CenterBeam Improves Upon Single Pane of Glass Web Portal (Press Release…plus!)

by Al Bsharah | 05.02.2009 10:31 AM | Comments (0)

My-CenterBeam-Portal-Screenshot One of the many projects I’ve been focused on over the past 6 months is integration of the old Network Insight portal that I created into the existing CenterBeam portal framework.  Not only did we successfully do this, but we also launched a completely redesigned portal framework in the process. 

Within just a couple months of acquisition, we not only had both companies on the same internal business infrastructure (email, file systems, etc) but we integrated our on-line web presence into a single pane of glass for all of our customers (launched Feb 2009).

Took me a while to post this, as it all happened between November and February, but below is the official CenterBeam Press Release text:

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Midmarket Gains Window to its IT Services Through Single Pane of Glass

MyCenterBeam Delivers Innovative Enterprise Mashup Functionality

SAN JOSE, CA - 04/07/2009

CenterBeam today announced its next generation online customer interface, My CenterBeam. This enterprise mashup represents a significant evolution of its key information and support tools into one seamless window pane for organizations to manage their IT services. Combining information from messaging systems, business intelligence engines and data integration solutions, My CenterBeam delivers critical service information to a single pane of glass, clean and standardized.

With My CenterBeam, the company addresses a significant issue for midmarket businesses, the ability to inspect, verify and manage, in one pane of glass, its IT service performance, security and availability information. With this data typically coming from numerous vendors, systems and platforms, each with its own proprietary console or reporting portal, there has been no coherent way to easily or cost effectively aggregate and correlate the information.

Traditionally, IT teams have to draw information from disparate data sources, each tracking and reporting data in their own way. CenterBeam’s operational data store forms the nucleus of My CenterBeam, leveraging Web 2.0 techniques and CenterBeam-developed API’s to collect and transform that information into consumable or “mashable” assets. My CenterBeam presents the correlated assets in a standardized format, allowing users to gain valuable insight into service metrics. This includes patch and configuration management data, anti-virus and anti-malware statistics, case and satisfaction metrics, service requests, server and network availability and performance and mailbox usage – all in a single pane of glass.

“Until now, an IT executive had to keep track of statistics and information from possibly dozens of different vendors to figure out the health and performance of its IT systems. This makes inspection close to impossible and exposes the business to risk if, for example, they don’t notice that a significant patch has been missed, or if backups aren’t happening the way they are supposed to,” states Shahin Pirooz, Executive Vice President and CTO, CenterBeam. “My CenterBeam eliminates the confusion and delivers clarity by rolling up all service and information into one standard view, giving the business or IT executive, for the first time, one place to go for comprehensive and actionable information.”

“My CenterBeam provides invaluable insight into the performance of our IT operations,” states Curtis Helsel, Vice President, Information Services at University of Colorado Foundation. “To gain this level of information on my own, I would have to access several different reporting consoles and attempt to translate and reconstruct the data to provide a holistic view of our systems. This is something I don’t have the time or resources to manage or maintain.”

My CenterBeam aggregates information for all CenterBeam services including hosted email, PC security, network and server management and help desk statistics.

About CenterBeam
Headquartered in San Jose, Calif., CenterBeam is an award-winning managed IT services provider with a rich service portfolio including PC management, hosted Microsoft® Exchange email, helpdesk support, network and server management and consulting services. More than 140,000 daily services are delivered in an integrated software as a service (SaaS) architecture to clients with end users working in forty-five countries. For more information, visit www.centerbeam.com.

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Merger and Acquistion - How to Fail at it from a Technology Perspective

by Al Bsharah | 02.01.2009 11:31 PM | Comments (2)

Mergers and Acquisitions I thought it would be fun to take a different perspective on how to go about merging or acquiring a company...by focusing our undevided attention on how to fail at it.  This article focuses mostly on the technology aspects and skips over Human Resources, Finance, and other non-technical areas.  I will spend a little time on Operations, though...as Technology and Operations should be heavily intertwined. 

This topic was spawned by the numerous articles out there discussing the varied emergency mergers and acquisitions that seem to be happening due to our economic situation.  It seems that there has been a subtle swing in reasons for a merger today compared to the pre-economic meltdown environment.  Previously, companies would merge not only for financial gain but for the ability to spread their wings, improve their position in the market, and stretch their product focus to new boundaries.  Today, many of the mergers happening are based in large part (if not completely) on financial survival.  Survival being the key word.

