, Q4’s 12.7% drop to $570.5bn in total deal value (from $653.7bn in Q3) caused the year to end relatively flat for the third consecutive year.9 9 Mergermarket M&A Trend Report: 2013 10
  • 11. U.S. M&A Deal Value $1,400 $1,346 $1,200 $229 $1,000 $255 $752 $78 $501 $263 $243 $153 $400 $200 $266 $186 $145 2007 $199 $233 $186 2009 2010 Q1 Q2 Q3 $325 $188 $248 $146 2008 $0 $221 $207 $178 $361 $893 $312 $721 $205 $860 $183 $688 $98 $800 $600 $823 2011 Q4 $168 $127 $179 2012 2013 Source: Mergermarket The U.S. M&A market ticked upward 3.8%, the fourth consecutive annual increase despite a particularly weak Q4 (down 29.2% y-o-y). However if not for the $124.1bn Verizon Wireless deal, U.S. M&A would have been the lowest in terms of total deal value since 2010 ($769bn vs. $721bn). This would have represented a 10.6% decline compared to 2012.2 U.S. Technology Deal Flow $180 1,600 $160 1,400 $140 1,200 $120 1,000 $100 800 $80 600 $60 $40 400 $20 200 $0 0 2007 2008 2009 Deal Value ($bn) 2010 2011 Number of Deals Closed 2012 2013 Source: Mergermarket Technology M&A increased 22.3% y-o-y, finishing the year at $166.3bn in total deal value. A pair of large PE deals (Dell and BMC) inflated that number, yet there were fewer large ($2bn+) deals by strategic acquirers than 2012. Strategic technology M&A looks strong heading into 2014 as large enterprises look to ignite growth and either establish or maintain leadership positions through the acquisition of innovators. 11
  • 12. IT Private Equity Deal Flow 95 $60 94 90 94 90 82 $50 90 82 79 77 $48 80 71 77 $39 $40 $41 65 64 64 49 51 70 73 70 68 62 60 63 62 58 55 $30 50 49 $20 40 42 $17 100 89 37 $15 $15 $9 $10 $5 $4 $4 $3 $3 $3 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 $5 $10 $7 $16 $15 $18 $16 $17 $15 20 $9 $8 30 $14 $12 $7 $5 10 $0 0 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 2007 2008 Q3 2009 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 2010 Deal Value ($bn) Q2 Q3 Q4 2011 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 2012 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 2013 Source: Pitchbook Number of Deals Closed Technology Private Equity deal volume experienced a particularly weak Q1 2013 (the lowest in terms of both deals closed and capital invested since Q2 2010), but both Q2 and Q3 rebounded, with Q3 capital invested driven in large part by BMC. Q4 was highly influenced by the Dell deal, but even with that removed, Q4 was the largest quarter in IT PE since Q4 2007. iv. VCs Funding Trends Median % Acquired by Stock Series 50% 45% 40% 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% '04 '04 '05 '05 '06 '06 '06 '07 '07 '08 '08 '09 '09 '09 '10 '10 '11 '11 '11 '12 '12 '13 '13 Series Seed Series A Series B Series C *As of 9/30/13 Series D or Later Source: Pitchbook In 2004, on average VCs acquired 40% of a company in Series A rounds and 24% of a company in Series D rounds. For the first three quarters of 2013, those figures have fallen to 29% and 13%, respectively. This is largely a result of a decrease in the amount needed to start a company. Founders require less capital to run an efficient and effective business, resulting in the ability to raise less money and give up less ownership. 12
  • 13. This has consequently resulted in two principal impacts:  VCs investing less capital in more companies  More angel investors providing early capital in place of Series A rounds Quarterly Median Pre-Money Valuation ($M) $30 $25 $20 $25.6 $17.8 $22.0 $15 $10 $8.5 $9.2 $4.9 $7.3 $5.3 $5 $2.5 $0 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 2009 2010 Series Seed 2011 2012 2013 Series A Series B Source: Pitchbook The addition of less experienced investors has also contributed to valuation inflation in seed rounds. Moreover, companies have had a difficult time receiving up-rounds in Series A due to high seed-stage valuations. Median premoney seed valuations have climbed 112% since the beginning of 2010, while Series A valuations have only increased by 26%. VC Fundraising (#) by Fund Size 100% 90% 80% $1B+ 70% 60% $500M-$1B 50% $250M-$500M 40% $100M-$250M 30% $50M-$100M 20% Under $50M 10% 0% 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: Pitchbook 13
  • 14. VC funds are also decreasing in size. Two years ago, 53% of VC funds raised were at least $100mm in size, with 33% coming in at $250mm or more. Today that figure has fallen to just around 40%, with 50% of all VC funds actually below $50mm. 14
  • 15. II. The News and Stories of the Year i. Dell Goes Private SCP analysis of Dell acquisition rationale and implications After an eight-month battle with investors, Michael Dell and Silver Lake Partners took Dell private in September at a valuation of $25 billion, the 10th largest LBO by deal size and the largest by revenue in history.10 The deal featured a tennis match’s worth of back and forth (Michael Dell even used this tennis analogy to describe his sentiment with Carl Icahn following the deal’s close; “It was like a tennis match where there’s all kind of trash-talking, and then afterwards you’re telling each other ‘nice backhand’ and ‘great serve.’”10) and the ultimate outcome only came after months of negotiations, proposals and counter-proposals and Michael Dell making a large bet that he was still the man to lead the Company to its next iteration. Michael Dell returned as CEO of Dell (the Company he founded in his University of Texas dorm room) in early 2007, after a nearly three year hiatus. Upon Dell’s return, the Company (which derives half of its revenue from PC sales) attempted to remake itself on the public market; to transform beyond sales of PCs and servers into a full-service enterprise infrastructure vendor. Dell acquired over $10bn worth of companies in nearly every aspect of software “including IT services (Perot Systems), security (SecureWorks, SonicWALL), networking (Force10), storage (Compellent, AppAssure) and infrastructure software (Quest Software).”11 Despite the acquisitions and attempt to transition core offerings, the Company lost half its value following his return. According to Dell’s proxy filing, the first discussions on potentially going private began in June 2012 when Southeastern Asset Management (Dell’s second-largest shareholder) proposed a buyout, but it was not until Egon Durban of Silver Lake approached Michael Dell on the topic on July 17th that the discussions began in earnest. On August 14th, Dell notified the Board of the proposed LBO with Silver Lake. Dell’s board formed a special committee to evaluate the proposal and to solicit other strategic options for the Business. Over the next several months, Dell’s Board:  Demanded six price increases from Dell/Silver Lake before ever putting the proposal up for vote  Attempted to put a COO in place to provide decision making checks and balances on Michael Dell  Evaluated a complicated strategic alternative proposed by Carl Icahn that demanded Dell issue debt to fund a $9 per share dividend or face a proxy fight for control over the board (ultimately teaming up with Southeastern Asset Management)  Entertained a tentative $14.25-per-share-offer from Blackstone and former Dell #2 Dave Johnson that would potentially not include Michael Dell as CEO  Hired a bank to talk to 72 potential bidders during a lengthy “go-shop” period Michael Dell had to accept a discount on his shares in the Company twice to increase the offer when Silver Lake refused to budge on price, ultimately agreeing with Silver Lake on a $13.75 “best and final” offer along with a $0.13 special dividend. The final deal consisted of Michael Dell investing his 15.6% stake in the Company (about $3.4bn) and another $500mm in cash along with $250mm from his family office, Silver Lake committing $1.4bn and a loan from Microsoft of $2bn. 10 11 Dell’s Mitzvah Rescued Buyout as JPMorgan’s Lee Warned of Peril The 451 Group 15
