Microsoft Looks to Leverage the FAST Track in Enterprise Search
by
Paula J. Hane
Posted On January 10, 2008
In a move that is likely to shake up the enterprise search market, Microsoft Corp. (www.microsoft.com) has announced that it will offer to acquire Fast Search & Transfer ASA (FAST; www.fastsearch.com),
an Oslo, Norway-based firm, in a cash deal valued at $1.2 billion,
which the company said represents a 42% premium on the closing share
price of Jan. 4. The deal looks very solid as FAST’s board of directors
has unanimously recommended that its shareholders accept the offer and
FAST’s two largest institutional shareholders are committed to the
deal. The transaction is expected to be completed in 2Q of calendar
year 2008. The acquisition is generally seen as a win-win for both
companies and disruptive to their competitors. It will significantly
bolster Microsoft’s enterprise search efforts, bring them a solid
customer base with strength in Europe, and provide a strong collection
of technologies that should prove useful across a number of Microsoft
products. FAST in turn gains the resources and strengths of one of the
Big Guys.Jeff Raikes, president of the Microsoft business division,
sums up the rationale for the acquisition this way: " Enterprise search
is becoming an indispensable tool to businesses of all sizes … Until
now organizations have been forced to choose between powerful, high-end
search technologies or more mainstream, infrastructure solutions. The
combination of Microsoft and FAST gives customers a new choice: a
single vendor with solutions that span the full range of customer
needs."
"This acquisition gives FAST an exciting way to spread
our cutting-edge search technologies and innovations to more and more
organizations across the world," says John Lervik, CEO of FAST. "By
joining Microsoft, we can benefit from the momentum behind the
SharePoint business productivity platform to really empower a broader
set of users through Microsoft’s strong sales and marketing network. It
validates FAST’s momentum and leadership in enterprise search."
In
a teleconference to discuss the acquisition, Raikes said the three
reasons Microsoft chose FAST are that it brings the best people, the
best technology ("to complete what we’re doing"), and a great
opportunity to get more R&D talent, especially in Europe. These
company assets were echoed by Lervik, who added that the deal meant
that "our dream is coming true."
One industry analyst, Susan
Feldman, research vice president for search technologies at IDC, has
been following FAST since its early web search days, as have I. Feldman
says this acquisition is likely to change the enterprise search market
permanently—and quickly. It also signals that search has reached the
big time: "It is a necessary part of the enterprise software stack.
Moreover, it is not just search but information access in general that
has been validated."
Most important for FAST, according to
Feldman, is that it now acquires the much-needed resources to support
the company’s strong vision—one that sees a broader role for search in
the future. And, she says, FAST brings Microsoft an array of "very nice
technologies and products [that] will fit well with both Share[P]oint
and Microsoft’s Live group of products." She specifically pointed to
the FAST architecture that provides unified access to content and data,
its rich media search capabilities, semantic features, contextual
search, hosted solutions, Ad Momentum, and more. But, she stresses
FAST’s scalability (to billions of documents) as its major selling
feature.
Guy Creese, an analyst with the Burton Group, calls the acquisition a "huge coup for Microsoft in the enterprise search space" (http://ccsblog.burtongroup.com).
He also stresses that it will make Microsoft "a one-stop shop
vendor"—with enterprise search offerings at all three market tiers. He
describes these as 1) cheap and OK (Microsoft Search Server 2008
Express), 2) relatively inexpensive and an 80% solution (SharePoint
Search), and 3) expensive and sophisticated (FAST Search).
Stephen
Arnold, search expert and author of the first three editions of the
"Enterprise Search Report," who has closely tracked FAST for more than
7 years, posted an extended commentary on the acquisition on his new
blog, Beyond Search, which is also the title of his next book (http://arnoldit.com/wordpress/2008/01/08/thoughts-on-microsoft-buying-fast). He summarizes his views with these observations:
- Microsoft
SharePoint is complex and the Fast Search enterprise search platform
(ESP) is complex. Integrating two complex systems will be a challenge.
