Kony Solutions acquires SAP app developer Sky Technologies

Contact: Ben Kolada, Thejeswi Venkatesh

After providing offline sync features for applications connecting to SAP’s ERP systems, Kony Solutions has decided to bring those apps in-house with the acquisition of Sky Technologies. Melbourne-based Sky provides preconfigured apps that integrate with SAP software. IBM, SAP and Kony competitor Appcelerator have also recently announced purchases that bolstered their app development platforms.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but we feel this should be viewed as a tiny tuck-in for Kony, which has 900 employees. Sky’s headcount is reportedly in the 30-40 range.

Kony is increasingly targeting the internal business requirements of enterprises after working with them to develop their customer-facing apps. Sky aids this initiative. By tucking in Sky, Kony can now offer customers a broader range of business-to-employee apps, including those that integrate with SAP environments.

Respondents in our April 451 Enterprise Mobility Survey said that their organizations place higher priority on development of apps that serve employees than apps that serve customers. To a degree, SAP acknowledged this sentiment when it announced that it was acquiring Syclo, which provides mobile work order software for field workers. Underscoring the value of these companies, we’re hearing that SAP paid roughly $100-150m for bootstrapped Syclo.

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Dell as a mobile manager?

Contact: Ben Kolada, Rachel Chalmers, Chris Hazelton

Dell hasn’t hidden its intentions of leveraging its hardware legacy to extend into the enterprise IT market, particularly in regards to software. The PC and server giant recently reinforced its goals with the $2.6bn acquisition of systems management vendor Quest Software. But, as we point out in a recent report, its next move is likely to be in mobile management.

Former CA Technologies CEO and current head of Dell’s software division, John Swainson, made our job a bit easier. Swainson hasn’t been explicit with his plans, but we read some of his recent statements as a signal that Dell may make an imminent move into mobile device management.

That makes sense. Connected devices are the primary target for new applications. They’re also fountains of data that can be gleaned and distilled into BI – which is among the four focus areas for Dell’s software group: security, systems management, business intelligence and applications. In a report detailing the possible future of Dell’s mobile management, we prognosticate about how the company may move into this sector, and with whom. Click here to read the full report.

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Rebellion Media set on consolidating digital media

Contact: Ben Kolada

Rebellion Media was founded just earlier this year, but has already announced enough acquisitions to make itself appear like a veteran player in the digital media sector. From its first acquisition announcement, Sortable.com, announced July 11, the company has been printing a deal a week. In fact, Rebellion is buying companies at such a breakneck pace that official announcements are playing catch-up to Rebellion’s corporate website, which already lists all of the brands it has acquired so far.

Waterloo, Canada-based Rebellion Media isn’t hiding its intentions, saying on its website that it will continue to be ‘aggressive’ in M&A. The startup has so far announced acquisitions of content, mobile and Web development and e-commerce-related vendors. Targets so far have been located in its home country, Canada, but future deals are likely throughout North America and beyond.

The company primarily targets content and reference Internet properties in the health and wellness, technology, entertainment and sports verticals. But it isn’t restricting itself to this group. Rebellion recently announced the purchase of Jingu Apps, an LBS-based mobile instant messaging and friend-finding service. The company has reinforced its acquired assets with its traffic and monetization platform called TRACE, which stands for ‘Traffic, Revenue and Content Engine.’

Rebellion isn’t yet working with bankers, instead preferring to use M&A knowhow that its executives garnered from their prior experiences. CEO Ted Hastings was previously president of digital media rollup shop Cyberplex. As for funding, the company has taken an undisclosed amount of financing from American Capital. Although we weren’t given specific guidance on who or where Rebellion might acquire next, future transactions could be in the SEM/SEO and e-commerce sectors.

Rebellion Media’s announced M&A

Date announced Target Target summary
July 31, 2012 Universal Properties Owns domain names for purposes of Web development and search engine optimization.
July 24, 2012 Jingu Apps LBS mobile instant messaging application that enables BlackBerry and iOS users to connect with nearby users of WhatsApp, Hookt, LiveProfile, Touch and Kik mobile social networks and communities.
July 17, 2012 Scott Hastings (10 sports websites) Group of combat sports news and reference content websites, including www.fighters.com, www.fightline.com, www.mmatraining.com and www.mmaconvvert.com.
July 11, 2012 Sortable.com Provides online electronics buying advice and reference content that allows consumers to compare and rate products.

Source: The 451 M&A KnowledgeBase

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Facebook saves faces with Instagram, at least for now

Contact: Brenon Daly

There wasn’t much to be wildly bullish about in Facebook’s initial financial report as a public company on July 26. At least that was the view on Wall Street, as shares of the social networking giant slumped around 10% to their lowest level since the mid-May IPO. The one bright spot, however, is the continued stunning growth of Instagram.