Having recently gone through a post-meltdown merger NOT focused entirely on survival (CenterBeam Acquires Network Insight), and being largely responsible for the initial merging of these companies from a technological perspective, it seemed appropriate to share my thoughts on this.  As CenterBeam, I'd like to think we've done a very good job at mitigating the below risks, or avoiding them entirely.  Of course none of us are perfect, but I'm proud to say that we've accomplished a lot in a short time frame and haven't destroyed anything along the way.  Yet, there's still plenty of work to do.

Don't get IT Involved Early

A common theme through many of the articles I've read over the past 6 months is that IT wasn't involved in either the decision making, the planning processes, or both.  In this day and age, you simply can't afford to do that.  If you don't have an IT department (or an "IT guy") in your company, you're likely outsourcing it.  If you're not doing either, we'll call you and your company "unique" and move on.  <smile>  The important point is that in many organizations, the accelerated proliferation of technology over the years has become the glue to keeping things moving smoothly through your organizational process flows. 

When was the last time your email server went down?  How much of a screeching halt did your company come to because of it?

Get IT involved as early as possible.

Don't Use Proper Project Management Resources

In a previous life, I was a Project Manager and even led a team of them at one point.  Despite the title no longer residing on my business card, I still wear my Project Management hat on a near-daily basis.  As someone who's worked in the IT-based Professional Services industry for 10 years, I can say...without question, hesitation, or doubt...that project management is a vital aspect to successful technology projects.  A small project can get by with a solid technological resource who knows how to manage his tasks, but that's not what we're discussing here.  A project of any scale requires multiple Subject Matter Expers (SMEs) working in harmony, with numerous dependancies on each other, over a lenthy period of time.  The only way you're going to keep that herd of cats moving in the same direction is by using a solid Project Manager, or Project Management team.

In the Professional Services world, customers will often balk at getting billed for Project Management hours in their projects because they don't understand the benefit.  Having lived and breathed it, having seen projects succeed and projects fail, and knowing wholeheartedly that much of that success and failure had to do with the level of project management involvement...it would be silly to avoid proper project management. 

Our VP of Operations provided me with an exceptional quote the other day:

"If you can't take the time to do it right today, when will you find the time to do it over?"

This applies to so many areas of business.  Don't skimp on Project Management, you'll only pay more later.

Don't get Appropriate Subject Matter Experts Involved

SMEs are your best friends when championing or managing an IT project.  If you plan without them, or without their input, you will miss things...you will forget something...and your struggling project will cause grief for many.  Better yet, don't limit yourself to just asking for their input.  They need to be active players and stakeholders in the project, so give them the responsibility to be successful with you.

You are not a super hero, regardless of the underoos you sport!  Don't work in a bubble.

Don't Spend Time Researching Both Networks and Systems

If you're an IT Manager, CIO, CTO, or other technology leader...and you're working in an organization who's core focus is not technology...odds are that you might not be very much involved in the "go" or "no-go" decision making regarding the merger or acquisition.  This is OK in most circumstances.  What's not ok is for you to sit back, accept the decision and deal with the consequences.  You still need to do your dilligence.  You have to consider how both organizations are functioning, on what types of systems they are functioning, what the short-term merger solution is and what are the long-term merger solutions going to be.  Beyond this, you need to know the risks, requirements, and effort necessary for you to be successful.

A subset item to this is having an understanding of how the two disparate systems will actually work together in the future.  There have to be distinct visions for what the merger will look like in 2 months, 6 months, and 12 months...and you need to be considering this well in advance of any acquisition. 

If you are working in a technology-based organization, and you're a high-level technology leader, you need to be a part of the decision-making process.  The executives will be looking to you for appropriate analysis and decisions on whether this is the right solution.  Everything mentioned in the above paragraph is still mandatory...and it's mandatory that your peer leadership team hears what you have to say.

The bottom line here is that the Executive teams need to understand the entire cost structure required to merge the two companies, whether they are based on technology or basket-weaving.  If they don't understand the cost basis, and it runs out of control because dilligence was not performed (or listened to), the acquisition is an immediate failure. 

No one loves homework, but you need to do yours.  Thankfully, you can do a lot of your homework at work.

Don't Sweat the Workload Requirements...You're Acquiring or Being Acquired!  There are Now More Resources to Do the Work.