The companies’ engineers are up to this task, but the question will be
"How long will the meshing take?"
- Customers may be wary of
escalating risk. Microsoft will have to keep Fast Search’s more than
2,000 customers in the fold while other vendors try to pick them off.
- More
investor interest in companies in the search sector and a series of
shifts in the search landscape may occur over the next year.
- Further
consolidation in search will take place in 2008 and 2009. In the midst
of these buyouts, customers will vote with their dollars to create some
new winners in "behind the firewall" search.
Not
surprisingly, some competitors in the enterprise search space issued
statements responding to the acquisition that provided a different spin
on the deal. ISYS, which sells into the mid-market, says that "The
mid-market should continue unaffected, as it will take months for the
two companies to merge, and the resulting product will likely be too
aggressive (both in costs and implementation timeframes) for most
mid-market needs … news such as this only further highlights the need
for powerful yet affordable enterprise search" (www.isys-search.com/company/pressreleases/2008/msfast.html).
Jeff
Dirks, CEO of SchemaLogic, had this comment on the news. "This
acquisition expands the capabilities of Microsoft’s SharePoint platform
and furthers [its] goal to provide a complete information management
solution for the enterprise. For SchemaLogic this is further validation
of the continued market demand for enterprise-wide information
management solutions and the value large enterprises are placing on
finding and sharing information. SchemaLogic provides connections to
SharePoint 2007 and FAST search for several large enterprise customers,
and we predict the combination will allow us to provide even more value
to these customers in the future."
Ali Riaz, former president and
COO of FAST (2000–2006), is currently CEO and founder of Attivio, Inc.,
an "Information Fabric/Information Infrastructure platform provider."
(The company doesn’t have a product yet and Riaz says it actually isn’t
competing against his old company because it is approaching the problem
differently.) Riaz sees the Microsoft move as a shot across the bow of
Google. He says that FAST has the experience and technology Microsoft
needs to counter Google’s forays into the enterprise with its search
appliance. He does bring up some concerns, mostly from the perspective
of FAST’s customers, such as level of support (FAST has an extremely
high customer satisfaction rate), level and speed of innovation,
possible changes in pricing strategy and business model, and FAST’s use
of Java and non-Microsoft technologies.
I found the media and
blog coverage of this news fascinating—it almost inundated me as I
tried to sort through it all. Comparing some of the headlines was most
intriguing, and showed the range of opinion on what this deal means.
- Did Microsoft Just Pull A FAST One?
- Microsoft Acquires FAST, Will Other Biggies Follow the Trend?
- Microsoft goes for Google jugular with search buy
- Microsoft’s Fast deal boosts Autonomy
- Microsoft’s FAST Bid Highlights Growth Of Enterprise Search
- Microsoft, Fast Combo To Yield Better Search Dev Tools
- Microsoft Vaults to Enterprise Search Top Rung With Fast Buy
- Microsoft
FAST Acquisition Suffers From Brain Drain (Asks " What kind of brain
drain might have FAST suffered during the 2007 layoffs?")
FAST,
founded in 1997, is now a global organization with offices on six
continents. It is publicly traded under the ticker symbol FAST on the
Oslo Stock Exchange. It sold its internet search business, AlltheWeb,
to Overture Services in 2003. FAST’s solutions are used by more than
2,600 global customers and partners, including America Online (AOL),
CNET, Factiva, IBM, Knight Ridder, LexisNexis, Overture, Reed Elsevier,
and Reuters. Following some disappointing financial results in 2007,
the company went through a strategic realignment that involved a series
of cost reductions, job cuts, streamlining of internal operations, and
a renewed focus on key markets. FAST now has about 750 employees and
had projected its 2008 revenue to be in the $200 million to $210
million range. Competitors in the enterprise search space include
Autonomy (which owns Verity), Endeca, ISYS, Exalead, Siderean,
Vivisimo, IBM, and Google.
Paula J. Hane is Information Today, Inc.'s news bureau chief and editor of NewsBreaks.
Email Paula J. Hane