NetApp CEO Says Channel Helped Company Show Strong Earnings
November 16, 2005 6:37 PM ET
Network Appliance had a strong showing for its fiscal quarter, in part due to its increased sales through the channel.
Dan Warmenhoven, CEO of the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based storage vendor, told CRN that 50 percent of NetApp's North American revenue, and 60 percent of its worldwide revenue, was attributed to the channel in the company's fiscal second quarter, which ended October 28. About 13 percent of the overall revenue came via two distributors, Arrow and Avnet, he said.
The company on Wednesday reported revenue of $483.1 million, up 29 percent compared to the $375.2 million reported for the same period last year. Income for the quarter reached $70.7 million, or 18 cents per share, compared to $55.3 million, or 15 cents per share last year.
NetApp is meeting with meeting with a number of its top solution providers this week, and telling them it expects channel sales to continue to grow, said Warmenhoven. "We're telling them we expect their revenue to grow 40 percent this year," he said.
To make that happen, NetApp is in the process of bringing its solution providers the opportunity to become service providers on the company's behalf, Warmenhoven said. To that end, the company has just wrapped up a pilot program which offered a limited number of partners training and self-certification opportunities around NetApp services, and is ready to roll the program out to partners worldwide, he said.
As part of NetApp's financial reports, the company did not specifically address the part of its business that comes from the agreement it has with IBM under which that company will resell the majority of NetApp's products as it currently accounts for under 1 percent of NetApp's revenue, said Warmenhoven.
However, he said that the relationship will grow quickly going forward. "When the IBM revenues are fully ramped up, eight to ten quarters out, they will account for approximately 10 percent of our revenue," he said. "That's significant. But that means 90 percent comes from our sales. So we expect 45 percent of our business to come from direct sales, 45 percent from our indirect sales, and 10 percent from IBM eventually."
Warmenhoven acknowledged that there will be some channel conflicts between NetApp's solution providers and IBM's sales. However, he said the IBM relationship will be mainly around incremental business for NetApp.
NetApp's data security business, while still small, is also expected to grow quickly, said Warmenhoven. It accounts for about 1 percent of NetApp's business this quarter. Warmenhoven said security revenue should hit about $15 million this fiscal year, and grow to between $35 million and $50 million in the next fiscal year.
|
|
Symantec's Code Red: The Law Enforcement/Anonymous E-Mail Exchange Law enforcement officials negotiated via e-mail for more than two weeks with an Anonymous group member trying to extort $50,000 from Symantec to keep stolen product code off the Internet. |
|
|
How To Sell IT Security Services To Your Customers Cyberattacks can cost a business thousands, even millions, of dollars, and can deal a death blow to some. Here's how IT solution providers can help guard against malicious attacks. |
|
|
Cybersecurity Experts: What They Know Could Scare You A recent report based on interviews with security experts in government, business and academia finds more than half in agreement that a worldwide arms race is taking place in cyberspace. |
- NetApp Preps Security Box
- IBM's Midrange NAS Play
- Microsoft Shows Its Love In Valentine's Day Patch Release
- Worker Abuse Protest Targets Apple, Supplier Foxconn
- Dell Hires Former CA CEO To Run New Software Group
- IBM Expands Endpoint Security, Operations
- NetApp The Latest To Increase Hard Drive Prices Due To Thailand Floods
- PersonalWeb Files Patent Lawsuits Against Top Storage, Cloud Vendors
- Insider Threats: The Next Frontier for Security Resellers and SMBs
- Complete Security and Your Bottom Line: Sophos, Value and the Channel
- Tough Threats, Tougher Security: How You Can Leverage New Solutions To Combat A “Targeted Attack” Landscape
- Dark Clouds Ahead: Why the Mid-Market Needs To Ramp Up Cloud Security and How You Can Help Them Get There
