Title: VC: ISV Industry Analysis
1VC ISV Industry Analysis RecommendationsBrian
Halligan
2Agenda
- Premise of Paper
- S/W Industry Structure Then Now
- Revenue, IPO, MA, and other trends
- Recommendations for VCs
- Halligans investment interests
3Premise
- ISV industry has stabilized into a gentle
oligopoly - ISV S-Curve
- What does it mean for vcs entrepreneurs?
4Software Industry Structure Porters
5-forcesForce 1 Intensity of Rivalry and
Competition
- Then (1990) - Low
- Very high growth in industry
- Low relative fixed cost
- Wide variety of differentiating capabilities
- Smaller number of players from mostly developed
world
- Now (2004) - High
- Growth stabilized (see later slides)
- Fixed cost are higher now
- More difficult to differentiate
- Numerous players around the world with entry of
low-cost developing world
5Software Industry Structure Porters
5-forcesForce 2 Barriers to Entry
- Then (1990) - Low
- Product differentiation was easier
- Brands evolving
- Switching costs lower
- Network effects not completely established
- Now (2004) - Higher
- Product differentiation is harder
- Brands established
- Much higher switching costs
- Network effects create significant barriers
6Software Industry Structure Porters
5-forcesForce 3 Bargaining power of Suppliers
- Then (1990) - High
- Strong developers in short supply
- Few experienced project/program managers
- Education/training concentrated evolving
- Now (2004) - Low
- Large supply at low cost from around the world
- More experienced managers available
- Matured education/ training freely available
7Software Industry Structure Porters
5-forcesForce 4 Bargaining Power of Buyers
- Then (1990) - Lower
- Could not clearly articulate needs
- Technology was Strategic thrust
- Demand far exceeded supply
- Now (2004) - Higher
- Can clearly articulate needs
- Technology has been commoditized
- Supply has significantly increased
8Software Industry Structure Porters
5-forcesForce 5 Threat of Substitutes
- Then (1990) - High
- Bespoke software lower in the stack
- Technology was strategic advantage more custom
development - Lower switching costs
- Now (2004) - Lower
- Bespoke software higher up the stack
- Must have efficiency focus - less custom
development - Higher switching costs
9Software Industry Structure Porters
5-forcesSummary
- Then (1990) ?
- Rivalry Lower
- Entry Barrier Lower
- Supplier power higher
- Buyer power lower
- Substitutes higher
- Now (2004) ?
- Rivalry Higher
- Entry Barrier Moderate
- Supplier power lower
- Buyer power higher
- Substitutes lower
10Packaged Software Annual RevenueSlowing growth
thinning margins
11Projected Revenue Slow growth is predicted by
IDC going forward
12Shifting marketsConsumer software has higher
margins faster growth than enterprise
13Shifting Form FactorsEmerging form factors are
growing
14Software IPOs Few Transactions in 04IPOs
down from pre-bubble era
15Software MA 750 Transactions in 04MA up
from pre-bubble era
- 19 public ISVs acqd in 04. Down to 237
public ISVs.
16Software Industry Consolidation
- Industry has matured
- Top 10 firms control 58 of Revenue
17Software Industry ConsolidationWall Streets bet
- Industry has matured
- Top 10 firms control 72 of Market Cap
18Software Industry as OligopolyWall Streets bet
Microsoft
Oracle
IBM
SAP
19Historic VC InvestmentSoftware as a percentage
is still increasing
20Recommendations for VCs
- Reduce investment in Enterprise ISVs in favor of
SME and other industries (i.e. biotech). - Invest in new form factors
- Build companies to attract future acquisition
(most logical exit) - Differentiation by business model, not just
technology!!
21Halligans investment interests
- Next generation MCAD (its time)
- Collaboration Virtual Reality merge
- P2P version of Webex
- Unified user ontology
- Search (Googles better, but)
- Self-service SME applications
- Personal portals (Vermeer realized)
- Wikis replace MS-Word Content Mgmt
- Neuroscience (www.neuroplaz.com)
22QA