  • 16. The deal captured headlines around the world for months, marked the end of Dell’s 25 year run on the public market, the return of the mega-LBO and a significantly different, new chapter in one of enterprise technologies stalwarts. ii. The Year of the CMO With a limited number of exceptions12, most of the companies in the broader Marketing Automation space were founded in the late 1990s or early 2000s (Aprimo, Constant Contact, Eloqua, ExactTarget, Responsys, Silverpop), each taking slightly different approaches to the market. Some focused primarily on Email Marketing Automation, enabling marketers to send out personalized emails to large numbers of potential customers in seconds. Others took a more targeted approach to analyzing the utilization and effectiveness of resources in the marketing department. In early 2012, Gartner declared that the CMO would have more control of the IT budget than the CIO by 2017. The sales cycle had shifted dramatically over the years, with consumers educated about potential products and services well before ever coming in contact with a sales rep. This shift made the need for compelling marketing content an imperative for companies as each attempts to maintain a consistent brand experience across the various channels. Both strategic acquirers and the public market took note of this opportunity in 2012 with a slew of fairly high-profile Social Media Management acquisition (Salesforce-Buddy Media, Oracle-Vitrue, Google-Wildfire) and well-performing IPOs (ExactTarget, Eloqua). This Social Media Management consolidation was not the first round of acquisitions focused on CMO software. The first wave occurred in 2010 with Teradata’s acquisition of Aprimo and IBM’s acquisition of Unica. Aprimo took an analytic angle toward Marketing Resource Management while Unica provided largely on-premise license Marketing Management software and related maintenance. The space then went untouched by Diversified IT strategics (the one exception being Intuit’s acquisition of Demandforce for SMB marketing) through the end of 2012 until Oracle acquired Lead Management provider, Eloqua. This acquisition had a domino effect that helped drive 2013 to become “the Year of the CMO” in software. Eloqua went public in early August 2012 and traded well on the public market before Oracle ultimately acquired the Business on December 20, 2012 for a 104% premium over the price at which Eloqua priced its IPO. Eloqua was a frequent partner of Salesforce and it is rumored that Salesforce never had the opportunity to look at a counter offer on the Business. Oracle immediately looked to Eloqua to form its marketing platform. SCP analysis of Eloqua acquisition Largely in reaction to the Eloqua transaction, Salesforce quickly raised $1bn in debt, specifically earmarked for marketing-related acquisitions. Rumored to have evaluated a number of providers (including Act-On, HubSpot, Marketo and Neolane), Salesforce ultimately acquired ExactTarget, using its Marketing Automation capabilities to form the cornerstone of the (new) Marketing Cloud and spinning off its Lead Generation capabilities (from the acquisition of Pardot) to the Sales Cloud. SCP analysis of ExactTarget acquisition Six weeks later, Adobe followed up with an acquisition of its own, purchasing French Marketing Automation provider, Neolane. SCP analysis of Neolane acquisition Finally, Oracle closed out the year with the acquisition of Responsys. SCP analysis of Responsys acquisition All of this while Lead Generation provider, Marketo, traded up nearly 200% following its IPO in May and Social Media Management providers HootSuite, Spredfast and Sprinklr all raised large rounds in preparation for an IPO or a second wave of Social Management consolidation. 12 HubSpot – 2005, Marketo – 2006, Neolane – 2006, Unica – 1992 16
  • 17. Larry Ellison and Mark Hurd at Oracle set off the year of the CMO on December 20, 2012 and ultimately ended it exactly 365 days later, purchasing two different public Marketing Automation software providers. iii. The Fall of BlackBerry The Company that once dominated the corporate mobility market saw its fall from grace largely culminate in 2013. Blackberry went from a 50% share of the smartphone market and an $80bn market cap in 2008 to less than a 2% share of the smartphone market and a market cap under $3.9bn at the end of 201313. Shares of Blackberry dropped over 50% in 2013 alone. In January 2013, BlackBerry announced its much-delayed BlackBerry 10 system. The system was a major disappointment with sales far below expectations and resulted in the Company subsequently announcing 4,500 layoffs and reported a $1 billion write-down. Fairfax Financial, the largest shareholder, attempted to force an LBO of BlackBerry, but was unable to find any buyers. Unable to go private, on November 4, Blackberry announced $1 billion investment from Fairfax Financial, a Qatar-based sovereign-wealth fund and several Canadian investment funds. A stipulation of this investment was that CEO Thorsten Heins step down. John Chen (former CEO of Sybase) was named the interim CEO. The Company also announced the departures of three top executives. CFO Brian Bidulka was replaced by SVP and Controller, James Yersh while COO Kristian Tear and CMO Frank Boulben were dismissed without replacements14. Upon assuming leadership, Chen reached out to former relationships from SAP/Sybase to join him in revamping BlackBerry. Chen poached Jim Mackey (former SVP, Corporate Development at SAP) and Mark Wilson (SVP, Corporate and Field Marketing at Sybase) from OpenText and Avaya, respectively. Mackey will serve as EVP of Corporate Development and Strategic Planning and Wilson will serve as SVP of Marketing at BlackBerry. Chen also named John Sims (President, SAP Mobile Services) President of BlackBerry Enterprise. iv. Pivotal Initiative Pivotal is a new business entity within the EMC federation, and was formed by assets owned by EMC and VMware. Pivotal plans to be a platform for mainframe, client-server, and consumer grade computing. Its goal is to make cloudbased industrial software applications faster than anyone has before. If successful, Pivotal may be the first tech company to make a lasting mark without passing through a small startup phase. Its core offering is Pivotal One, a comprehensive solution that includes a set of application and data services that run on top of Pivotal CF, a turnkey solution for agile development teams to rapidly update and scale applications on a private cloud that can be instantly expanded and upgraded with no downtime, allowing enterprises to innovate with disruptive speed. The Pivotal strategy appears to be out of the playbook EMC employed in nurturing VMware to market dominance as an independent subsidiary, and the motives seem to be similarly in line. First, maintain Pivotal as a separate equity security with tremendous growth prospects so that EMC can use Pivotal stock options to retain top engineering talent for those assets which will need the most innovation. VMware shares have appreciated over 200% since the Company’s IPO, while EMC shares have returned less than 50% … much of which is due to VMware’s rise. 13 14 ABI Research Blackberry Announces Management and Board Changes 17
  • 18. Second, keeping Pivotal at an arm’s length from its corporate parents will allow the Company to maintain some semblance of neutrality in a field of complex coopetition among IT leaders. VMware’s similar position has facilitated its ability to effectively sell into and alongside Storage and Security vendors that are very much competitive with EMC, including Dell, HP, IBM, NetApp, and Symantec. In turn, Pivotal hopes that it will be able to peddle its big data wares to that group as well as those who are competitive to VMware, notably Citrix, Microsoft, and Red Hat. v. Salesforce1 At Dreamforce in November, Marc Benioff unveiled his vision for mobility with the announcement of Salesforce1. Salesforce1 provides a CRM platform for developers and software vendors focused on mobile applications. The positioning was broader than simply mobility with Salesforce latching onto the Internet of Thing utilizing the term “the Internet of Customers.” Salesforce1 required a major refactoring and expansion of Salesforce's APIs with the new APIs all publicly available on the AppExchange. This vision integrates the Company’s Cloud platform, allowing Chatter, Force.com and Heroku (Saleforce’s platform for Ruby and Java) to work together seamlessly. The near-term impact is that the platform will enable Salesforce customers to more easily migrate applications to mobile devices. Customers will also have the ability to customize and brand their own version of the Salesforce1 platform with Marc Benioff showing off a Tesla-branded example at Dreamforce. The Internet of Things positioning seems more conceptually aspirational than near-term impactful. It is Salesforce’s attempt to reorient customers around the Internet of Customers because, as Marc Benioff stated, “there is a customer behind every interaction on the Internet." Salesforce’s view is that mobility will be the center of all customer relationships and CIOs need to focus on how to optimally connect devices to both employees and customers. How this translates to the Internet of Things seems a bit of an unnatural extension. A cynic would say that for the first time in a while Salesforce felt left out of a specific buzzword and tried to position its mobile platform around a hot term. The overall implications of the announcement remain