Showing posts with label Rick Nucci. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rick Nucci. Show all posts

The 451 Group's latest research on Dell Boomi



Tom Paine



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It is rather contradictory that although consensus is that Dell Boomi is a leader in PaaS integration services (see its positioning in the Gartner Magic Quadrant), a critical component of the explosive growth of SaaS and the Cloud, yet its still quite small.

One might expect Dell to be building a huge Boomi headquarters in the center of Berwyn, whereever one imagines that to be. But right now there are only a couple hundred people to put in it at most.

That's one piece of information derived from the 451 Group's latest research on Dell Boomi, put together by Carl F. Lehmann, entitled 'Dell Boomi continues to impress but lags in some key markets.' Carl was kind enough to share some of it and speak with me about it.







Some key takeaways from the 451 Group report:


  • Revenue growth (presumably for 2015): The Americas grew at 44%, EMEA posted a 108% growth rate and APJ grew at a 72% rate. Obviously global penetration is increasing.



  • Boomi reports that its AtomSphere iPaaS executes 2.8 billion integration processes per month, versus over the 30 million per month it reported as a key milestone just three years ago.



  • Boomi has been bolstering its AtomSphere iPaaS for scale via performance improvement.




  • Boomi has successfully developed its master data management (MDM) capabilities to a degree.



  • But it still lags behind other market leaders in the area of big data integration.




  • Boomi's API management capabilities were announced in March 2015, and they should become of increasing importance strategically.



  • Boomi's target market is users implementing hybrid on premise/private cloud/public cloud solutions.


One thing I didn't know was that EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) was Boomi's legacy business from its early days. In fact, its never really gone away, and Lehmann writes that "over time, Boomi believes, as do we, that the EDI market will become ripe for transformation to next-generation hybrid cloud integration architecture."


Lehmann emphasizes that Boomi's "integrated multipurpose platform" is probably its greatest strength, but that Boomi is not alone in having gone down that path.

A couple of other points of interest:

Boomi AtomSphere is a single-instance multi-tenant architecture that runs primarily on Rackspace.

SuccessFactors has been a major Boomi user, but SAP is trying to replacing it with its own SAP HANA Cloud integration (HCI) iPaaS. That offering has been improved, but Boomi is still likely the superior solution and will remain in the SuccessFactors toolbox for some time, the report says.


So the overall picture is that Dell Boomi is a vibrant, market leading business, and that PaaS integration is a critical utility for hybrid  deployments. It isn't alone, having numerous competitors including IBM (which acquired Cast Iron around the same time Dell acquired Boomi) and a still independent MuleSoft.

What's surprising is that the revenue figure I've heard for Boomi is still quite small. I wonder, perhaps, if there are some transfer pricing issues going on, or that headcount figure may not include other Dell people who spend considerable time on Boomi issues. Just guessing.

Lehman felt the biggest threat to Boomi was the uncertainty surrounding the completion of the Dell/EMC/VMware deal. Completing the deal has required considerable financial engineering, and its been a tight fit. But I think Boomi has always been one of Michael Dell's special interests, and as long as he's involved I think Booml's interests will be looked after.

As Fortune said of Michsel Dell one year ago: "He seemed particularly excited about Dell Boomi, which integrates software systems, helping companies win in what Dell calls “the API (Application Program Interface) economy.”



There seems to have been a smooth transition from the Nucci/Moul era to GM Chris McNabb and his team. And Dell Boomi just announced it was adding its first COO and CMO.

I've wondered whether Boomi would be better off in a company more focused on data tools, such as Informatica or TIBCO, but it also may be a better fit with some of the more cloud-oriented EMC properties.



The 451 Group gives us some info (& numbers) on Dell Boomi




Tom Paine



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We've heard a good deal about Dell Boomi's progress over the past few years, but not too much in terms of hard numbers, which were mostly buried in the results of Dell's overall
software group (when it was public). But a recent report by the respected 451 Group's Carl Lehman (pdf), reposted on Dell Boomi's website, provides some insights.

Its report, presumably based on information provided to it by Dell Boomi, says it currently has around 100 employees and plans to have about 150 on staff by year end. (Dell Boomi's LinkedIn page shows 67 employees, 31 in the Philly area.) Revenue distinct to Boomi was not reported, but the unit did say susbcription revenue grew at an average rate of 68% per quarter over the past 12 months (not sure if that's over prior year or over prior
quarter).

Dell Boomi also said the year over year platform usage grew by a factor of 13, from 35 million integration processes a month a year ago to 450 million now.


The 451 Group says Boomi's AtomSphere has become "an iPaaS reference architecture of sorts" that other vendors are trying to emulate, and that this along with growth in customers and usage positions AtomSphere as an iPaaS leader. While its MDM (Master Data
Managment) offering, which competes with market leader Informatica, is still maturing
and is mostly in trial right now, it has promise. Other new tools in its recent Spring
release include message queing. The 451 Group also expects API management to be another
important feature for Dell Boomi in the next few quarters.