Just ahead of the financial release, Instagram indicated 80 million people are now using the photo-sharing application. That’s more than twice the number of users that Instagram had when Facebook announced the acquisition in April. Additionally, some four billion photos have been shared over Instagram.

Of course, it’s important to note that Facebook hasn’t actually closed the acquisition. Moreover, even when it does close, there won’t be much – if any – direct impact on Facebook’s financial statements from Instagram, which is free to use. (The payoff from mobile advertising, which was the primary driver for the acquisition, is some time off for Facebook.)

Not to be cynical, but we couldn’t help but think that there might be (just maybe) something going on behind the scenes around the timing of Instagram’s boastful release. Investors have a much more jaundiced view of CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s impetuous decisions – including his hasty agreement to drop $1bn on Instagram – now that they are losing money on him.

So perhaps it was important for Facebook to show that it is getting an early return on its largest-ever acquisition. That might have been even more important because social gaming company Zynga – whose fortunes are tied to Facebook in many ways – got pummeled on Wall Street after indicating people just aren’t into its games as much as they once were. One specific area of weakness that Zynga indicated: Draw Something, which Zynga picked up as part of its largest-ever acquisition.

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Dell’s hard drive into software

by Brenon Daly

Dell plans to more than triple the size of its software business in the coming years, underscoring the tech giant’s transition away from its origins as a box maker. The software division is currently running at around $1.5bn, and John Swainson, the recently appointed president of Dell Software, laid out a target of $5bn in sales for the unit. M&A will continue to help move the company toward that target, he added.

In many ways, the transition that Dell is going through is one that IBM has already been through. Indeed, Swainson and a number of other executives (Tom Kendra and Dave Johnson, among others) that are charged with building out Dell’s software portfolio helped do the same thing at Big Blue. Each of the three executives spent a quarter-century at IBM.

Dell has been a steady buyer of software, with all six of its acquisitions so far this year adding to the company’s software portfolio. The largest, of course, is the recently announced $2.5bn purchase of Quest Software, expected to close later this quarter. While that acquisition brought some much-needed heft to Dell’s software portfolio, Quest was viewed by many as a mixed bag of businesses, including some (such as data protection) that directly overlapped with existing Dell products.

For the software business, Swainson also set out the rather ambitious goal of growing it in the ‘mid-teen’ percentage range. Clearly, that was a long-range goal, one that implies a significant acceleration of existing business as well as a regular contribution from acquisitions. Still, the projection seems like a bit of a stretch. Consider that IBM – a model for Dell – has increased revenue in its software business just 2.5% so far this year.

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Shallow pool in mobile optimization becoming shallower

Contact: Ben Kolada

After Allot Communications dipped its toes into the pool of mobile optimization targets by acquiring small Ortiva Wireless, Citrix cannonballed with the acquisition of Bytemobile. These two deals significantly drained the already shallow pool of acquisition targets in this market. Interested buyers should dismiss the ‘don’t run when wet’ precaution, and jump in before there’s no water left.

Consumers are buying data-intensive devices in droves, and data consumption is exploding as a result. Because seamless data use is considered a right rather than a privilege these days, cell carriers unable to provide flawless transmission risk customer desertion. Tackling this concern, mobile operators are employing every option available to relieve their bandwidth bottlenecks, including relying on a new breed of mobile traffic optimization firms.

As these upstarts emerge as viable solutions, they’re becoming increasingly attractive acquisition targets both for the vendors that traditionally have served telcos, and for non-traditional vendors hoping to pull in cash-rich telco customers.

However, interested acquirers need to move fast. In a recent report, we identified 11 remaining vendors, ranging from pre-revenue firms to established midmarket players. But less than half of those vendors target mobile optimization as their core business. Click here to see who we think may be next in the buyout line.

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U-Blox acquires Cognovo in LTE chip push

Contact: Thejeswi Venkatesh

U-Blox has announced the acquisition of UK-based software-defined-modem designer Cognovo for $16.5m in cash. Switzerland-based U-Blox, best known for designing GPS receiver modules, will combine baseband chip technology from Cognovo with the 4G stack from 4M Wireless, a company it bought in April for $9m. The combined technology will further its push toward gaining market share in LTE chips. Growthpoint Technology Partners advised Cognovo.

Cognovo was founded in early 2009 and is based in Cambridge. Shortly after its founding, chip giant ARM Holdings handed over its Vector Signal Processor (VSP) technology to Cognovo in exchange for a 15% equity stake in the company. ARM also provided convertible debt financing to Cognovo and held a seat on the target’s board.

In recent months, the explosion in smartphones has set off a race for spectrum that has resulted in the fragmentation of frequency bands and wireless technologies. Each band requires specific chip and antenna support, making it difficult for phone manufacturers like Apple and Samsung to support all bands without compromising on cost and performance.