to be seen, but it clearly has big implications for the Company. Salesforce does not seem to view mobile as a standalone application market, but instead an extension of existing solutions previously created for the web. This bet is in line with what large customers are demanding for mobility. Salesforce’s large customers have development teams in-house with capabilities to build out and customize mobile solutions much faster than Salesforce could on their behalf. That said, Salesforce’s traditional SMB-base will likely need robust frameworks and support (more closely resembling pre-built applications) to move existing solutions to the mobile world. It is unclear to what extent Salesforce1 will have capabilities tailored to this need. Traditional leaders in mobility like SAP and IBM undoubtedly took notice, in addition to leading mobile upstarts like Spring Mobile Solutions and Kony. vi. New Partnerships Oracle-Salesforce (June) In one of the most head scratching announcement of the year, Larry Ellison and Marc Benioff held a call with media and research analysts on June 27 to announce a strategic partnership. Both CEOs played nicely on the call: Marc Benioff:  “Larry and I both agree that salesforce.com and Oracle need to integrate our clouds. Salesforce.com's CRM integrated with Oracle’s Fusion HCM and Financial Cloud is the best of both worlds: the simplicity of salesforce.com combined with the power of Oracle” Larry Ellison: 18
  • 19.  “We're committed to working very closely with salesforce.com to continuously improve our database and our Java middleware technology, so we can help salesforce.com deliver the highest level of security and reliability to their Cloud customers. Our two Companies are going to work together to jointly develop out-of-the-box integration between Salesforce's market-leading CRM applications and Oracle's Cloud applications”  “Sure, Salesforce and Oracle have some overlapping products, but I think there are far more opportunities to work together than to compete”  “Virtually every time we buy a company, they're running -- I wouldn't say every time, but almost every time we buy a company, they're running salesforce.com CRM” Was this announcement mainly a publicity stunt between a former mentor-mentee? Did this mean that Salesforce and Oracle would work together more strategically going forward and cease the cause and effect of acquisitions and strategy that started when Oracle finally came around on the Cloud? While customers may benefit from deeper integration between the solutions, neither Oracle nor Salesforce altered strategic plans to accommodate the other. Oracle made two particularly aggressive acquisitions that cut directly against Salesforce (SCP analysis of BigMachines acquisition; SCP analysis of Responsys acquisition). Salesforce also announced a competitive partnership utilizing HP’s hardware and hired former 26 year Oracle veteran Keith Block as President and Vice Chairman following his ouster from Oracle. It appears that this may have been two great marketers making nice after the fallout in 2011, but seems to have limited implications from a strategy standpoint. Oracle-Dell (June, September) Twice in 2013, Oracle and Dell announced plans to more tightly integrate enterprise management capabilities. Taken individually each specific integration means very little, but collectively it shows a developing and deepening strategic partnership between two of the largest vendors in IT. Following its acquisition of Sun Microsystems in 2009, Oracle utilized and invested in the acquired SPARC-based hardware (mainly competing with IBM), but largely let Sun’s server business (using Intel x86 chips) atrophy. The formation of a strategic alliance with Dell indicates that Oracle will not attempt to compete in the x86 server market (long expected) and acknowledges that Dell and Oracle each have access to customers that the other wants. Marius Haas, the head of Dell’s Enterprise business, stated, “Oracle has a phenomenal engine into the top 500 enterprise accounts worldwide. They’d like to go after the broader market, and we’ve got a great relationship with companies there.” Oracle has the enterprise and Dell has the SMB and both would like more diversity. If successful, the loser in all of this may be Mark Hurd’s old firm, HP. Salesforce-HP (November) At Dreamforce in November, Salesforce announced a new partnership with Hewlett-Packard, unveiling a jointlydeveloped "Superpod," which will provide a dedicated infrastructure for large customers to run Salesforce in the Cloud. These dedicated servers will be housed and managed within Salesforce's data centers and running on HP’s Converged Infrastructure. This announcement, while not overly strategic from a partnership standpoint, is the first instance where Salesforce has acknowledged that some customers may simply want dedicated servers. Marc Benioff pointed out that this is not a single tenant model and that the software running on Superpod is exactly the same as that run on the rest of Salesforce’s stack, but it is a big extension after years of attacking “fake clouds.” This partnership also can be viewed as a counterstrike to the partnership from Oracle and Dell earlier in the year. 19
  • 20. vii. Corporate Reorganizations and Leadership Changes CA (April) Michael Gregoire, became the CEO of CA Technologies in December 2012, taking over for Bill McCracken. Gregoire has a largely application software background (having served as CEO of Taleo and EVP of Global Services at PeopleSoft) and it is his Cloud expertise that led to his selection as CEO. It is clear that CA must evolve past mainframe and distributed systems and move quickly into the Cloud and CA is betting that Gregoire’s application background provides him with the experience to do it. Four months after arriving, Gregoire announced a $150MM reorganization that included:  Layoffs of 1,200 employees, replacing them “with those that understand newer technologies”  Restructuring of commission incentives to drive new business  Balancing the shift into Cloud with the attractive higher margins of mainframe business Gregoire’s first year has been met positively by the public markets with CA trading up over 50% in CY 2013. Intel (May) Brian Krzanich, a 30 year Intel veteran who began with the Company at twenty two as an engineer, was announced as CEO of the Company in May following a six month search to replace Paul Otellini. In 2012, almost two-thirds of Intel’s $53bn in revenue came from the PC market, which Krzanich states “is not growing, let’s be honest.”15 Krzanich’s vision for the Business is to move beyond the chip world because “the assets that made us great in PCs and servers are even stronger in the mobile and cloud world.”15 To build on this vision, Kraznaich also promoted Renee James (who also was vying for the CEO role) to President, from her role as EVP and GM of Software & Services. Microsoft (August) In August, it was made public that Steve Ballmer would be stepping down as CEO of Microsoft after 33 years with the Company and 13 years as CEO. In an exclusive interview with the WSJ, Ballmer acknowledged that he and the Board were in alignment that Microsoft needed to evolve and restructure, but the Board’s issue was the speed at which it should be done. When Ballmer tried to change his traditional management style, he immediately received pushback. Ballmer stated, "No matter how fast I want to change, there will be some hesitation from all constituents—employees, directors, investors, partners, vendors, customers, you name it—to believe I'm serious about it, maybe even myself." Ballmer ultimately concluded that a new CEO would be able to enact the change that Microsoft needed at a faster pace than he would. The list of potential candidates is rumored to include Ford CEO Alan Mulally (who subsequently denied interest), Microsoft veteran Sataya Nadella, former Skype CEO Tony Bates and former Nokia CEO Stephen Elop. Now that the search has moved into 2014, the list could be expanded to include various other names as well. SAP (June-July) Lars Dalgaard, head of SAP’s Cloud operations and former CEO of SuccessFactors, left the Company in June to become a General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz. He was expected to remain involved with SAP in an advisory role with Ariba CEO Bob Calderoni assuming the position as President, SAP Cloud and becoming a member of the SAP Global Managing Board. This announcement was coupled with consolidation within Corporate Development with the previously separate SuccessFactors and SAP teams, merging under Arlen Shenkmen’s leadership. 15 New Chief at Intel Aims to Expand Chip Making 20
