September 23, 2009 4:33 PM PDT
Revenue up, but Red Hat needs more JBoss focus  by Matt
Asay<http://www.cnet.com/profile/Matt+Asay/>

At the recent Red Hat Summit, company CEO Jim Whitehurst quipped that "flat
is the new up," but he clearly wasn't referring to Red Hat. On Wednesday Red
Hat announced another strong
quarter<http://investors.redhat.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=411154>,
with revenue of $183.6 million for the company's second fiscal quarter of
2010. That's a rise of 12 percent compared with the same period last year.
Despite the company's against-the-grain performance in a weak market,
however, it may need to invest more in its middleware business to ensure
future growth.


But first, the good news. Of Red Hat's total revenue, roughly 85 percent, or
$156.3 million, came from subscription revenue. That's an increase of 15
percent compared with the year-ago period. Putting this into context, IDC
projects Linux subscription revenue to top $1 billion by
2012<http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/08/19/idc_linux_forecast/>.
Red Hat should claim virtually all of this at its current pace of growth.

Customers seem content to pay Red Hat for free software that they could get
more cheaply elsewhere. While recent IDC data hint at hard times to come for
commercial Linux vendors<http://news.cnet.com/8301-13505_3-10312978-16.html>,
it hasn't hit Red Hat. Not yet. The company is still a darling with
CIOs<http://press.redhat.com/2008/12/09/cios-recognize-red-hat-for-lowering-it-costs/>
.

And it may not for some time, with Red Hat reporting deferred
revenue<http://blogs.the451group.com/opensource/2009/06/25/keeping-an-eye-on-red-hats-deferred-revenue/>of
$581 million, up 17 percent compared with the same period last year.
The
company is increasingly profitable, too. It reported net income of $28.9
million, or 15 cents a share, compared with $21.1 million, or 10 cents a
share, for the year-ago quarter.

Along with its quarterly results, the company also revealed the following:

   - All top-25 customer accounts renewed, and at 120 percent of the prior
   year's value. Most customers are expanding their adoption of Red Hat, and
   more and more are upgrading to Advanced Platform.
   - Only three of its top-300 customers up for renewal didn't renew in the
   quarter, and two of those have returned to Red Hat after the quarter closed.
   - Two deals were over $5 million, while 10 deals hit $1 million. Red Hat
   EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) closed its biggest deal ever in the
   quarter.
   - Of the top 30 deals, 23 included Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)
   Advanced Platform, and five included a JBoss component. This suggests that
   Red Hat's big customers are upgrading to Advanced Platform, according to Red
   Hat CFO Charlie Peters.
   - JBoss continues to grow much faster than the core RHEL business.
   - Deal length extended to 22 months from 19 months last quarter,
   reflecting
   - One former Red Hat customer, a large financial services company (almost
   certainly Credit Suisse), dropped Novell's SUSE Linux and returned to Red
   Hat with a big order in the quarter. Credit Suisse is one of the
   companies Novell pulled away from Red Hat by using Microsoft-subsidized
   coupons <http://news.zdnet.com/2100-3513_22-152110.html>, but Peters
   indicated that the customer had returned because of Red Hat's superior
   value. It appears that Red Hat is a better value than free.
   - Red Hat is taking share from its competitors rather than seeing an
   increase in net new server purchases.

Despite the mostly sunny skies, Red Hat's slowing revenue growth remains a
concern. The trend kicked off in 2005 and has continued apace since then
despite a brief respite in 2007, as The 451 Group
reports<http://blogs.the451group.com/opensource/2009/08/26/red-hats-organic-growth-opportunities/>
.

Of course, as Red Hat gets bigger, and as the economy remains stagnant, it's
normal that Red Hat's revenue growth will slow.

But it's also normal that as it slows, companies like Red Hat will look for
increased growth beyond their core businesses. Oracle is perhaps the most
obvious example of this.

Red Hat doesn't need to get into video game consoles (e.g.,
Microsoft's Xbox<http://www.cnet.com/xbox-360/>)
or hardware (e.g., Oracle's pending acquisition of Sun) or a variety of
businesses far afield from its core infrastructure business. After all, Red
Hat clearly has a lot of room to grow its JBoss/middleware business, and
arguably needn't acquire its way to that growth.

But it does need to significantly change the way it views its channel
partners.

Red Hat's traditional Linux partners are absolutely the wrong group to be
selling its middleware offerings, a fact that took Red Hat some time to
digest. Now, however, Red Hat seems to be getting the picture and has
launched its Catalyst
Program<http://www.thevarguy.com/2009/09/01/red-hat-catalyst-program-vars-gain-complete-isv-solutions/>to
sell turnkey open-source solutions through a growing ecosystem of
value-added resellers (VARs).

Catalyst, however, is still in its infancy. It remains to be seen whether
this program will stick, as Red Hat has moved away from ecosystem efforts
like its Red Hat
Exchange<http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/06/11/redhat_rhx_slowed/>in
the past.

For Red Hat's sake, it should stick with this one. Through Catalyst and
other means, Red Hat needs to place more emphasis on the world outside of
Linux. The company believes that virtualization and cloud computing are big
opportunities<http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,62057472,00.htm>,
and they are, but these are mostly ways to build upon RHEL, rather than ways
to extend its reach into fast-growing, diverse markets.

Red Hat is an execution machine and will undoubtedly be able to continue to
grow its Linux business, and possibly to accelerate that growth again
through enhanced investments in virtualization and cloud computing. But the
real growth for the company is a bit higher up the stack in its middleware
business.

Peters said that the company is investing significantly more in JBoss than
RHEL, proportionate to the revenue each brings. That's good, but also
obvious, given that Red Hat's JBoss business is comparatively small to its
RHEL business. It may be time to invest even more in JBoss.


-- 
Computer Network Technician
Microsoft Windows, Linux, and Macintosh
LAN/Intranet, WAN/Internet, Wireless LAN
Cell Phone no. (Smart): 0919 332 4848
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