A shifting landscape for e-mail security

By Joris Evers
<http://news.com.com/A+shifting+landscape+for+e-mail+security/2100-7350_3-6147760.html>http://news.com.com/A+shifting+landscape+for+e-mail+security/2100-7350_3-6147760.html
 


Story last modified Mon Jan 08 12:05:01 PST 2007



Cisco Systems' purchase of e-mail security specialist IronPort 
Systems is another sign that big-name vendors are taking over the 
spam fight, analysts say.

Upon completion of the 
<http://news.com.com/Cisco+to+spend+830+million+for+e-mail+security+firm/2100-1033_3-6147065.html>the
 
$830 million cash and stock deal, networking giant Cisco will join 
Symantec and Microsoft as a leader in the e-mail security arena. 
Those other companies entered the market via acquisitions and product 
development of their own.

"As a market matures, this is typically what happens--the major 
vendors want to have another arrow in their quiver to sell," said 
Peter Firstbrook, an analyst with Gartner.

More acquisitions are likely, with Cisco rival 
<http://www.junipernetworks.com/>Juniper Networks and tech giant IBM 
possible suitors for the remaining independent e-mail security 
companies, he said.

E-mail security used to be the terrain of specialized providers, 
selling to eager buyers who wanted to stop the influx of e-mail 
threats, particularly spam. Today, such technology has become more of 
a commodity, and the area has changed from a sellers market to a 
buyers market catered to by the big guys, analysts said.

Industry consolidation has been ongoing, driven by e-mail security 
becoming a necessity for businesses. Spam and other e-mail pests have 
kept on rising, despite 
<http://news.com.com/Gates+reveals+his+magic+solution+to+spam/2100-1028_3-5147491.html>Microsoft
 
Chairman Bill Gates' promise to squelch the issue. More than 90 
percent of e-mail is unsolicited, and 2006 was a 
<http://news.com.com/Tis+the+season+to+send+spam/2100-7349_3-6136901.html>record
 
year in spam yet again, according to IronPort statistics.

Acquisitions in the space include 
<http://news.com.com/Microsoft+puts+its+stamp+on+e-mail+security/2100-7355_3-6080284.html>Microsoft's
 
takeovers of Sybari Software and FrontBridge Technologies, as well as 
<http://news.com.com/Symantec+to+buy+Brightmail/2100-7350_3-5216378.html>Symantec's
 
purchase of Brightmail and Secure Computing's buy of CipherTrust. As 
a result, the independent companies that remain face a tougher market.

"It is a brutal battle against intelligent and well-armed enemies," 
said Peter Christy, an analyst with the Internet Research Group in 
Los Altos, Calif. "This is a time where antispam companies will start 
to fall by the wayside. If you're not in the top four, there is a 
question of how you survive with a decent business if somebody 
doesn't buy you."

Companies such as <http://www.proofpoint.com/>Proofpoint and 
<http://www.barracudanetworks.com/>Barracuda Networks could be 
acquisition targets, Christy said. "Anyone in this space who is not 
public would like to be acquired," he said.

The number of companies active in the space has decreased from about 
150 in 2003 to about 75 now, said Dean Drako, CEO of Mountain View, 
Calif.-based Barracuda Networks, a venture-backed maker of antispam 
appliances. Yet Drako believes the market won't consolidate at the 
pace that pundits have proclaimed.

"I would characterize the merger and acquisition activity in this 
market as overhyped beyond hope for the last four years," he said. 
"Will there be some more consolidation in this area? Probably. In the 
short term, the market is not going to change significantly from the 
way it is today. In the longer term, over many years, the number of 
suppliers will be fewer."

Drako would not be drawn on the question of whether Barracuda was up 
for sale or would launch as a public entity. The company, which 
markets primarily to small and midsized organizations, is 
well-positioned to remain an independent player, he said. "The 
customer cares about that the vendor is large enough to survive to 
provide them what they need. We crossed that threshold a year or so 
ago," he said.

Cisco's entry augurs a tougher battle amongst the big guys. Symantec, 
in particular, faces a challenge, compared with the days when it 
competed mainly with smaller rivals: The Cupertino, Calif., company 
used to go head-to-head with David, now it's squaring off with 
Goliath. "The last thing Symantec had over IronPort was their big 
brand name," Firstbrook said.

On the rise
The e-mail security market is growing rapidly. In 2005, it hit $660 
million in worldwide revenue and was growing at 44 percent per year, 
according to Gartner data. Symantec held 12 percent of that pie, and 
IronPort had 6.6 percent, the analyst firm said.

Cisco paid a premium for IronPort, which is known for its high-end 
e-mail security appliances. The $830 million deal is the second 
biggest purchase of a privately-held business by Cisco and the 
fifth-biggest takeover in the network specialist's history. By 
contrast, Secure Computing paid $273.6 million in July for IronPort 
rival CipherTrust.

An acquisition should be welcome news to customers of IronPort and 
other such companies that get bought, analysts said. The suitors 
typically have deeper pockets, which should translate into more 
stability. "A private company, consuming venture capital, is living 
in limbo," Christy said.

Also, customers will be able to buy multiple products from a single 
provider, instead of having to deal with several suppliers. "The more 
vendors you have, the higher the administration cost," Firstbrook 
said. In Cisco's case, buyers may even be able to get their Cisco 
discount applied to IronPort products, he said.

But not all IronPort customers are happy that the company will be 
part of Cisco. "There goes the neighborhood," CNET News.com reader 
Fred Dunn, who works at a large academic institution, 
<http://news.com.com/5208-1033_3-0.html?forumID=1&threadID=23949&messageID=224307&start=-1>wrote
 
in response to the buyout news. "With Cisco's reputation, we can 
already see the annual maintenance fees going up."

Tom Gillis, senior vice president of marketing at IronPort, assured 
customers that nothing will change as the company operates as a 
subsidiary of Cisco. "It is business as usual--no changes to 
products, pricing or support," he said.


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