Cisco Picks ‘Plum’ in E-mail Security Market


Cisco Systems  started off its new year with a bang
by bidding to acquire
IronPort for $830 million, a premium more than eight times the company’s annual
revenue run rate.


Cisco will pay the premium because IronPort, the leading standalone provider
in the e-mail messaging appliance market, was prepared to go public.


IronPort’s machines preserve the integrity of e-mail by keeping out dangerous spam,
worms, viruses and even spyware. Corporate compliance regulations requiring the preservation of e-mail and other computerized records have sparked a huge demand for such devices.


Gartner analyst Peter Firstbrook said Cisco picked the right “plum” in the
market; IronPort lit up the industry with about $115 million in sales in
2006.


The purchase will give Cisco a solid platform on which to build security for
its unified communications strategy, which includes convergence of
instant messaging, VoIP and e-mail.


“Everybody buys anti-spam solutions, but if you can use the appliances for
instant messaging security and eventually VoIP security, it’s a big win for
Cisco,” Firstbrook said.


Moreover, the deal brings Cisco squarely into heavy competition with
Symantec , which began offering e-mail security systems
two years ago after acquiring Brightmail for $370 million.


“This pits Cisco and Symantec in a pretty hot contest,” Firstbrook said.
“IronPort has been tearing the cover off of the ball in terms of sales.
They’re a really fast-growing company that is gaining market share.”


The analyst said IronPort makes better products than the machines Symantec
began offering after the Brightmail purchase. Symantec tried to poach
IronPort’s large enterprise customers by offering free appliances, but had a
hard time succeeding because of IronPort’s quality.


With IronPort, Cisco also opens up another avenue of competition with
Microsoft , which has made big strides in the security
software market.


The software giant rolled out its ForeFront security portfolio, cobbled together by several acquisitions.


Expect Cisco and Microsoft, with the help of partner Nortel, to compete
mightily in the unified communications space. But to see this end goal through to fruition, Cisco must once again prove its mastery of integrating various product lines and talent.


Because of its dozens of acquisitions of large and small companies in the
last several years, Cisco is good at incorporating new
technologies.


Cisco chose IronPort from many in the market, including SonicWall,
Secure Computing (which acquired
CipherTrust last year), Sophos, Seagate, MiraPoint, SurfControl and
Tumbleweed, Marshal, Clearswift and Proofpoint.


Firstbrook said he expects Proofpoint to be the next domino to fall, given
the company’s solid technology and blue-chip customer base.


Opinions differ over how big this e-mail security machine market really is. Gartner pegged it at $640 million, growing 40 percent year-over year
in 2005. IDC claims the market for e-mail security gateway appliances will
top $1.7 billion in 2009.


But it’s clear that appliances are swiftly becoming the preferred method of
deploying security applications; IDC estimates that 80 percent of all
network security software will be piped through an appliance by 2007.

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