Perhaps the top two competitors to AtomSphere are MuleSoft and Informatica Cloud, the 451 report says. There are others, including a Red Hat entrant and SnapLogic.

Dell Boomi today announced a new NetSuite OpenAir Connector, a tool that helps simplify integration processes with one of Dell Boomi's most important long-time partners.

Dell acquired Berwyn-based Boomi, co-founded by Rick Nucci with Bob Moul later joining then-CTO Nucci as GM, in 2010. Michael Dell, in his comments, has frequently touted Boomi as a key to Dell's software strategy. The sale price was never announced, though the most credible report I saw put it in the $60 million range.

Dell Boomi's current GM is Chris McNabb, who like Moul came from SunGard's Higher Ed business, now part of Ellucian.


Boomi co-founder Rick Nucci launching new venture, Guru



Tom Paine



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I first had a hint that Boomi co-founder and Philly Startup Leaders President Rick Nucci was preparing to launch a new startup when I saw this tweet by him a couple of weeks ago, communicating about his LaunchRock site, usually a sign that something is up:





Indeed he is, and Walnut Street Labs reports it is called Guru, has already been funded and has been hiring, and plans a formal product announcement on June 16. Not much information so far, except that "Guru lets you capture, verify, and share your facts and answers, right from the apps you use every day." You can see its LinkedIn site here.

Nucci will be at Walnut Street Labs in West Chester on Tuesday (May 6) from 9 to 10am. His topic will be "My Ten Favorite Startup Mistakes."


Links 9/26/2013: Nucci to succeed Moul as PSL head; Air Products looks for new CEO



Ackman strikes again? Air Products looks for new CEO (CNBC)

Exclusive: SunGard in talks to sell data unit to Apax - sources
(Reuters)

Rick Nucci Selected as Next President of Philly Startup Leaders (Philly Startup Leaders)

Corbett launches fund for high-tech startups (Pittsburgh Business Times)

Will Verizon Go Wireless-Only And Spinoff FiOS? (Investor's Business Daily)



U.S. cable company turns to a three-year-old startup to solve its Netflix problems (Gigaom)

FCC Votes Comcast/Bloomberg Complaint Appeal
Decision in Restricted Proceeding Won't Become Public Until Order is Released
(Multichannel News)

FCC Orders Comcast to Place Bloomberg Channel in News ‘Neighborhood’ (Variety)



Cable-TV Bundles Work Great, Say Bundlers of Cable TV (Business Week)

Comcast pulls plug on MyTV Choice offer for new subscribers
(FierceCable)



Igniting a new network: Meet our Tech Hub partners (Google Official Blog)
Why not in Philly?

LevelUp reports raising $7.5M (Boston Business Journal)
Some concerns about early DreamIt Ventures alum; relationship with Princeton-based Heartland Payments Systems one area of emphasis.

hybris Tapped by Airgas to Drive its Expanding B2B Commerce Channel (Globe Newswire)
Airgas, based in Radnor, is already an SAP Businsss Suite customer.







Rick Nucci's new gig: Venture partner at FirstMark Capital





Tom Paine



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Rick Nucci


Rick Nucci has joined New York-based FirstMark Capital as a venture partner, the firm announced on its blog today.

Nucci was the co-founder and CTO of Berwyn-based Boomi, and became GM after Boomi was acquired by Dell and Bob Moul departed. Nucci left Dell Boomi in May. FirstMark was the key investor in Boomi.

FirstMark later invested in Moul's latest startup, Philadelphia-based Artisan Mobile. It is also an investor in King of Pussia-based clinical trial payment startup Greenphire.

FirstMark managing director Amish Jani, speaking to TechCrunch, described Nucci as "a cloud product and technology visionary. He’ll be spending a lot of time thinking about new opportunities, and in the meanwhile, he’s a fantastic resource for our SaaS companies to tap into."



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Daily Links 7/30/2013: CBS, TWC halt brief blackout; Dell CIO questions HANA scalabilty








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CBS, TWC Halt Programming Blackout(Broadcasting & Cable)

Comcast: Belle of the Media Ball? (Bloomberg TV)


Fab Lays Off More Than 100 Employees in Europe, as It Continues Retreat From Flash Sales (All Things D)

Boomi co-founder looking to start new firm in same space (Philadelphia Business Journal)


Student ventures FTW: Dorm Room Fund-backed Firefly announces Olark patnership

(PandoDaily)

OLED: OpCo, Wedbush Dismiss Fears of Samsung Novaled Buy (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)
Universal Display (OLED) is based in Ewing, NJ. Samsung is reported to be close to buying
Novaled, another OLED tech firm, but analyst says Novaled complements, not competes with,
Universal Display.

SAP platform head: We’re not interested in buying ‘overvalued’ Tableau (VentureBeat)

Dell Says SAP’s HANA Has ‘Scalability Issues (Wall Street Journal: CIO Journal)



SAP Channel Chief Kevin Gilroy: Partners Reaching Revenue Faster (The VAR Guy)

Prepare now for a 7-year famine in IT services (Diginomica)


Publicis Omnicom merger puts healthcare clients under one roof
(Medical Marketing & Media)

RES Software Rounds out First Half of 2013 with a Resounding Performance
Says its planning move to larger Philadelphia area headquarters later this year.