  • 21. Calderoni ultimately also announced his departure in January 2014 with Shawn Price (former CEO of Savvion and President at Zuora) assuming responsibility of SAP Cloud (including SuccessFactors and Ariba) in addition to onpremise CRM. Jim Hagemann Snabe also announced that he will be stepping down from his role as Co-CEO in May 2014 to spend more time with his family. The move will leave Bill McDermott as the sole CEO of SAP. Hagemann Snabe will join the Advisory Board after a shareholder vote in May 2014. Symantec (June) CEO Steve Bennett utilized 2013 to restructure the Company that he assumed control of in July 2012. Bennett has looked to rework the sales team, trim software products/reorganize business units, cut headcount and increase R&D and marketing spend. Bennett has focused on selling customers on Symantec as a protector of networks and mobile devices in addition to PCs.16 Bennett also announced a workforce reduction of up to 1,700 jobs, mainly focused on middle-management after Bennett found that the average manager had only five people reporting to them.17 The public market has received Bennett’s leadership well with the Company up over 50% since he assumed the role of CEO. 16 17 Symantec Replaces Technology Chief as CEO Leads Overhaul Symantec Cutting up to 1,700 Jobs as Early as Today 21
  • 22. III. Deals of the Year Note: All multiples are LTM unless otherwise noted i. Oracle/Responsys / 12/20/13 Transaction Value: $1,607mm; Multiples: 7.7x EV/Revenue, 106.9x EV/EBITDA Email marketing software provider Deal Rationale  The acquisition came exactly 365 days following Oracle’s initial play in SaaS Marketing Automation with the acquisition of Lead Generation provider Eloqua. In many ways this deal saddles Oracle with redundancies to Eloqua, a solution that has been used as the cornerstone of Oracle’s Marketing Management offering  The principal technological addition that Oracle acquires with Responsys is B2C marketing expertise and Email Marketing Automation, neither of which were particularly strong for Oracle historically  While Responsys does derive a significant portion (~32%) of its revenue from Professional Services, Oracle is acquiring a Business that is on a $140mm run-rate for its Subscription business alone. This provides Oracle with a sizable addition of Cloud revenue at a discount below other SaaS comps  The acquisition of Eloqua, BigMachines and Responsys all provide Oracle with strong technologies that are complementary to its existing Sales Force Automation solution. As Salesforce has increasingly grabbed a stranglehold on the SFA market, competitors have looked to differentiate offerings with Oracle focusing on components that are in direct adjacencies to SFA Implications  Oracle will likely continue to deploy Eloqua for B2B marketing and utilize Responsys for B2C marketing. The lines between B2B and B2C only continue to blur and it will be interesting to see how Oracle’s sales reps utilize each solution as the delineation B2B and B2C becomes increasingly ambiguous  Despite the very public partnership announcement, this deal is the second by Oracle (along with BigMachines) in Q4 that seems particularly competitive to Salesforce (SCP analysis of BigMachines acquisition). Although possessing Lead Generation functionality from the acquisition of Pardot, ExactTarget’s core business was more directly competitive with Responsys than Eloqua (SCP analysis of ExactTarget acquisition)  SAP was rumored to be involved in the bidding for Responsys, although this would stand in stark contrast to many of the comments made by SAP leadership following the acquisition of hybris (SCP analysis of hybris acquisition). SAP will ultimately need to acquire something in the Marketing department, but there remain more targets than acquirers and should have its picking of the remaining offerings 22
  • 23.  Marketo entered the public market with the intention of remaining there and has continued to appreciate in value for its shareholders. The Company is betting that the opportunity to own the CMO can be done independently from any CRM system and so far the public market has certainly agreed. Responsys ultimately found an offer too good to pass up – it remains to be seen if the same will happen for Marketo 23
  • 24. ii. Thoma Bravo/Intuit (Financial Services Division) – NCR/Digital Insight / (Financial Services Division) 07/01/2013 Transaction Value: $1,025mm; Multiples: N/A / 12/02/2013 Transaction Value: $1,650mm; Multiples: 5.0x EV/Revenue, 55.0x EV/EBITDA Online banking & payments software Deal Rationale  Brad Smith assumed the role of CEO at Intuit in 2008, after serving as SVP and GM of Intuit’s Small Business Division. Under Smith’s leadership, Intuit divested its Real Estate Solutions business (acquired by Vista Equity for $128mm in 2009), Commercial Banking business (acquired by Bottomline Technologies for $20mm in 2012) and website development software assets (acquired by The Endurance International Group for $60mm in 2012). In middle of 2013, Smith set out to divest the largest business to date; the Business formerly known as Digital Insight, which it had acquired for $1,350mm in 2006  Intuit retained a bank that contacted a limited number of parties that could close quickly, which seemingly eliminated all strategic acquirers. The process is rumored to have been extremely fast including a “30-day final close (which ultimately caused Thoma Bravo to fund the acquisition via bridge loans, before later lining up more traditional financing).” Thoma Bravo paid $1,025mm for the Business and retained the Digital Insight name that it had on the public market  Upon seeing the announcement of the acquisition, NCR expressed interest in Digital Insight, having not been able to participate in the previous sale process. The deal was diligenced, negotiated and closed within five months of the announcement by Thoma Bravo for a $625mm increase (61%)  NCR saw an opportunity for Digital Insight to fundamentally change its Financial Services business, providing customers with a consistent experience across various channels. According to the investor presentation on the acquisition, NCR stated that the acquisition would increase its available market by ~$5bn Implications  The deal represents an unprecedented return for Thoma Bravo with its team benefiting from aggressiveness and the ability to act quickly  Lost in much of this is that Digital Insight represents an extremely strategic acquisition for NCR and its vision for transforming its three core lines of business. Radiant and Retalix were highlighted as the cornerstone for the Hospitality and Retail businesses, and NCR expects Digital Insight to be that for the Financial Services businesses. NCR plans to utilize Digital Insight to become a global leader in an omnichannel retail banking transformation, enabling transactions across multiple touch points. This deal will likely make NCR much more competitive with more traditional Financial Technology banking companies 24
  • 25. iii. OpenText /GXS / 11/05/2013 Transaction Value: $1,165mm; Multiples: 2.4x EV/Revenue, 8.4x EV/EBITDA Electronic data interchange and file transfer software and services Deal Rationale  Under CEO Mark Barrenechea’s leadership, OpenText rebranded from Enterprise Content Management (considered by Barrenechea to be an antiquated business term) to Enterprise Information Management in the last year. The acquisition of GXS builds upon this repositioning, providing software that links supply-chain information between vendors/suppliers and complements the acquisition of EasyLink (acquired for $246mm in 2012)  Additionally, the deal doubles OpenText’s Cloud revenue (nonexistent prior to the purchase of EasyLink), expands its geographic reach (specifically Latin America and Asia-Pacific), diversifies application software from its traditional focus on SAP and expands its industry focus (specifically adding more of a presence in Financial Services, Manufacturing, CPG and Retail)  OpenText is also able to capitalize on the favorable debt markets (taking on $800mm in new debt to pay off $777mm in GXS debt, bringing its own long-term debt to $1.3bn), while Francisco Partners, Golden Gate, Cerberus and Norwest Venture Partners are able to exit a deal that has been in portfolios since 2001 Implications  The most interesting and immediate implication from the acquisition is with regard to OpenText’s relationship with SAP. OpenText has traditionally been sold as part of SAP's price-listed products and this acquisition puts OpenText more squarely in competition with aspects of SAP/Ariba. OpenText cited IBM as its principal competitor with the acquisition and Barrenechea stated that “in relation to SAP they are a strong, strategic partner. I am hopeful that our relation with GXS will bring us closer together as companies. We value the relationship that we have built over the last decade highly, and I suspect this will bring us closer, not further apart.” It remains to be seen if SAP will view the acquisition in a similar way  The integration of GXS (the largest acquisition in Company’s history) will likely keep OpenText from making large acquisitions in 2014 and potentially 2015. In the investor call with research analysts, Barrenechea stated OpenText would onboard GXS within two years 25
