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Q&A: McData CEO scopes out CNT acquisition, Fibre Channel market

By Deni Connor, NetworkWorld.com
August 09, 2005 03:13 PM ET
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Storage switch maker McData in January acquired CNT, a leader in WAN extension and long-distance data replication technology. Network World Senior Editor Deni Connor recently sat down with McData CEO, Chairman and President John Kelley to chat about the reasons why McData acquired CNT and the state of the Fibre Channel switch market.

Why did McData acquire CNT?

In our long-range strategic plan, we believe that the Fibre Channel connectivity management system business is really coming together. Almost anybody that talks with users will find that out. For us, we thought that this was a very proactive move to get a company that was doing many of the things I’ve just described and putting it together. We clearly hoped that one 1+1 was going to equal 3, 4 or 5 as it relates to being able to doing something that is to the customers benefit in terms of putting systems, distance capabilities, SAN/MAN [storage-area network/ metropolitan-area network] and having it be implemented on timely and effective basis.

How is the integration going?

That has been a really good story. These things are always from a CEO perspective, risky – about what do you do and how it is going. We’ve had a little bit of practice with SANavigator, Nishan and Sanera and what we’ve found is that we have two cultures that are very much alike. If you think about this for a second, McData has been around for 23 years, CNT for 21, and in many cases, there are folks whose only job has been with the company. You’ve found a lot of grey-hairs and a lot of people that have the same mindset. That has been a good match. While we are a Denver-based company, we have a lot of Midwestern-based values and ethics; certainly they do in Minneapolis, where CNT is based.

The plan we put forward to Wall Street has been executed on very well. There’s a bit of a sadness to it because it has caused the elimination of people’s jobs. If someone from Wall Street asked me ‘How’s it going?’ the elimination of jobs is a good thing. For the people that are being eliminated it’s not so hot.

Where do you see the Fibre Channel switching market going?

On LAN, MAN, SAN, WAN, I see a tremendous integration all those technologies. It is about the network and the applications. The network is there whether it is a tiered network, a grid network or an information lifecycle management concept – all of those are based on managing data freely and smoothly. In the last several years ever since [Sept. 11] it has been a revolutionary change. We couldn’t move data out of Manhattan 50 miles on SANs at that time. Now we are talking about moving it around the globe. We are talking about running it through IP networks securely.

Cisco in Fibre Channel switching has grown from a zero percent market share in 2003 to a nearly 30% market share in 2004. What are you going to do to counteract that?

Two things. If you look at it from an installed base, CNT and McData have a 60% to 80% share. This is an important concept because most of the installed base is upgradeable, meaning new business chassis’ are an important arena but also indication that you need to keep your technology rolling – 1Gig, 2Gig, 4Gig Fibre Channel, IP blades, how do you handle virtualization. So when you look at the business model, upgrading and maintaining your installed base is critical going forward. It’s almost like the razor blade business.

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