VC Money is Sign of Healthy Exits
We blogged last week about the availability of VC money for security startups. The selected entrepreneurs who made it to the final rounds of the Global Security Challenge collectively raised over $19 million following their participation. In a recent article in Red Herring, Cassimir Medford confirms the vitality of fundraising for security technology citing the example of Proofpoint -- an email security startup. This is a good sign for healthy exit opportunities in this market, because VCs typically only invest in startups they believe will earn them exit with a return of at least 10-x-cash,.
IPO as a Viable Exit Opportunity?
While current market conditions for an initial public offering are difficult for any startup, security startups have had a mixed scorecard. The fingerprint and hand-scanning company Cross-Match withdrew its filing for an IPO in January 2008, citing an unfavorable market environment. Broadview Networks, whose solutions ensure protection of critical data and networks, is still on track for its IPO in 2008. It filed for an IPO on Nasdaq in November, aiming to raise $288m. Sourcefire experienced a fast path to a successful IPO. The network intrusion detection startup was founded in 2001 and just 6 years later completed its IPO, generating $86.3 million.
M&A the More Attractive Alternative?
It is every entrepreneur’s dream to take his idea to IPO, but realistically the recent corporate acquisitions of security startups show a very active market that may prove the better route for security entrepreneurs.
Lately a bunch of acquisition deals for IT-security startups have happened with high valuations and hence nice payouts for the founders and investors. Cisco Systems spent almost a billion dollars last year for acquiring IronPort ($830m) and Securent ($100m). Not surprisingly, Google also went on a shopping tour and bought the on-demand web security firm Postini for $625 million last July.
However, IT-security startups are not the only hot acquisition targets as physical security technologies, such as biometrics and video surveillance, appear on the buying lists of industry leaders. In January 2008, L-1 Identity Solutions bought the finger-scanning company Bioscrypt for $44million. Neither are these deals contained only to the US, as the Israeli video surveillance company NICE bought Actimize for $280 million in July 2007 – a nice pay day for an 8-year old startup, no?
We blogged last week about the availability of VC money for security startups. The selected entrepreneurs who made it to the final rounds of the Global Security Challenge collectively raised over $19 million following their participation. In a recent article in Red Herring, Cassimir Medford confirms the vitality of fundraising for security technology citing the example of Proofpoint -- an email security startup. This is a good sign for healthy exit opportunities in this market, because VCs typically only invest in startups they believe will earn them exit with a return of at least 10-x-cash,.
IPO as a Viable Exit Opportunity?
While current market conditions for an initial public offering are difficult for any startup, security startups have had a mixed scorecard. The fingerprint and hand-scanning company Cross-Match withdrew its filing for an IPO in January 2008, citing an unfavorable market environment. Broadview Networks, whose solutions ensure protection of critical data and networks, is still on track for its IPO in 2008. It filed for an IPO on Nasdaq in November, aiming to raise $288m. Sourcefire experienced a fast path to a successful IPO. The network intrusion detection startup was founded in 2001 and just 6 years later completed its IPO, generating $86.3 million.
M&A the More Attractive Alternative?
It is every entrepreneur’s dream to take his idea to IPO, but realistically the recent corporate acquisitions of security startups show a very active market that may prove the better route for security entrepreneurs.
Lately a bunch of acquisition deals for IT-security startups have happened with high valuations and hence nice payouts for the founders and investors. Cisco Systems spent almost a billion dollars last year for acquiring IronPort ($830m) and Securent ($100m). Not surprisingly, Google also went on a shopping tour and bought the on-demand web security firm Postini for $625 million last July.
However, IT-security startups are not the only hot acquisition targets as physical security technologies, such as biometrics and video surveillance, appear on the buying lists of industry leaders. In January 2008, L-1 Identity Solutions bought the finger-scanning company Bioscrypt for $44million. Neither are these deals contained only to the US, as the Israeli video surveillance company NICE bought Actimize for $280 million in July 2007 – a nice pay day for an 8-year old startup, no?
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