The bMighty Blog -- Storage

Whither Iomega?

Posted by Paul Korzeniowski Thursday, Mar 13, 2008, 07:36 AM ET

One problem with carving out a successful market niche is that sometimes you attract unwanted suitors. Iomega, which manufactures portable data storage solutions, now finds itself in such a position, so its future is unclear.

Iomega produces an assortment of removable data storage devices, network attached storage, data recovery products, and managed security services for small and midsize businesses as well as consumers. With computers becoming more powerful, the number of federal regulations increasing, and the amount of network bandwidth growing, small and medium enterprises find themselves in need of more storage solutions. Like other companies in this space, Iomega has been seeing an increased need for its products. In February, the company reported net revenue of $336.6 million and net income of $10.1 million for 2007, compared to $229.5 million with a net loss of $8.8 million in 2006.

The sterling numbers underscore a dramatic turnaround by the company, which has experienced many ups and downs in its 28 year history. At the turn of the millennium, the storage supplier was riding high as one of the pioneers of popular zip drives. But the company made bad business decisions, betting its future on proprietary rather than open products, and zip drives lost their luster as smaller, simpler, less expensive storage solutions emerged. Iomega retooled its line with network storage systems for small and medium enterprises, whose revenue increased 76% in 2007, and new consumer storage solutions, which generated an 86% rise in the same time.

As the new products took root, the vendor decided to acquire ExcelStor, which designs and manufactures hard disk drives, security storage and external storage. The company generated $371 million in 2007, and Iomega’s plan was to transform itself into a $1 billion business. But its recent success caught the attention of EMC, which has been aggressively gobbling up storage suppliers during the past few years, and offered to purchase Iomega at a price that was 22% higher than its current trading value. EMC was probably attracted in part by Iomega’s stock price, which at about 16 times expected earnings per share was lagging in the Computer Storage & Peripherals sector, where most companies are valued at multiple of about 24 times their earnings per share. Iomega’s board of directors rejected the offer this week, but EMC could come back with another one.

Regardless of how its future unfolds, Iomega’s next decision represents good news and bad news for small and medium businesses. The good news is the company should gain business depth and muscle once the transaction is completed. The bad news is there will be period of management turmoil as the new entity takes shape, and that often leads to less attention to customers in the short term.

Do you use Iomega products? What has been your experience with the company? What has been your experience with vendors that have gone through a merger or acquisition?


Company Size: 1,100-1,500 | Company Size: 1-49 | Company Size: 250-999 | Company Size: 50-249 | Storage




This is a public forum. CMP Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. CMP Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of CMP Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in CMP Media's Terms of Service.

Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.


Spotlight on Solutions
(Sponsored By Cisco)


Explore the bMighty Blog
Most Recent Posts
bMighty Blog Topics
     
bMighty Bloggers
bMighty Blog Roll



Browse by Category
Imaging How-To Center

Document imaging basics, plus how to select a solution

go

FREE Technology Services Locator!

Search our database of 200,000 solution- provider locations by business activity, technology, vertical market, and customer size. Find a technology partner NOW.

go

Tech Term of the Day: FMD ROM

TechEncyclopedia gives you the meaning of today's word, plus more than 20,000 additional IT terms and definitions.


techweb
Online Communities TechWebInformationWeekLight ReadingIntelligent EnterprisebMightyNetwork ComputingDark ReadingDigital LibraryWall Street & Technology
Byte & SwitchNo JitterInternet EvolutionLight Reading's Cable Digital NewsContentinopleUnStrungBank Systems & TechnologyAdvanced TradingInsurance & Technology
Face-to-Face Events
InteropWeb 2.0 ExpoWeb 2.0 SummitVoiceConBlack HatCSISoftwareEntrprise 2.0 ConferenceGTEC
Mobile Business Expo
InformationWeek 500 ConferenceBuy Side Trading XchangeBuy Side Trading SummitBank Executive SummitInsurance Executive SummitTelcoTVEthernet ExpoOptical Expo
Magazines  
InformationWeekWall Street & TechnologyInsurance & TechnologyBank Systems & TechnologyAdvanced TradingMSDNTechNetSmart EnterpriseThe Architecture JournalDatabase Magazine
 
Research & Analyst Services  
Heavy ReadingInformationWeek ReportsInformationWeek Analytics