Nucci departs Dell Boomi; Chris McNabb new GM







Tom Paine



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I just came across something that may not be news to many in the Philly Tech community, but on which I haven't seen any reporting or an announcement (and nobody sent me the memo).

Rick Nucci has left Dell Boomi as of May, where he was GM. Rick was co-founder of Boomi in 2000 and served as CTO up until then-GM Bob Moul's departure at the end of 2011 (Moul is now CEO of Artisan Mobile). He then became GM of Dell Boomi. He was the architect of Boomi's cloud app integration offering, the foundation of Boomi's success.

The new GM of Dell Boomi is Chris McNabb, who joined Dell Boomi as Director, Product Management in June 2011. Prior to that he was Senior VP of Software Engineering at SunGard Higher Education (now part of Ellucian), where Moul had previously been a top executive.

Dell announced it was acquiring Berwyn-based Boomi in November, 2010.

It will be interesting to see what's up next for Nucci.


451 Group research note on Dell Boomi has some interesting info

Tom Paine



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The 451 Group, a software industry research group, has published a research note on Berwyn-based Dell Boomi (pdf) republished with permission on Boomi's website.

The report describes Dell Boomi as "a strong thought leader in the hybrid cloud-integration market. Its AtomSphere platform, Atom integration componentry and design capabilities such as its Suggest feature make it a desirable tool for integration designers and administrators alike." It cites Boomi's recently announced one million cloud-managed integration processes per day milestone "as a wakeup call for systems integrators, cloud hosts and all manner of integration technology and services
rivals to step up their efforts to enhance hybrid integration architecture as part of datacenter and cloud operating environments." The 451 Group also mentions Dell Boomi's recently announced partnership with Wipro, in addition to a similar partnership announced last year with Infosys, as being important steps forward with the systems integrator community.

I knew Boomi was still rather small when it was acquired by Dell in 2010, but The 451 Group's estimate of $5 million in revenue at that time (if accurate) suggests it was even smaller than I thought. It estimates the acquisition price (never disclosed by Dell publicly) at about $60 million and projects that Boomi will contribute $20 to $25 million in revenue to Dell in 2013.

The 451 Group sees Informatica, closely followed by MuleSoft, Jitterbit and IBM Cast Iron, and on occasion, SnapLogic, as its closest competitors, while middleware offerings from Tibco, Pervasive, IBM (WebSphere), Oracle (Fusion) and SAP (NetWeaver) remain factors. The report concludes that perhaps the greatest competitive threat to Dell Boomi comes from the open source community.

An anticipated upcoming product from Boomi will be the formal unveiling of its cloud-based MDM (Master Data Management) suite offering enhanced tools for modeling, storing, synchronizing, validating and cleansing master data, The 451 Group says.

Dell Boomi was cofounded by its current GM, Rick Nucci. Former CEO Bob Moul left a year after the acquisition and now is CEO of Philly mobile platform startup Artisan, as well as President of Philly Startup Leaders.



Daily Links 8/31/2011: Justice Department moves to block AT&T/T-Mobile deal

U.S. Files Antitrust Complaint to Block AT&T, T-Mobile Merger (Bloomberg)

Justice Dept. to block AT&T's T-Mobile deal (CNET News)

AT&T: Deal’s Dead, Says Bernstein; It Ain’t Over, Says Wells (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Perzel: 'I'm sorry that I let you down.' (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
Charges centered on use of State funds for software that aided GOP campaigns.

Scott Maxwell: What Prick Will Pop the Bubble? (PE Hub)
Scott Maxwell founded Boston-based OpenView Venture Partners, which this month has announced major investments in two Philly-area ventures: Monetate and NextDocs.


The Bidding War Over Hulu Erupts – Find Out Who's In And Who's Out Here (Silicon Alley Insider)


Comcast to introduce low-cost Internet service for low-income families (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Versus to Launch ‘NBC SportsTalk’ Live Studio Show at 6pm on Sept. 8 (Hollywood Reporter)

Bloomberg TV Takes New Shot At Comcast Over Channel Placement (paidContent)

Dell Cloud Business Applications video feaures Boomi and its CTO Rick Nucci (Dell via YouTube)

Salesforce.com Revs up Mobile Strategy With HTML5 (PC World)

Salesforce.com's Benioff inspired by Arab Spring (Reuters)

Salesforce.com, Dun & Bradstreet Launch Data.com (PC World)

QlikTech Announces New Salesforce Chatter Integration for the QlikView Business Discovery Platform; Enables Collaborative Decision Making by Leveraging Chatter Connect to Deliver Social Conversations to QlikView Business Discovery Apps (Business Wire)


CardioNet shares sink to life-low on DoJ probe (Reuters)



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