  • 26. iv. Oracle/BigMachines / 10/23/2013 Transaction Value: N/A; Multiples: N/A CPQ Sales Automation SaaS Deal Rationale  Oracle spent much of 2013 adding components complementary to Sales Force Automation, differentiating its CRM solution from Salesforce and to a lesser extent SAP. Whereas Eloqua served as a key differentiating quiver on the front-end (SCP analysis of Eloqua acquisition), BigMachines offers technology to drive deals at the back-end of the sales cycle  Salesforce is both a key partner of and investor in BigMachines, and therefore in addition to differentiating Oracle’s offering, the acquisition of BigMachines also strikes a blow to one of its principal competitors Implications  Oracle likely will look to move BigMachines’ CPQ solution even more upmarket as the solution is particularly tailored for the Fortune 500. A focus on selling to the largest enterprise clients has been the blue-print of post-acquisition planning for Oracle under Mark Hurd’s leadership. Hurd has consistently cited that 60% of Oracle’s revenue come from the top 2000 customers and that should be the focus of sales reps  This deal comes on the heels of the $37mm raise in September by APTTUS (BigMachines’ principal competitor) from K1 Capital, ICONIQ Capital and Salesforce. APTTUS should see the opportunity to greatly expand its footprint in the enterprise as Oracle focus on its largest customers  Subscription billing/recurring revenue management possibly represents the next area of consolidation/acquisition at the back-end of the sales cycle with Oracle and SAP likely consolidators in the market 26
  • 27. v. Microsoft/Nokia / 09/03/2013 Transaction Value: $5,010mm; Multiples: N/A Mobile phone designer & manufacturer Deal Rationale  This deal cements a partnership that Microsoft and Nokia put together in February 2011, where the device vendor built its smartphone products around the Windows Phone OS. Microsoft is acquiring almost all of Nokia’s Devices & Services business, including its Mobile Phones and Smart Devices portfolio and its Devices & Services production facilities, sales and marketing activities and support functions. About 32,000 Nokia staff will transfer to Microsoft, including 4,700 staff in Finland  The Windows Phone was losing ground to Nokia’s Lumia and Microsoft needed to find a way to “accelerate growth” amidst competition with Google and Apple (and do so without losing Nokia, the only OEM committed to Windows, once the partnership was up for renewal). The risk of losing the Nokia alliance ultimately is greater than less than 10% of Microsoft's international cash holdings  Microsoft also gets a 10-year non-exclusive license to Nokia’s patents, including the Nokia brand (with an option to extend the license) Implications  While the traditional computing model remains under threat, buying Nokia appears to do little more than to delay deciding on a strategic vision and avoid the “nuclear” option (Nokia partnering with Google). This allows Microsoft more time to build its presence in mobile and to try to convince both consumer users and enterprise businesses of the value of its suite of a multi-device experience powered by Windows (similar to Apple’s model)  This acquisition solidifies Microsoft’s number-three position in the smartphone OS market and leaves Steve Ballmer’s successor somewhat handcuffed with Ballmer’s vision for Microsoft in the near-term  Microsoft also gains opportunities in both emerging markets via inexpensive entry-level phones, and in developed enterprise markets with an expansion of Windows-powered smart devices 27
  • 28. vi. IBM/Trusteer / 08/15/2013 Transaction Value: ~$1,000mm; Multiples: N/A Financial anti-fraud & endpoint integrity software Deal Rationale  The rise of networked services and the proliferation of devices has caused a corresponding rise in cyber security threats with hackers becoming increasingly more creative in ways to infiltrate systems. Together with existing capabilities in advanced threat detection, analysis and remediation, Trusteer will allow IBM to offer customers several additional layers of defense against sophisticated attackers. Trusteer has 7 of the top 10 banks in North America using the Company’s SaaS to detect malware used for financial fraud  The deal marks IBM’s first move in the broader security space since the acquisition of Q1 Labs in 2011. It provides Big Blue with advanced endpoint malware detection in addition to threat intelligence and mobile protection capabilities to help build a cybersecurity leadership position. IBM had historically been selling Trend Micro’s endpoint security suite18  Brendan Hannigan, GM of IBM Security Systems, stated in a press release, “The acquisition of Trusteer builds on more than 40 years of IBM's rich contribution to the security space. Trusteer will extend our data security capabilities further into the cloud, mobile and endpoint security space. This acquisition helps provide our clients with comprehensive network and endpoint anti-malware solutions" Implications   The success of the acquisition will not only require successful integration with IBM’s existing solutions, but also the ability to accommodate other vendors’ offerings. Cybersecurity still remains a highly fragmented market where “best-of-breed” appears to be the option of choice (for securing networks, systems, endpoints, and data) and provides a target rich environment for IBM to continue to acquire  18 This deal adds capabilities to help IBM become a large-cap leader in the market. Combining Trusteer’s advanced endpoint protection capabilities with the software from BigFix (acquired by IBM in 2010) provides IBM with fairly robust solutions The deal will be combined with various aspects of IBM’s existing security/counter-fraud solutions including i2, BigFix, QRadar, SPSS and InfoSphere and sit within the Security Systems Group. Before the transaction there were some rumors that IBM could get out of the security market entirely and this obviously represents a big move to the contrary The 451 Group 28
  • 29.  IBM will likely look to take Trusteer beyond the financial sector and into the broader enterprise security market. While financial services was the principal use case for Trusteer, having proven its solutions capabilities in one of the most critical security markets should allow for IBM to fairly easily take the solution more horizontally  IBM also plans to form a cybersecurity software lab in Israel that consists of 200 Trusteer and IBM researchers/developers and focuses on creating solutions for "mobile and application security, advanced threat, malware, counter-fraud, and financial crimes" 29
  • 30. vii. Cisco/Sourcefire / 07/23/2013 Transaction Value: $2,700mm; Multiples: 10.7x EV/Revenue, 160.5x EV/EBITDA Intrusion detection & prevention and anti-malware Deal Rationale  With the third largest deal in the history of the Security market, Cisco bolstered its position in network security and is banking on leveraging the Sourcefire brand in making a broader push into enterprise security  Security has been an on-again, off-again focus for Cisco, but at CiscoLive in June, CEO John Chambers stated that Cisco is not “customers’ primary security vendor” and “that’s got to change.” Cisco will now focus on a “threat-centric” security model moving forward, meaning that Cisco will focus attention on the threats themselves more so than policy and controls Implications  Cisco will likely attempt to utilize Sourcefire’s brand to make a significant mark in the enterprise Security space (to compete with vendors like HP, IBM, Intel and Symantec). In Sourcefire, Cisco immediately gets an established network security architecture, an anti-malware solution and additional security intelligence to form the cornerstone of the new-look Cisco Security Group. Sourcefire will immediately contribute market leading network security products and services to Cisco’s existing assets like TrustSec and ISE  The future of Software Defined Networking and a redefined perimeter is perhaps the greatest opportunity for Cisco. Combining Cisco’s SDN solution and utilizing the strength of Sourcefire’s software security applications leads to a natural opportunity to embed security in the network intelligence fabric (which would be consistent with the Application-Centric Infrastructure vision announced by Cisco earlier in the year)  The Sourcefire team will become a part of the Cisco Security Group with founder and CTO Martin Roesch becoming VP and Chief Architect for the Security Department 30
