Cisco Systems has announced its intent to acquire Composite Software, which provides data virtualization to help IT departments interconnect data and systems; the purchase is scheduled to complete in early
Data virtualization is among the topics we explored in our benchmark research on information management. Our findings show that the largest barrier to managing information well is the dispersion of data across too many applications and systems, which impacts two-thirds (67%) of organizations. Our research and discussions with companies suggest that data virtualization can address this problem; it is one aspect of information optimization, an increasingly important IT and business strategy, as I have pointed out. Composite has made data virtualization work in technology initiatives including business analytics and big data but overall in information architecture.
Since my last formal analysis that I wrote about Composite, its technology has advanced significantly. One area of focus had been to increase virtualization of big data technologies, realized recently in its 6.2 SP3 release furthering its support of Hadoop. Over the last two years Composite has supported distributions from Apache, Cloudera and Hortonworks, interfacing to MapReduce and Hive since its 6.1 release. In the 6.2 release in 2012, Composite added improved techniques for processing analytics and virtualizing the resulting data sets, which came not only from traditional data sources but also from HP Vertica, PostgreSQL and improved interfaces with IBM and Teradata systems. These releases and expanded data connections have made Composite’s the most versatile data virtualization technology in the industry.
As Composite Software becomes part of Cisco, it is worth remembering that acquiring technology companies has been a major part of building the company Cisco is today; the many acquisitions have expanded its product portfolio and brought together some of the brightest minds in networking technology. Less often noted is Cisco’s mixed success in acquisitions of data-related software for enterprise use. Among the examples here is CxO Systems, which had a complex event processing (CEP) and data processing technology that Cisco eventually used to advance its event processing across network technologies; the software no longer exists in stand-alone form. Another example is Latigent, a provider of call center reporting on detailed call data that was supposed to help Cisco cultivate more services; eventually this software was shown not to fit with Cisco’s technology products or services portfolio and disappeared. Cisco’s business model has been to market and sell to data center and networking environments, and it has not been successful in selling stand-alone software outside this area. It is not easy to compete with IBM, Oracle, SAP and others when it comes to technology with which Cisco lacks experience and will impact its success in monetizing the investment in purchasing Composite Software.
Emerging computing architectures will change the way IT departments will operate in the future, but it’s an open question who will lead that change from traditional IT software stacks to hardware and networking technology. Cisco plans to transform the data center and networking from software and hardware stacks, partly through virtualizing software inside premises and out into the Internet and cloud computing. We see IT architectures changing in a haphazard, vendor-driven approach while most CIOs wants to revise their architectures in an efficient manner. Data and information architectures have moved from relying on databases and applications to adapt innovative technology such as in-memory processing and grid architectures that support new trends in big data, business analytics, cloud computing, mobile technology and social collaboration. These technology innovations and pressure to use them in business are straining the backbones of enterprise networks that have to adapt and grow rapidly. Most companies today still have data centers and networking groups and are increasing their network bandwidth and buying new networking technology from Cisco and others. This will not change soon, but they need better intelligence on the networking of data in these technologies. This I think is what Cisco is looking for with the acquisition of Composite, hoping to refine the infrastructure to help in virtualization of data across the network. This approach can play well into what Cisco articulates as a strategic direction around the concept it calls the Internet of Everything (IoE). The challenge will be to convince CIOs that this energetic of a change by Cisco is necessary for improving connectivity of data across the network. Data virtualization will play a key role in efficiently interconnecting networks and systems but where this is primarily applied within the data center of networking compared to where it is centered in the stack of information management technology today.
I think the acquisition makes sense for Composite Software as it could not grow fast enough to satisfy its technological ambitions and needed more deployments to support its innovations. Cisco for its part will be tested over time to determine what it makes of Composite. I expect that Cisco will fundamentally change its roadmap and support for enterprise IT as it adjusts the technology to work with its data center and networking technology; such a change inevitably will impact its existing customers and partners. The company will place Composite in its Services organization (which I was told includes software); I take this as an indication of more maturity needed by Cisco to bring software acquisitions into its product and services portfolios and manage as software with the right level of dedicated marketing and sales resources. For those who want to learn more about data virtualization, I recommend reading the educational content of Composite in the next couple of months before its website and material disappear from the Internet. This may sound harsh but is how companies like Cisco and others digest acquisitions and eliminate the companies past and by doing so eliminate critical information. No one is saying so and could not get an answer, but the reality is that Composite will become one item in the long product and services list on Cisco’s website; my guess is it will become part of the data center and virtualization services or unified computing services; to see how many Cisco has, just check its website.
Data virtualization is just beginning to mature and attract CIOs and IT professionals who care about the ‘I’ in their titles that stands
Congratulations to Composite Software for its innovative contributions and sad to see its independence and passion for data virtualization to disappear. I will be watching to see if Cisco understands the company’s real value, not just for data centers and networking but for bridging to enterprise IT and the market for information optimization.
Regards,
Mark Smith
CEO & Chief Research Officer