Email this article   Print article 

VARBusiness 500 Ranking Updates

By Cristina McEachern Gibbs, CRN
August 24, 2006    3:55 PM ET

Since the publication of the VARBusiness 500 and the GovernmentVAR 100 in June, the following amendments and corrections have been posted to both lists.

Agilysys In the VARBusiness 500, Agilysys' 2005 revenue should have been listed as being $500 million; it's 2004 revenue $450 million. That would result in an 11.1 percent increase year over year, placing Agilysys tied at number 92.

ASAP Software In the VARBusiness 500, ASAP Software's 2005 revenue should have been listed as being $1.4 billion; its 2004 revenue was $1.3 billion. That would result in a 7.7 percent increase in revenue year over year, placing ASAP Software tied at number 50. For the GovernmentVAR 100 listing, ASAP's 2005 public sector revenue should have been $390 million with 4 percent revenue change from 2004. The ranking should have been number 28.

Emtec In the VARBusiness 500, Emtec's 2005 revenue should have been listed as being $268.4 million; it's 2004 revenue $232.6 million. That would result in a 15.4 percent increase in revenue year over year, placing Emtec tied at number 131. After a reverse merger in August of 2005, Emtec and Westwood Computer became a single company with combined revenues.

Modis In the VARBusiness 500, Modis' 2005 revenue should have been listed as being $719.7 million; it's 2004 revenue $636.4 million. That's a 13.1 percent year-over-year increase, placing Modis tied at number 70.

Northrop Grumman In the GovernmentVAR 100, Northrop Grumman's 2005 public sector revenue should have been $10 billion, a 5.5 percent revenue increase over 2004. Northrop's revenue should have been broken down as follows: $9.6 billion from federal agencies, $200 million from state agencies and $200 million from local agencies. That would place Northrop tied for number one on the list.


Email this article   Print article 

More Channel Programs

Recent Articles

Five Companies That Dropped The Ball This Week

For the week ending Feb. 10, CRN looks at five companies that were either asleep at the wheel or just didn't make good decisions.

Five Companies That Came To Win This Week

For the week ending Feb. 10, CRN looks at five companies that brought their 'A' game and made moves to beat out competitors

10 Challenges That HP Wants Partners To Tackle Right Now

CRN speaks with HP's business unit chiefs to get a sense of where they'd like partners to focus in the coming year, as well as how CEO Meg Whitman is making a difference.

  More Slide Shows




Related Videos
Loading...