  • 31. viii. Adobe/Neolane / 06/27/2013 Transaction Value: $600mm; Multiples: 8.6x EV/Revenue Web & mobile marketing software Deal Rationale  Following rumored unsuccessful bids for hybris and ExactTarget, Adobe ultimately acquires French Marketing Automation provider, Neolane to add Marketing Automation capabilities to the Adobe Digital Marketing Suite. Adobe will look to pair Neolane’s solution with the software assets from Omniture, Day Software and Context Optional (by way of the Efficient Frontier acquisition)  Adobe looks to approach the CMO from more of a web-based focus prior to the acquisition of Neolane, utilizing Omniture and Day Software (making it somewhat curious HubSpot was not the ultimately acquisition). Neolane and Context Optional provide Adobe with strong CRM-based Marketing functionality and the most robust Social Media Management platform of all the leaders in CRM Implications  While a bit reactionary to the acquisition of Eloqua and ExactTarget, Neolane provides Adobe with the functionality that CMOs are increasingly expecting from CRM providers  This deal makes it very likely that Act-On, HubSpot, Marketo, Responsys and Silverpop need to focus on becoming standalone companies in the public market, potentially becoming acquirers instead of acquired  After addressing Marketing Automation, Adobe may still look to make an acquisition in E-Commerce although there are far fewer providers of scale that address the enterprise segment 31
  • 32. ix. SAP/hybris / 06/05/2013 Transaction Value: $1,341mm; Multiples: 10.7x EV/Revenue E-commerce software provider Deal Rationale  Once considered a foregone conclusion, the acquisition of hybris is finally cemented after SAP ultimately scrapped its on-going efforts to build an E-Commerce platform. SAP’s organically built E-Commerce platform significantly trailed the industry leaders and was viewed as lacking appropriate integration functionality with non-SAP CRM offerings  E-Commerce represents a front office capability that should be able to leverage HANA’s in-memory capabilities, so that SAP can perform various differentiated functions like predicting demands and trade promotions that will help drive customer insight  SAP has attempted to position Salesforce as its principal competition (vs. Oracle) and used the M&A Call with Research Analysts to highlight the deal’s differentiation vs. ExactTarget a day earlier Co-CEO Bill McDermott:  “And for those of you that probably already know this, I don't want to be repetitive, but I think you and all the CEOs I talked to already get enough emails, and they put them directly into the trash folder, so some of the moves that we saw others make are quite puzzling”  “I just can't push the email blasts as strategic to any other CEOs I met” Co-CEO Jim Hagemann Snabe:  “This is not about the email world of CRM. This is about the real-time interaction with consumers in billions in volume.”  “Now coming to the competitive situation, you kind of begin to see a pattern here, a little bit like we saw with our other competitor. There's either the strategy where you consolidate the past, and that's about sales force automation and it's about sending emails out in marketing, or you define the future, which is about individualized consumerization, the change of the experience for the consumer, understanding each individual consumer's individual requirement and be able to analyze, predict and upsell. That's where we are going. And so in many ways, you could say this is not about a catch-up. This is about defining the next-generation CRM. And it's not about email, I can assure you.” Implications  Although positioning itself vs. Salesforce/ExactTarget a day earlier, the more direct implication is putting SAP in a more competitive position vs. Oracle's ATG Commerce Suite and IBM's WebSphere Commerce 32
  • 33.  Although expected to be left as a standalone company within SAP, hybris will look to leverage the core differentiators that SAP brings to CRM: mobility and HANA’s in-memory database capabilities  SAP has backed itself into a bit of a corner with regard to Marketing Automation, speaking very disparagingly about the ExactTarget acquisition by Salesforce. Like many of its competitors before, SAP will ultimately need to find a way to position these comments as non-contradictory if and win it purchases into Marketing Automation (likely by unfairly calling ExactTarget simply Email Marketing) 33
  • 34. x. Salesforce/ExactTarget / 06/04/2013 Transaction Value: $2,500mm; Multiples: 7.6x EV/Revenue Marketing automation SaaS provider Deal Rationale  Marc Benioff historically spoke fairly disparaging about Email technology, stating “Email will be dead. Many teenagers today think of email as their parents’ way to communicate and as they enter the workforce, business apps will have to change if they are to hold the attention of a new generation.” Benioff began to soften his language at Dreamforce ’12, which ultimately resulted in the acquisition of ExactTarget  Following the acquisition of Eloqua by Oracle, Salesforce quickly began to evaluate Marketing vendors (rumored to include Act-On, Marketo, Neolane and Silverpop), finally settling on ExactTarget due to both its Marketing Automation and Lead Generation capabilities (from the acquisition of Pardot)  The deal represents an extremely successful outcome for ExactTarget management team and investors. After initially filing for an IPO in 2007, ExactTarget withdrew its application to invest in its platform, raising money from TCV, Battery and Scale Ventures. The Company (with a legacy focus on SMB Email Marketing) emerged from the investment with a more robust offering built for enterprise businesses Implications   The ExactTarget team will largely remain intact, operating as a fairly standalone entity within Salesforce that includes its own Corporate Development department, focused on marketing acquisitions  19 Following the acquisition, ExactTarget immediately will become the core offering of the Marketing Cloud with Buddy Media and Radian6 serving lesser, complementary roles in the suite. Scott Dorsey (CEO of ExactTarget) will assume the head of Salesforce’s Marketing Cloud The deal also adds to the perspective that there are three separate approaches19 to how Marketing Automation technology will be utilized going forward:  Sales Force Automation-driven, ie. Oracle and Salesforce  Web/Inbound-led, ie. Adobe and HubSpot  Standalone platform (agnostic to CRM/Web Presence), ie. Marketo and Silverpop The 451 Group 34
  • 35. xi. IBM/SoftLayer / 06/04/2013 Transaction Value: $2,000mm; Multiples: 4.7x EV/Revenue Hosted services provider Deal Rationale  SoftLayer provides IBM with a cornerstone for its vision in the Cloud. Together with SoftLayer, IBM can offer the flexibility, automation, and agility of the public Cloud with the security, reliability, and management of the private Cloud. IBM should now be able to provide customers with the environment necessary to meet their needs for security and pricing  This deal allows IBM to leverage the suite of its products and services to become a full service provider as businesses look to develop next-generation Cloud strategy. IBM now has the high-end, strategic consulting services to advise on options (IBM Global Business Services), SoftLayer to host in the desired environment and applications/products to cross- and up-sell Implications  SoftLayer immediately becomes the central infrastructure of IBM’s Cloud strategy and will be the catalyst for consolidation of IBM’s family of Cloud products. Hosting is increasingly becoming commoditized, but the ability for IBM to provide a “one-stop shop” for customers evaluating Cloud solutions makes SoftLayer particularly strategic  The also deal immediately puts IBM in direct competition with Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Rackspace and may increasingly pull IBM into the mid-market as many of SoftLayer customers are smaller than IBM’s traditional base  The acquisition of SoftLayer could also lead to further commoditization of Cloud services offerings, potentially resulting in additional acquisitions with various providers approaching with slight differentiation 35
