Microsoft's FAST Buy To Trigger Enterprise Search Consolidation 1 comment
-
Font Size:
-
Print
- TweetThis
Microsoft said Tuesday that it will offer $1.2 billion in cash for Fast Search and Transfer [Norway: FAST], a big player in the enterprise search market.
The move is sure to shake up the enterprise search market, which
thus far has been dominated by a series of smaller players like FAST,
Autonom
y
and Vivisimo. Google has made some inroads, but for the most part the
market is the realm of niche players. Microsoft is about to change that
with FAST. You can expect Google to make a purchase in enterprise
search along with traditional enterprise players like HP, IBM and the
usual suspects.
In a statement, Microsoft said its offer is a 42 percent premium to where FAST shares trade in Norway. FAST’s board of directors has recommended that shareholders take the offer and the company’s two largest shareholders–Orkla ASA and Hermes Focus Asset Management Europe–are on board with the deal. The transaction should be completed in the second quarter.
FAST counts Comcast, Microsoft, UBS and others as customers.
Microsoft is likely to raise a ruckus in enterprise search and force consolidation among FAST’s rivals. Microsoft can bundle FAST with its Microsoft Office SharePoint Server and probably poach some features for its consumer search if warranted. And Microsoft will gladly take FAST’s search engineering talent. I did an overview of enterprise search last year and highlighted how long it takes to deploy. In a nutshell, enterprise search is more complicated than slapping in a search appliance because you have unstructured data.
In a statement, Jeff Raikes, president of Microsoft’s Business Division, said:
“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.”
Translation: The rest of this industry is going to consolidate fast.
Related Articles
|


























This article has 1 comment: