Links 8/7/2014: More on Cerner's plans for Siemen's health IT unit; John Glaser's view



SAP’s ‘More Like Google’ Campaign Leads to Millennials, Startups
(Wall Street Journal: CIO Journal)

Some SAP customers scratching their heads over how to use Hana, survey finds (PC World)


Cerner: Millennium Remains the Core Product Line
(Health Data Management)

John Glaser, Ph.D., Siemens Healthcare CEO, Reviews the Logic of the Cerner-Siemens Deal
(Healthcare Informatics)

InterDigital Announces Second Quarter 2014 Financial Results
(Globe Newswire)
Revenue almost triples year over year.

Ben Franklin Approves $1.9M for Eleven Early-Stage Companies (Ben Franklin Technology Partners SEP)


UPDATED: Bankruptcy court plan calls for AT&T, DirecTV to take over Comcast SportsNet Houston (Houston Chronicle)




Sprint Appoints New CEO And Drops Bid to Buy T-Mobile (Wired)

TIBCO on the block? (Diginomica)
I'll pass on the SAP/TIBCO rumors since its only the 100th time I've heard them, although
Spotfire would be an interesting addition.



Sage Cloud forms over US (Business-Cloud.com)

.Doctor On Demand Raises $21M Series A And Adds Comcast As A Customer (TechCrunch)

AT&T Said to Weigh Buying Comcast’s Houston Sports Network
(Bloomberg)

CenturyLink brings gigabit broadband to 16 cities: Seattle, Denver, and more (PC World)




Cerner acquires Malvern-based Siemens Health Services for $1.3 billion






Tom Paine



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Cerner has agreed to acquire Malvern-based Siemens Health Services, one of the major purveyors of hospital administrative systems and EHRs, for $1.3 billion. Siemens Health Services grew out of the 2001 acquisition of Shared Medical Systems, but its growth had stalled in recent years as other vendors (particularly Epic) had gained prominence.

Shared Medical was founded in 1969. Siemens acquired it for $2.1 billion.

The health IT business is only one part of a much larger Siemens Healthcare segment. Siemens had decided to exit the business so finding a buyer who would be a good custodian for it became a top priority, Siemens said. Siemens Health Services estimates its 2014 revenue at $1.2 billion. Cerner, which is based in Kansas City, expects combined 2014 revenue of $4.5 billion.

Although Siemens apparently will dispose of some other pieces of its Healthcare unit as a result of a corporate strategic review, it plans an ongoing joint venture with Cerner that will combine capabilities of Cerner's IT business with Siemen's diagnostic businesses.

Cerner indicated that in the short term it expected to operate the two businesses on a stand-alone basis and no major personnel changes are imminent. The combined company will have 20,000 employees, of whom about 5,000 appear to be coming over from Siemens.
The trade source HIStalk provides excellent coverage.


Liberty Interactive reaffims intent to create QVC tracking stock, but doesn't say when





Tom Paine



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Liberty Interactive had announced late last year (I believe) its intent to create one of its separate tracking stocks for its West Chester-based QVC business named the QVC Group. Tracking stocks, which Liberty Interactive's John Malone employs frequently, do not carry ownership of a company's assets but are intended to reflect the underlying value of the asset.

Little more had been said and no action had been taken since then. But today Liberty Interactive said it still planned on creating the QVC Group tracking stock, consisting of its interests in QVC and HSN (38%). However, Liberty said it has delayed the move "in light of the pending Provide Commerce transaction (agreed to be acquired by FTD), and other factors. As a result, "Liberty is reevaluating the optimal structure and best alignment of the Liberty Digital Commerce Group assets," and "the timing of the transition to the QVC Group has been delayed".

No word on when it will happen, but when it does the QVC entity will trade separately on the market with a value likely in excess of $10 billion. It may also facilitate the oft-discussed merger of QVC and HSN.