  • 36. xii. Various PE Investors/BMC Software / 05/06/2013 Transaction Value: $6,900mm; Multiples: 3.2x EV/Revenue, 10.0x EV/EBITDA Systems management software provider Deal Rationale  In what has increasingly become a blueprint for Elliott Management in technology, the firm identified a middling public technology company and provoked an evaluation of strategic options. Similar to the outcome with Novell (and what appears the case with Elliott’s involvement in Compuware), the outcome was not likely the one for which Elliott initially hoped when it set out to “unlock shareholder value”  The Enterprise Service Management group has long weighed down BMC’s growth20, causing the Business to trade at a multiple below many of its peers in the software industry. The transaction will also allow BMC to evaluate its various lines of Business in a more private setting and appropriately invest in its SaaS business without a focus on near-term profits, something that has moved from desirable to imperative with the success of new competitors like ServiceNow, AppDynamics and New Relic Implications   Three of the four principal players in IT Management experienced disruption or underwhelming results in 2012 and 2013. BMC, HP and IBM have all struggled at various points throughout the period while CA emerged largely unscathed. CA and new CEO Michael Gregoire will need to continue to stay ahead of the curve (particularly with regard to the Cloud) in its core Business to avoid the hard-times that have fallen on its direct competitors  20 The LBO makes it likely that the Enterprise Service Management business will ultimately be divested and allow BMC to focus on the higher growth core businesses The deal trails only Dell as the largest post-recession PE transaction and is one of the first large “club deals” since the recession. There are quite a few businesses with “legacy” offerings that could benefit from life off the public market and sponsor capital to invest in more modern technologies. The success of BMC could segue to more large take privates featuring various clubbing together to provide capital The 451 Group 36
  • 37. xiii. Silver Lake Partners/Dell / 02/05/2013 Transaction Value: $24,811mm; Multiples: 0.4x EV/Revenue, 5.2x EV/EBITDA Computer & IT systems provider SCP on the Dell story over 2013 Deal Rationale Michael Dell and Silver Lake Partners  Dell fell hard from its position as one of the preeminent stocks of the late 1990s, particularly in the last five years as the proliferation of smartphones and tablets cut into its leadership position in the PC market. Following a brief hiatus, Michael Dell returned as CEO to the Company in 2007 and attempted to acquire his way into businesses with higher margins than PCs (including IT services, security, networking, storage and infrastructure software) all while managing shareholder expectations every three months. Michael Dell ultimately concluded that the Business would be most efficiently and effectively transformed without an eye towards monthly results, but instead a long-term investment horizon  Michael Dell found in Egon Durban and Silver Lake a partner with the capital and vision to invest in Dell for returns in five-to-eight years.21 Throughout the negotiations, Silver Lake remained disciplined in the price it was willing to pay for the Business, ultimately forcing Michael Dell to twice discount the price of his shares to increase the overall price of the bid. The price Silver Lake is paying reflects a 25% premium on Dell’s stock from before leaks of the LBO (with an overall higher deal premium due to Michael Dell’s stock discount), but well below the level where Dell has traded since the end of the recession. The multiples (0.4x LTM Revenue and 5.2x LTM EBITDA) are much more closely in-line with its legacy nature as a PC provider than its vision as an enterprise infrastructure software provider  Ultimately it was extremely unlikely that any realistic bid would emerge without Michael Dell’s support, a conflict which Carl Icahn lamented throughout the process. The alliance between Silver Lake and Michael Dell never received a credible counter-proposal and was forced to insignificantly increase the price a few times, before ultimately receiving board sign-off Microsoft  21 Microsoft has been a partner of Dell’s for nearly 30 years and provided a loan up to $2bn to help Michael Dell and Silver Lake take the Company private. It was rumored to be Egon Durban at Silver Lake who used Dell’s Mitzvah Rescued Buyout as JPMorgan’s Lee Warned of Peril 37
  • 38. his close ties with Microsoft CEO Steven Ballmer (having sold Ballmer Skype) to bring in Microsoft as a partner22  Microsoft is walking a thin-line with this investment, unwilling to take equity (for fear of upsetting other partners),7 but able to support its long-time partner and gain more influence over its partner and the PC sector in general  Microsoft may also be looking to Dell for support as it moves further into the enterprise market including potentially virtualization and datacenter space Implications   23 Despite PCs being a declining market with eroding margins, Dell has stated that plans to stay in the market and intends to be aggressive in regaining global market share, in particular going after China  22 The most obvious and immediate implication is that under new private ownership structure, Dell will be able to completely focus on its core platform for the future. Michael Dell specifically stated that the LBO would allow the Company “to grow in cloud, mobile, Big Data, without thinking about the next quarter.” The Dell software platform already includes three converging pillars: Systems Management (Quest, KACE, Wyse and AppAssure), Security (SonicWall, SecureWorks, Quest) and Information Management (Boomi, TOAD, Kitenga).22 It remains likely that Dell will attempt to build on its position in each of these areas through both organic investment and M&A. Several of the aforementioned Dell acquisitions are large purchases of older technology, and thus appear to be motivated by a desire to show rapid growth in Software revenues of any strip. We expect Dell’s acquisition strategy to be more targeted going forward, focused on earlier-stage nextgen technologies in key areas (Cloud, Big Data, Security, Storage), and for Dell to attempt to partially offset the total cost of acquisition via more activity out of Dell Ventures Sources have indicated that Silver Lake will have ultimate sign-off on all important management decisions and can veto any transaction or spending exceeding $500 million23 The 451 Group Dell’s Mitzvah Rescued Buyout as JPMorgan’s Lee Warned of Peril 38
  • 39. xiv. Oracle/Acme Packet / 02/04/2013 Transaction Value: $2,063mm; Multiples: 5.9x EV/Revenue, 67.8x EV/EBITDA Session border control provider Deal Rationale  Oracle’s acquisition of Acme Packet represents a landmark transaction that will enable Oracle to integrate more deeply into service providers’ infrastructure. Acme Packet provides session border controller solutions that provide security and management for multimedia traffic, including subscriber authentication capabilities that govern the types of access and quality of service that users receive  Like many providers to the telecom market, Acme Packet has struggled to grow its top line revenue recently as service providers delayed or cut orders for new equipment. Oracle’s bid is approximately half of the level at which Acme Packet traded in 2011  Network equipment vendors have been increasingly focused on integrating with the network services that their customers are providing, and Oracle is striving to play a greater role in next-generation services including VoLTE Implications  A deal that seemingly came out of nowhere, the addition of Acme Packet could serve as one the more strategic deals for Oracle in recent memory. The acquisition builds out Oracle’s Unified Communications offering and makes it more directly competitive against companies like Cisco, Huawei, Alcatel-Lucent and Sonus  Oracle can now play a role in accelerating the migration of service providers and enterprises to all-IP networks and is poised to innovate with software-based technologies for monetizing network services. This deal seems particularly strategic and, if integrated effectively, could prove transformative for Oracle 39