This one scares me the most.  In this economy, companies are downsizing dramatically.  Last week alone 100,000 jobs were lost.  ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND.  In ONE WEEK.  Insanity.  This means that everyone in the company is going to be asked to do a little more, with a little less.  It's incredibly likely that the company acquiring you, or the company being acquired by you, has a heavy workload on their employees already.  Adding headcount due to acquisition does NOT mean you have more people to do new work.  It means you have more people that already have full-time jobs, and you now have to find a way to merge these organizations with your existing headcount (as it's pretty unlikely you'll be getting any more heads).

Even in a normal economy, this is still a frightening proposal.  Understand the workload of your employees and those being asked to perform merger duties.  Of the employees critical to the integration, work with their supervisiors and peers to understand their workload, existing projects, and abilities to balanace additional responsibility.  Otherwise, risk severe inaccuracies to your time estimations, commitments to Executives, and deadlines.

Know what can be done, who it can be done by, and in what timeframe.  Know it well.

Don't Bother Planning for Change

So, you've heeded the above advice...you've got your ducks in a row and everything is moving along as you've hoped.  The plan is set in stone, risks have been identified and mitigated, stakeholders and SMEs have been identified, everyone knows their responsibilities, and project management is on it. 

What's wrong with the above paragraph?  "The plan is set in stone..."  Come on.  You know as well as I do that nothing (nothing) is ever (ever) set in stone.  Your deadlines will get moved.  New customers will drive requirements that throw wrenches into your well-formed plan, cascading further issues throughout the project.  There are any number of items that can cause problems.  Your job is to forsee these and build flexibility into your plan.

Be nimble, be quick, be prepared to jump over that candle stick.

Do Not, Under any Circumstances, Focus Your Efforts on the Employees

The first thing to approach in just about any acquisition I can think of, is the employees.  If you ever expect to perform as a single organization, one company, one unified front...get your employees on the same collaborative systems as soon as humanly possible.  If you don't, all communication between the two companies will be haphazard and many, many, many things will fall through the cracks.  One of the first things we did at CenterBeam was get Network Insight employees dialed into all the CenterBeam systems (email, instant messanger, intranet, file systems, human resources, etc).  We did this in roughly one month.  Not bad, considering the network and systems effort required.

The point is, we're still working on the integration and merger.  I expect it to go on in various phases throughout the year.  But, since our employees are now "one", it makes our integration life so much easier.  Because we're already working as a single unit, getting the company to function as a single unit will be that much easier.

Employees first, without them you'd be job hunting instead of reading this.

Don't Rush it...Our Companies aren't Going Anywhere...We Have Time

Procrastination is NOT your friend, especially when it comes to acquisition.  We all know what happens to things that get "put off".  Something else always comes up with higher priority, and the items sitting on the shelf waiting for completion will never get attention again.  Stoke the fire while it's still hot.  If you're not well on your way after 2 months, 75% complete after 6 months, or finished in 12 months...something is seriously wrong and you need to re-evaluate the acquisition project and get Executive sponsorship back in the game to prioritize and finish things up. 

If you're not fully integrated, your employees are spending valuable time and money working around operational inconsistencies when they could be focusing more on productive endeavors.  Get on your integration horse and ride hard.

Conclusion

This is by no means an all-encompassing look into how to be successful at a merger and acquisition, even just focusing on the technology.  However, these are all very important aspects that in many circumstances get overlooked, undervalued, or shrugged off.  Treat these items with the respect and attention they deserve and you'll at least be on your way to a successful M&A.

Image Credit:  business-sale.com

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CenterBeam Grows IT Services through Acquisition of Network Insight (Press Release)

by Al Bsharah | 10.28.2008 06:00 AM | Comments (0)

CenterBeam Grows IT Services through Acquisition of Network Insight
Market-Leader Gains Deeper Network Expertise and Offers Further Redundancy

San Jose, Calif—October 28, 2008—Today CenterBeam, Inc. announced it has acquired Network Insight, a premier network management and consulting services firm based out of San Diego, California.  The acquisition strengthens CenterBeam’s position as the leading managed services provider (MSP) to the mid-size market by bringing deeper network design, architecture and management expertise. Additionally, the location in San Diego provides CenterBeam with another network operations center (NOC) for further redundancy.

Network Insight focuses exclusively on IP network systems integration and managed services to organizations from several hundred users up to Tier I service providers. The acquisition significantly increases the number of network devices CenterBeam can manage and adds deep network assessment, architecture and design capabilities to its broad service portfolio that includes PC management, hosted Microsoft® Exchange email, helpdesk support, and network and server management. The new capabilities now make it possible for CenterBeam to provide its customers with comprehensive services no matter where they are in their IT lifecycle.
 
