Tag Archive for Shoretel

Mitel – Avaya Hook Up?

Updated August 28, 2019 – Rumors confine to swirl about the future of Avaya. Channel Partners is reporting there are 2 offers on the table. They cite reports from Bloomberg that Avaya is considering a bid by Mitel and Reuters is reporting that Avaya is considering an all-cash offer from private equity firm Clayton Dubilier & Rice.

Channel Partners speculates that the Mitel-Avaya deal would “…result in a company with a market share that would rival key industry players Cisco and Microsoft.”

Avaya buy-out rumors are back. Last month it was thought that a PE firm, possibly Searchlight Capital Partners was going to buy Avaya. The unknown private equity firm valued Avaya at more than $5 billion, including debt.

The newest report is that Ottawa-based Unified-Communications-as-a-Service provider Mitel is looking to acquire Avaya in an all-stock merger valued at between $2.2 billion and $2.4 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The reported deal would value communications equipment and software provider Avaya at $20 to $22 per share, a premium based on its current stock price of about $18 per share on Monday 04/29/2019. If Avaya and Mitel are able to strike a deal, the merger could happen as soon as next month, the WSJ said, citing mysterious people familiar with the matter.

compete against their larger UC competitorsCRN says that the Avaya-Mitel deal could help the two companies compete against their larger UC competitors. Mitel typically plays well in the small to midsize market, while Avaya has a large install base of enterprise customers because of its legacy in the UC hardware arena.

Zeus Kerravala at NoJitter points out that the reported $2 billion purchase price doesn’t into account Avaya’s roughly $3 billion in debt. With debt included, the offer would have to come in for a total enterprise value of $5 billion to be of interest to shareholders.

Mr. Kerravala believes that a successful merger between Avaya and Mitel would create a behemoth of a company, bringing the number two and number three voice vendors together. He cites Synergy Research Group data that shows Cisco (CSCO) the leader with about 44% market share, Avaya second at 10%, and Mitel third at 8%. He believes a combined Avaya and Mitel would hold the industry’s biggest installed base.

Synergy enterprise voice market share estimate

Source: Synergy Research Group

The merger would also be beneficial as the industry becomes more artificial intelligence (AI)-centric, data and scale are must-haves. Mr. Kerravala believes Avaya and Mitel are stronger together than apart on AI. That said, if a deal doesn’t happen, the companies should still be fine continuing down their current trajectories, optimizing their internal resources while leveraging partners for AI. They can still do this, although it would be easier as a bigger company.

private equity firm Searchlight Capital PartnersAn investment group led by private equity firm Searchlight Capital Partners acquired Mitel in April 2018 with a $2.6 billion deal that took the company private. Mitel has a history of growing via acquisitions. In 2017 the company completed the acquisition of competing UC provider ShoreTel for $530 million. The move helped Mitel become one of the largest UCaaS providers in the world. The company lost out on its deal to acquire videoconferencing provider Polycom in 2016 to Siris Capital Group.

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This is just more of the same for Avaya. The crowning jewel in this deal is Avaya’s corporate call center business. Avaya’s call center business is the product of the acquisition of Nortel assets, after the Canadian networking giant’s bankruptcy in 2009.

This deal is really about the cloud. TechCrunch notes that Searchlight has a strategic stake in Rackspace, another legacy company that it took private for $4.3B in 2016.

Will Searchlight leverage its investments in Rackspace, Mitel, and now Avaya to build a cloud-based UCaaS juggernaut to take on the likes of Cisco, Microsoft, Slack, RingCentral, 8×8, even Google and Amazon?

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

802.11ac Wi-Fi Clears the Way for Collaboration

802.11ac Wi-Fi Clears the Way for CollaborationThe emerging gigabit 802.11ac, Wi-Fi standard is the current darling of the hype machine. The standard will be finalized in February 2014. However, that has not stopped manufacturers from shipping 802.11ac routers, access points, and mobile devices. Shortel (SHOR) recently provided their opinion on what this means for your business.

IEEE 802.11acThe article points out that more people are using mobile apps and devices. Shortel calculates that a typical worker may have three IP addresses, while digital natives may have up to six IP addresses. These stats suggest that mobility has become a must-have and the author claims that 802.11ac can meet the needs of increasing mobility because 802.11ac is faster, more reliable, and delivers more Wi-Fi capacity. 802.11ac is:

  • Faster – 802.11ac is three times faster than 802.11n Wi-Fi. 802.11ac will deliver up to 1.3 Gbps, which is about three times faster than 802.11n. This capacity will be ideal for real-time applications, such as IP voice and streaming video. Faster data throughput means better battery life for mobile devices, too.
  • More reliable – 802.11ac is more reliable with less interference. 802.11ac operates at 5 GHz, which is far less crowded than the 2.4 GHz band that by 802.11b/g/n access points — as well as cordless phones, automatic garage door openers, and other home appliances. That means that there’s less interference from other Wi-Fi-enabled devices, which will result in a better user experience.
  • Improved throughput. 802.11ac uses multiple antennas for transmitting and receiving RF signals, and that means better data throughput. More specifically, MIMO, or Multiple-Input and Multiple-Output, is key to providing wireless performance that is more switch-like, compared to the shared media nature of 802.11n.

W-Fi Alliance logoShortel believes that Gigabit Wi-Fi can be a real asset for unified communications, streaming media, and other bandwidth-hungry apps. They plan to use the greater capacity of 802.11ac to support more devices and more apps. In the workplace, teams want to engage and share without hassle using modern collaboration tools with the devices of their choice creating the need for BYOD.

The newest generation of workers are digital natives, who are more inclined to use videoconferencing for quick chats or to share ideas. In addition, many people use tablets to stream media, and more organizations are turning to streaming media over Wi-Fi for digital signage, training, company meetings, and customer support. And those bandwidth-hungry applications will love the new gigabit Wi-Fi.

Wave 1 802.11ac only offers incremental benefits over 802.11nShoretel reassures those that have deployed an 802.11n WLAN recently, you don’t need to be in a hurry to move to 802.11ac. You can be confident in the investment that you made, as the first-generation 802.11ac will offer only incremental benefits over 802.11n. But if you are replacing old Wi-Fi or expanding your wireless LAN or looking to downsize your wired network in favor of wireless, you should weigh the options between 802.11n and the new 802.11ac.

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802.11ac will only get faster, the theoretical max speed of 802.11ac is just shy of 7Gbps, which you will never see in the wild, but don’t be surprised to see link speeds of 2Gbps or more in the next few years. At 2Gbps, you’ll get a transfer rate of 256MB/sec.

To reach such Wi-Fi speeds, chipset and device makers will have to figure out how to make second-generation chipsets with four or more 802.11ac streams in software and hardware. The engineers at Broadcom (BRCM), Qualcomm (QCOM), Marvell (MRVL), and Intel (INTC) are already working on ways to implementing four and eight-stream 802.11ac solutions. A lot of work will need to be done by the chipset and device makers to make sure that advanced features, such as beamforming, comply with the standard and are interoperable with other 802.11ac devices.

In general, then, you can certainly expect some impressive speeds from 802.11ac in situations where you don’t need the performance and reliability of wired GigE. But I do not believe that 802.11ac will replace a wired Gigabit Ethernet network just yet.

What do you think?

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.