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Monday, October 29, 2007

Putting customers first?

Most readers will by now be familiar with the recent sparring between Oracle and BEA (just see our del.icio.us links over the past days to get an update if you're not up to speed). There's been plenty said about this already of course, but I thought it would be fun to look past the "industry insider" angle and consider what this piece of theatre says about the IT industry and what it means for the organisations that this industry sells to.

The original (publicly stated, but unsolicited) offer to purchase BEA came from Oracle on October 12th. It was surely no coincidence that after years of alleged courting by Oracle, the offer finally came once "activist investor" Carl Icahn had acquired a significant position as a BEA shareholder. Icahn started his BEA investment run-up in early September, and now owns around 13% of the stock. As part of his initial disclosure of stock purchase, Icahn's company stated that the purpose was to attempt to get BEA to sell itself in order to deliver more value to shareholders.

[Just to put some numbers on that "value", as mentioned here, if BEA had sold to Oracle for $17 a share, Icahn would have stood to make a $217.1m profit (that's roughly a 33% return on his $663.8m investment) in just a couple of months.]

Of course it's fair to argue that BEA has sometimes failed to capitalise on technology and business trends in ways that it might have done, and as a result its technology could deliver more. Icahn does have a point when he says that ISVs in general face an uncertain future as business models in the ICT industry change and value flows increasingly away from hardware and software (catalysed by open source and commodity hardware) and towards services.

But is Icahn's prescription for BEA (a sale) the right one? This article appraises Icahn's record and on that reading, he's certainly been far from infallible. For one minute, let's look past shareholder value in isolation, and consider the business that BEA is in.

BEA is a company that's built its business on being a middleware provider that can operate independently from the other technologies that middleware has to interoperate with - databases, desktop software, packaged applications, hardware, management consulting services, and so on. Indeed BEA has often said itself that its position is as "the Switzerland of enterprise software".

Not every medium or large organisation needs its middleware provider to be "Switzerland" of course. But in a large number of organisations, particularly financial services firms, telecoms providers and governments with extensive, decades-long IT legacies, there's sufficient heterogeneity to warrant building a strategic relationship with a supplier that can operate independently of all the other stuff and is less likely than others to favour one technology over another. This is a sound strategy based on sound policy (in other contexts, it's called separation of duties).

Many companies have built relationships with BEA precisely because it could offer them this kind of relationship. And middleware isn't like vacuum cleaners, or even airline seats: companies (particularly large companies) want long-term relationships with their middleware providers. If BEA is sold - to Oracle, or pretty much anyone else - those customers are going to have the rug pulled out from underneath them. Customers who made strategic IT bets on an independent middleware vendor will have to reappraise their investments and quite possibly spend a heap more money trying to either rejig their strategies, or build new relationships with new suppliers (although options for those wanting a slice of Swiss neutrality are limited: there are only two other software companies of any real size with similar positions - TIBCO and Software AG).

So - to get to the point: what's troubling me is that in the IT industry, there's often much hand-wringing about how poorly IT and IT vendors are perceived by businesses, and how everyone needs to work harder to build bridges and raise a positive profile of how IT (and IT vendors) can add value to organisations.

But if the IT industry continues to shuffle deckchairs in the name of shareholder value, to the detriment of customer value, can anyone be surprised when business wallets remain tightly controlled and IT staff, and vendors, are viewed with suspicion by the global community of business IT buyers? If Icahn wants BEA to become more competitive and deliver more value to shareholders, there are more ways to go about it than selling the company. It might be that those prescriptions take longer to kick in than Icahn's current favourite, though. That probably makes them less likely to be pursued.

Am I being hopelessly naive? Let me know your take. It would be good to start a bit of a debate here, I think.

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Comments:
you are not being naive...but you and I are an unfashioanable minority in pointing out buyers are stakeholders too...and have little say compared to investors in the M&A activity in the sector...see some of the commentary around my blog...

http://dealarchitect.typepad.com/deal_architect/2007/10/whats-wrong-wit.html
 
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