“CenterBeam sought this strategic alliance to meet our customers’ need for comprehensive and deep network management and design services. Network Insight brings the right blend of people, technology, services as well as a customer focus that complements our services and corporate culture,” said Dr. Kevin Francis LLD, CEO, CenterBeam. 

“We’re very excited about becoming part of CenterBeam. This provides a unique opportunity to further extend our offerings to the North American marketplace and to offer our customers a more comprehensive suite of services,” said Chris Pond, CEO, Network Insight.  Chris will join CenterBeam as senior vice president, business development and consulting.

Services are immediately available as part of CenterBeam’s turnkey managed IT service portfolio or individually as a way to extend in-house IT resources. Network Insight was designated as a Cisco® Silver Partner that has achieved Customer Satisfaction Excellence and is certified as a Juniper® Elite Partner. These certifications extend the partnerships CenterBeam has secured: Microsoft® Gold Certified Partner, Citrix® Certified Partner, VMware® Authorized Consultant (VAC), and VMware VIP Enterprise Partner.  For more information, visit www.centerbeam.com.

About Network Insight
Founded in 1998, San Diego-based Network Insight, LLC, is a leader in high-availability IP network infrastructure consulting, operations consulting and managed services for enterprise and service provider organizations. With a 10 year track record of successful IP networking projects, a 24/7/365 carrier-grade NOC and proprietary customer web portal for real-time status and reporting, its clients experience significant cost savings and increased revenue from streamlined designs and processes as well as new services for end users. For more information, please visit www.networkinsight.com.

About CenterBeam
CenterBeam is an award-winning managed IT services provider with a rich service portfolio including PC management, hosted Microsoft® Exchange email, helpdesk support, network and server management. Since CenterBeam’s inception, its focus has been providing mid-sized businesses with Fortune 500-class IT management and services for a fixed monthly fee. More than 140,000 daily services are delivered in an integrated software as a service (SaaS 3.0) architecture to clients with end users working in forty-five countries. CenterBeam offers predictable monthly pricing backed by a Total Satisfaction Guarantee. www.centerbeam.com.

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Network Insight Acquired...

by Al Bsharah | 10.14.2008 08:10 PM | Comments (0)

AcquisitionUPDATE 10.24.2008:  The acquisition is 100% official, so I'm updating this post to be a little less anonymous regarding the buyer.  I'll post the press release when it comes out.

So, the big news is that my company, Network Insight, was recently acquired by CenterBeamThe formal press release has been delayed (due out the week of 10/27/2008), so I won't announce the buyer just yet...although all of our clients and most of our colleagues are already fully aware of the details.

What does this mean for those of us at NI?  It means we're becoming a much larger organization, with much better funding, a much larger footprint, and are gaining a number of very (very) complementary offerings.  The Professional Services and Managed Services that Network Insight provides to it's customers is very similar to what our buyer CenterBeam does for theirs, but the overlap in services is incredibly minimal.  We'll finally be able to accomplish many of the things we've been hoping to over the past few years.  Additionally, it will allow the employees of NI to have a broader spectrum of peers surrounding them, and have more opportunities for career growth.

What does this mean for our acquirer CenterBeam?  Much of the same, ironically, despite our size being much smaller.  We will allow them to take on business they've had to turn away over the years, add to their experience, and help them spread their wings.  They will gain efficiencies, redundancies, and skillsets they do not have today.  I will say that everyone I've worked with over the past couple weeks has been incredible...this truly appears to be a great company that has "it" figured out, and I'm very much looking forward to seeing how things pan out.

Network Insight has always been a company that does very well during economic booms, and very well during economic busts...but just does average when things are in the middle.  Right now, we're in an economic bust and we've been doing quite well over the past months and years of the downturn.  The most recent accelerated downturns, and this acquisition, will bode quite well for both companies.  Singularly, we were each able to substantially reduce costs (both OpEx and CapEx) for our customers...together we'll take that benefit to new heights, which is exactly what CFO's have their eyes open for today...more than ever.

As for me, my life just got a whole lot busier!  I'm going to be responsible for much of the integration with respect to all of our (and their) technologies, and have started the process of researching and learning what each company has to offer so we can make educated decisions on our future product catalog...not to mention the systems used to service that catalog and our customers.  This will certainly be a daunting task, but believe it or not...I'm really looking forward to it!

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