  • 40. xv. Oracle/Eloqua / 12/20/2012 Transaction Value: $956mm; Multiples: 9.7x EV/Revenue Marketing automation SaaS provider Deal Rationale  Oracle is looking to couple Eloqua’s Lead Generation capabilities with its existing CRM platform and RightNow’s Customer Service offering to build a Customer Experience Cloud suite to help companies transform the way they market, sell, support and serve customers  The combined offering is expected to enable organizations to provide a highly personalized and unified experience across channels, creating brand loyalty through social and online interactions, providing superior service at every touch-point Implications  The deal represents the first move into software for the CMO following the failed Social Media Management acquisitions earlier in 2012 and a return to Enterprise Marketing Automation following acquisitions by IBM (Unica) and Teradata (Aprimo) in 2010  Eloqua has been a historically strong partner of Salesforce and the deal puts Salesforce in an unusual position, having one of its largest partners fall into the hands of one of its biggest competitors. This deal trigged Salesforce raising $1bn in convertible debt with an eye towards acquisitions in Marketing Automation  The acquisition of Eloqua currently looks like a steal for Oracle with the nearest director comparable company, Marketo, trading at close to north of 15.0x off of a nearly identical revenue base as Eloqua at the time of the acquisition 40
  • 41. IV. Predictions for 2014 i. Enterprise IPO debuts will slow down… because they can’t speed up Have enterprise IPOs been underpriced? At least in part, finishing up 42.8% on the first day trading in 2013 (Enterprise Technology IPO Market Overview). Both institutional and retail investors clamored for enterprise stocks as they entered the public market, acquiring unprofitable businesses with high top line growth that were looking to become leaders in various markets. We expect 2014 to correct this with underwriters becoming more aggressive in pricing, with fears of “Facebooking” an IPO becoming a memory of the past. VCs and other selling shareholders are leaving money on the table post-pricing and will likely pressure lead bookrunners to aim higher with initial trading. ii. Carve Outs over Buy Outs Dell and BMC headlined a number of software-focused LBOs in 2013 along with Active Network, Keynote and Websense. Elliot Capital Management also attempted to force new (private) directions at both Compuware and Riverbed. Vendors on the public market with more antiquated technology will continue go private at the hands of software-focused PE firms, but we expect the larger trend to look more similar to Thoma Bravo’s acquisition of Digital Insight and Vista Equity’s acquisition of Omnitracs. We expect PE firms to increasingly look to large diversified IT companies with potential businesses that would benefit from life without the parent company. Diversified IT firms will likely be more receptive to these strategies as they look to streamline product portfolios to counter the transformative trends that have disrupted technology in the last decade. iii. The Year(s) of the CMO We named 2013 the Year of the CMO with acquisitions by Adobe, Oracle and Salesforce, Marketo’s IPO and highprofile raises in the Social Media Management space. We expect 2014 to continue with this momentum in the Front Office. Look for potential consolidation in Social Media Management, specifically companies that have proven capabilities to scale in the Enterprise. Vitrue and Buddy Media did not meet the original acquisition theses in large part due to the heavy services components each required. For the next wave of consolidation, Adobe, IBM, Oracle, Salesforce and SAP will seek to avoid mistakes that were made in the summer of 2012 and will ensure that companies have the software platform to meet the needs of the largest enterprises. There also stand a few companies in the broader Marketing Automation space that could enter the public markets in 2014 including Act-On and HubSpot. iv. Elliott will continue to Elliott Elliott Capital Management used 2013 to cement its position as the leader in who enterprise technology CEOs fear acquiring a large stake in their business. Elliot invested became nearly synonymous with management will face a contentious period in the near future. The Company has seen mixed results from its recent strategy in enterprise software, but do not expect the team to slow down now, highlighted by a January 2014 investment in Juniper. 41
  • 42. v. Eloqua, Marketo or ExactTarget will distance itself to become the clear leader History has shown “to the victor go the spoils,” particularly in the SaaS market with network effects leading to a clear market leader… and then almost everyone else. This has proven true in SaaS CRM (NetSuite), ERP (NetSuite), HCM/Financial Management (Workday), ITSM (ServiceNow), Web Analytics (Omniture), B2B/Procurement (Ariba) and Customer Service Management (RightNow). We expect 2014 to be the year that one of the three company’s truly distances itself from the others and will either benefit from innovation as a standalone (Marketo), established position in SFA (ExactTarget) or size and strength of sales force (Eloqua). vi. Mobile in 2014 A favorite investor of ours once said, “We were all over mobile… but that was in 2000. We were investing in mobile before people were ready.” Well, mobile is definitely here and now the question is what it will look like. Mobile CRM Is mobile a standalone market? Do customers want pre-built applications or a platform to migrate existing desktop and SaaS-based offerings? The answer for each of these appears to be both yes and no. A bi-furcation is occurring between what an enterprise and SMB customer are seeking from mobile solution. Enterprises want a platform that allow developers to build out from existing framework, while SMBs are seeking pre-packaged applications with less customization. The winning providers will be the companies that can provide the appropriate platform for the enterprise with the appropriate applications from SMBs. Salesforce1 has the potential transformative in this regard and 2014 should prove if Salesforce has appropriately articulated its vision for mobile, or if the talk of “internet of customer” confuses the message. SCP on Salesforce1 Enterprise Mobility Management MDM continued to gain steam in 2013 with a host of companies led by AirWatch, Good Technology and MobileIron each seeking ways to differentiate from one another. That trio appears to have a collective finger poised on the power button in a sector-wide game of musical chairs, as many IT incumbents wait to see if those vendors will choose to go public, can go public, and can do so at a compelling valuation, before making major entries into the sector. Some, most notably Citrix with their acquisition of Zenprise and IBM via their purchase of Fiberlink, have chosen not to wait, though their remains a large and eclectic group of potential acquirers that appear to need to build an Enterprise Mobility Management position in one form or another. These include Device Manufacturers, Mobile Carriers, IT Service Management players, Security vendors, Semiconductor shops, and the Virtualization leaders, among others. vii. Sales Enablement and Recurring Revenue Management will become ubiquitous Every year certain buzzwords and phrases seem to take off with companies repositioning themselves around the success of the first movers. Transformative trends such as Cloud, Social, Big Data and the Internet of Things each were evangelized by leading companies orienting customers around the opportunity and large-caps eventually followed suit through marketing, investment or acquisition. Sales Enablement and Recurring Revenue Management are two terms that gained steam in 2013 and we expect to be ubiquitous in 2014. Companies like SAVO, ClearSlide, 42
  • 43. Bloomfire, Qvidian and Brainshark positioned around Sales Enablement in 2013, while Aria Systems and ServiceSource latched onto Recurring Revenue Management. Look for strategics in CRM to begin to market around these terms and to eventually acquire in companies in the broader universe. 43
  • 44. V. Bibliography and Thanks We would like to thank all of the people that have provided us with insights over the course of 2013. There are a number of people at private and public companies, in the research community and at both private equity and venture capital firms with which we have been fortunate enough to interact. We want to be clear that any uncited information is a compilation of our own proprietary insights and that we maintained the utmost care to ensure that we not cross any confidentiality bestowed upon us. SCP also maintains access to various research and data providers whose analysis and information has contributed to our understanding of various sectors and industries over time. These include:      Gartner The 451 Group S&P Capital IQ Mergermarket CB Insights We would especially like to thank each of these firms for their contributions to our brand building since our founding 5 years ago. 44