• Home
  • Insights
    • About Customer Insight
    • Ad Hoc Poll Results
    • Customer Insight
    • Green
    • Musings
    • Research Statistics
    • Top Performers
    • 495
    • RSS Feeds
  • Mobile UC
    • Mobile UC Business
    • Mobile UC Observations
    • Mobile UC Product Reviews
    • Mobile UC Service Reviews
    • Mobile UC Applications Reviews
    • Mobile UC Devices Reviews
  • Coms
    • IP Video
      • Video Conferencing Consultants
      • Telepresence Consultants
      • Video Conferencing Strategy
    • Applications
    • E911
    • Email
    • LANs & WANs
    • Messaging
    • Quality
    • Security
    • SIP
    • VoIP
    • VoIP History
  • Scores
  • Reports
    • Register?
      • Be Heard. Join our Panel.
      • Prize Winners Do Surveys
      • Unregister
    • Research Catalogs
    • Recovery Series
    • Collaboration
      • Exchange Review
    • Fundamentals
    • Messaging
    • Mobile UC
      • Alcatel-Lucent Users
      • Avaya Users
      • Cisco Users
      • Nortel Users
      • Product Manager's Guide
      • Siemens Users
    • Web 2.0
    • Pre-2007 Research
    • Comments
    • Brainshark Content Network
  • About
    • About Peter Brockmann
    • Contact Us
    • News
    • In the News...
    • Request a User Briefing
    • Request a Vendor Briefing
    • Full Disclosure Notice
    • Famous Brockmann's
  • David
Scores Deal Report Cards Score=65% Avaya Buys Nortel Enterprise

Score=65% Avaya Buys Nortel Enterprise

Monday, 14 September 2009 15:39 Written by Peter Brockmann
User Rating: / 23
PoorBest 

avatel-logoWell, despite the last minute nail-biting, it's official. Avaya won the auction for Nortel Enterprise with a $900 million bid. What a cliff-hanger. The IRS sued for $3 billion in back taxes (this can't be a credible lawsuit can it?), and a few days before the final auction date, Verizon sued that its contracts with Nortel were too important to national security to allow the winning bidder to reject them. Could you make this stuff up? This sure sounds like a 200x version of "Dallas" coming your way. Plenty of fodder for clever Canadian writers. I expect a TV-movie in about two years depending on whether there's any more gnashing of teeth in this continuing saga that is the once mighty, the once proud Nortel...

Here's the Brockmann analysis of this deal.

Strategic Fit [5/5] - Complementary Channels.

Acquiring weaker competitors is a natural business response to recession since prices for companies are depressed, and executives in market leading firms need to grow, including grow through acquisition if necessary. Nortel Enterprise does offer products with overlapping capabilities (see the Acquisition Analysis report), but the channels are very complementary. Avaya sells mostly direct, while Nortel sells almost exclusively in-direct through phone company and various telecom resellers. That's why Avaya will not rationalize product overlaps.

Never mind the product overlap in voice platforms or contact centers, or various alliances for phones (Nortel) or LAN switching (Avaya). Nortel channels could resell the Avaya phones and Avaya channels could resell the Nortel switches. In fact a simple MOU could enable these transactions to begin without anti-trust approvals.

Timing [5/5] - Recessions are Better Time to Buy.

Recessions are extraordinary times for the strong to get stronger. Remember it was only 2 years ago that we analyzed (as a speculative piece) Nor-ya. SilverLake Partners and TPG eventually paid $8 billion. A huge over-payment, except that Avaya was eventually saddled with $8 billion in debt, a price that Nortel's board could not compete with. Remember where the stock was at the time? Pretty low. I think all of Nortel was valued at $2 billion, so buying a $2 billion/year run rate business for 4 x didn't make a lot of sense to Nortel shareholders, but it did make sense to SilverLake and TPG.

Customer Demand [2/5].

Enterprise customers have made big investments over time in their communications infrastructures. They don't have to put up with degraded support or degraded technologies. Avaya needs to walk carefully and assure customers that the combined company is determined to satisfy their needs better than ever before.

Potential [1/5].

Potential for profits - yes (which will go to paying off Avaya's debt). Potential for growth - not so much. Potential for innovation - I'll have to wait and see.

But, we now live in a new world of plentiful communications, where innovators like Microsoft, Cisco and others are acting like public utilities and government bureaucracies. Microsoft is actually losing share in smartphone OS by ignoring segments that used to get them excited. Cisco people are a little arrogant, now that they're working on solving world hunger through committees and boards and matrix. Sadly, the stock is down and stubbornly staying down. I think John Chambers' successor will have to revitalize the stock and the brand by selling off many of the recent big acquisitions. They certainly grew, but not through innovation. That's why that company is stuck in the mud.

The only question now, who's buying who next?

 

< Prev   Next >

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Send
Cancel
JComments

Deal Report Cards

Business users waste an average of 25 hours a year dealing with spam.

The Problem with Email

Login

  • Forgot your password?
  • Forgot your username?
Follow us on Twitter

Posts: All-Time Highest Rated

  • Why Register?
  • Guest Blog: Convincing Business Leaders About The Green Value of Their Low-Carbon Products
  • Internet on Us
  • 10 Most Popular Blog Entries of 2009
  • Brockmann Guest Blogs for No Jitter
  • Cisco Cius
  • Swatting Is a New Dangerous Sport
  • Identity Thieves Masquerade as Job Sites
  • Cost Saving Strategies: Why Video Managed Services?
  • Video Conferencing Consultants

Posts: Year's Most Popular

  • Why Register?
  • Mobile Apps Are Addictive
  • Now, I Have Seen It All
  • Taxes and Telecommuting
  • Breaking News - Avaya to IPO
  • Android Users Suffer Security Problems
  • Google Removes More Mal-Apps
  • Innovations in Screen Technologies
  • Applying Email Marketing Features to Personal Email
  • NFL Season Predictions

Reports: All-Time Most Popular

  • Forums in Small Companies
  • Forums in Large Companies
  • The Problem With Email
  • Video Communications 2.0: Tips for Improving The Experience
  • The Manager's Recession Survival Guide video

Reports: Year's Most Popular

(c) Brockmann & Company 2002-2011 Scroll To Top