Cognovo helps overcome this problem by defining wireless modem functionality in the form of a software program that is independent of hardware design. To help meet mobile phone power-consumption requirements, Cognovo uses VSP, which provides an architecture and instruction set that is optimized for wireless algorithms.

LANDesk lands the largest MDM deal so far

Contact: Brenon Daly, Chris Hazelton

Two months ago, LANDesk Software switched from being a company that got bought to a company that does some buying of its own with the pickup of Managed Planet. (The old-line systems management vendor has had five owners in recent years.) LANDesk followed up that acquisition with another one earlier this week, reaching for mobile device management (MDM) vendor Wavelink. What’s more, the transaction is likely the largest one in the MDM sector so far.

Although terms weren’t disclosed, the deal triggered a Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) review, which would indicate that it is valued at more than the threshold level of $68m. (A source confirmed the HSR review of the transaction.) We understand that the price was actually closer to $90m, or about 4.5 times our estimated revenue for Wavelink of $20m. That would move LANDesk’s acquisition of Wavelink ahead of the sector’s previous big print, Symantec’s purchase of Odyssey Software. (Terms weren’t disclosed, but we estimate that Big Yellow paid $60m for its MDM partner Odyssey.)

As its own market segment, MDM emerged three years ago as iPhone and Android devices started popping up in offices and IT needed management tools since Research In Motion’s highly popular BlackBerry Enterprise Server did not support these devices at the time. Over the past 18 months, more than 80 vendors of varying sizes and sustainability have appeared to offer software and services to manage the ever-increasing number of smartphones and tablets.

That has tipped MDM toward commoditization, which is reflected in recent deal flow in the sector. For instance, big-name buyers such as Motorola Mobility, RIM and Numara have all done MDM deals valued at less than $10m, according to our estimates. However, there are a couple of medium-sized private MDM providers that are nearing breakeven and driving the evolution of this market to include application and data management.

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Box eyes a new round at $1bn valuation

Contact: Brenon Daly

Box is back in the market. Several sources have indicated that the enterprise content management and collaboration startup is currently looking to raise $100m in new funding, on top of the roughly $160m it has already pulled in. Box’s valuation is said to be north of $1bn.

That’s a heady valuation for a company that’s likely to finish this year at about $60m, according to sources. The round (assuming it does get raised) comes at a time when competition is heating up for Box. For instance, Citrix has made a series of acquisitions to piece together an enterprise collaboration and file-sharing platform. (Those small deals came after Citrix was rumored to have missed out on acquiring Box at a price thought to be roughly $600m.)

Likewise, VMware has used small purchases to bolster its Project Octopus while its parent, EMC, recently reached for synchronization startup Syncplicity to expand its collaboration offering. Other tech giants have rolled out their own collaboration platforms through organic development, such as Google’s Drive, Microsoft’s SkyDrive and even Apple’s iCloud. (Additionally, Microsoft is adding much more cloud functionality to its SharePoint product in its next release, due out late this year or early next year.)

Box – along with dozens of other cloud- and drive-themed rival offerings – effectively provides centralized storage as well as a shared file system for all of the documents at an enterprise. As we see it, the seven-year-old company is currently facing two main challenges, and is likely to put at least some of its new funding toward these.

First, since Box is competing as an enterprise software vendor, it needs to hire more sales agents to land enterprise accounts. We understand that the company has added dozens of experienced enterprise sales agents and is looking to bring on dozens more. Second, Box needs to establish itself as a platform on which other software shops can develop additional applications and enhancements. Earlier this year, the company introduced a new API – its first in four years – to draw in more developers.

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Qualcomm scales power management with Summit Micro buy

Contact: Ben Kolada, Thejeswi Venkatesh

Adding to its power management product portfolio, semiconductor giant Qualcomm announced on Monday the acquisition of Summit Microelectronics, a designer of programmable power management and battery-charging semiconductors. The deal is meant to help Qualcomm further target increasing demand for battery management on smart devices.

Neither Qualcomm nor Summit disclosed terms of the transaction, but in March Summit issued a press release claiming that it hit record revenue and profits in 2011, and that fourth-quarter 2011 revenue doubled from the prior-year period. However, that alone shouldn’t impress too much. The company had to raise several rounds of funding throughout its 15-year lifetime to bring its products to market. While most venture-backed companies typically continue to fundraise only through to maybe a fourth, or D, round, Summit’s messy fundraising history continued at least through to an H round.

The acquisition is yet another step in feeding the demand for managing power on an ever-evolving group of power-intensive devices. As consumer electronics continue to advance, particularly in regard to HPC capabilities and high-resolution screens, battery management is becoming increasingly critical. In announcing the deal, Qualcomm points directly at this demand, noting that Summit’s chips are found in a variety of mobile phones, tablets and e-readers.