-by Brenon Daly
After a fitful past few quarters, Violin Memory is ready to play on the big stage. The all-flash array provider is set to reveal its IPO paperwork later this week, according to sources. Our understanding is that the offering itself will take place in about a month, with Violin likely to be valued at just under $1bn at debut. Assuming it does go public, Violin would be the first significant enterprise storage IPO in two years.
The initial valuation is a bit lower than the $1.5bn we penciled out for Violin last October when we first reported that the company was set for an IPO. Two factors are weighing on that – one inside the company and one outside. In terms of macro-level influences, there’s been a recent trend toward conservative pricing for IPOs, at least at debut, as uncertainty and volatility has increased on Wall Street.
Still, fast-growing companies have traded substantially higher in the aftermarket, and we would expect Violin to follow suit. The reason? Violin’s torrid growth rate. According to our understanding, Violin is tracking to increase sales about 80% in the current fiscal year, ending next January. We gather that Violin put up roughly $75m in sales in the previous fiscal year, and is projecting about $135m for its current fiscal year.
The heady growth hasn’t come without a stumble or two. Several sources have indicated that the company’s sales in the second half of last year came in much lighter than expected, in part because Hewlett-Packard stopped reselling Violin. But at least some of the lumpiness that Violin had been experiencing has been smoothed by new sales arrangements and new products.
For instance, my colleague Tim Stammers recently wrote an in-depth look at Violin’s partnership with Toshiba, which is also an investor in Violin, to start selling PCIe flash cards . Although the expansion into what’s likely to be a commodity market doesn’t alleviate all of the concerns around the inherent lumpiness of Violin’s big-ticket arrays, it does at least add a new revenue stream.
And in terms of its core product, Violin does have the advantage that it has created a fair amount of buzz with the audience that matters. A recent survey by TheInfoPro, a service of 451 Research, interviewed more than 260 storage professionals at major enterprises and asked them to name which vendor they found ‘exciting.’ Violin came in as the top-ranked privately held storage company, with twice the mentions of other high-flying startups such as Nimble Storage and Pure Storage.
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