Philly Tech People News 8/3/2014









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SAP to focus on small businesses with launch of SMB Solutions Group
(ZDNet)


Prime Image Positions for Growth With New Leadership Appointments (Business Wire)

Unirisx Further Expands Sales Presence in EMEA (Marketwire)

NJIT Taps Tomas Gregorio, Pioneering Healthcare IT Executive, to Head Healthcare Systems Innovation at the New Jersey Innovation Institute (PR Web)





Cloud Revenue Jumps, Led by Microsoft and IBM (New
York Times: Bits)

New Philadelphia GameStop Policy Requires Customer Fingerprints When Trading In Games (CBS Philadelphia)


Comcast doubles broadband speeds in California, Midwest
(PC World)



Hamilton-based Sparta Systems Acquired by Thoma Bravo, Staying in NJ

Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com

On July 7, 2014, private equity firm Thoma Bravo (Chicago) announced it would be acquiring Hamilton-based Sparta Systems. The terms of the deal, which is expected to close in September, were not announced.


  
                           Eileen Martinson spoke to the NJTC last year. | Courtesy NJTC

An article in Law 360 noted that Thoma Bravo “typically invests $50 million to $300 million in companies with at least $20 million in annual earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.” Sparta Systems employs 160 people (about 250 globally) and will definitely stay in New Jersey. In fact, the company has plans to expand in Hamilton.

"We are fully committed to remaining in New Jersey and have in fact begun the process to expand our current facility." Steven Ford, Chief Financial Officer of Sparta Systems told NJTechWeekly.com.  This expansion is expected to be completed by early fall, 2014, and will increase our state of the art Hamilton headquarters by 25% to almost 40,000 square feet.  The increased space will help us to continue attracting and accommodating top notch employees. 

"The investment from Thoma Bravo, a pre-eminent private equity firm, will also fuel our accelerated growth plans organically by providing the resources need to target new industries, as well as inorganically through potential acquisitions to add to our product portfolio,” he added.

The company is a New Jersey Economic Development Authority (EDA) success story. In 2012 the EDA supported Sparta Systems with a Business Employment Incentive Program grant for just over $2.1 million and a Business Retention and Relocation Assistance grant for $184,500. The grants supported the company’s expansion in Hamilton, resulting at the time in the creation of an estimated 60 jobs and the retention of 82 existing jobs.

Already a private equity-owned company, Sparta Systems is being sold by private equity firms Summit Partners (Boston) and Altaris Capital Partners (New York), which invested in the company in 2006, according to an article on the website The Middle Market.

NJTechWeekly.com wrote about Sparta Systems when CEO Eileen Martinson spoke to the New Jersey Technology Council (NJTC) about how to turn around a stagnant company. Apparently her efforts have worked.

Martinson told the NJTC that middle-market companies — those valued at between $25 million and $1 billion — fuel much of the economic growth in the country. At that time she said when she had arrived at Sparta Systems, the company was “a little sleepy,” and she had thought she could do great things with it. “I started out at 8:30 a.m. [on] day one in a webcast to everyone, saying, ‘We are going to double in size during the next couple of years.’

“You have to go out there and set the bar high,” she noted, because if you set the bar at 10 percent growth, you’ll probably struggle to achieve 7 percent.

The press release announcing the acquisition says Sparta Systems now has more than 650,000 users in more than 30 countries. The company maintains an extensive customer base in many highly regulated industries, which includes the top 30 pharmaceutical firms and 12 of the top 15 medical-device and leading consumer-product and discrete manufacturing companies.

Regarding the acquisition, Martinson said, “Thoma Bravo’s investment allows us to continue our superior growth trajectory by strengthening our ability to deliver innovative solutions to customers faster as well as accelerate our vertical market growth.“I’m confident that this will enable us to not only enhance our current customer offerings but to be opportunistic about acquisitions that will add to our product portfolio,” concluded Martinson.

Ed. note: The deal closed before the end of July.


Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of NJTechWeekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in NJTechWeekly, and is republished here with her permission.



Links 8/1/2014: Tableau continues to rocket forward; Oracle enters cloud service management biz through TOA Technologies deal



First shot fired by Oracle in cloud field service management bidding war? (Diginomica)

SunGard Announces Second Quarter 2014 Results (Business Wire)
Now consists primarily of SunGard Financial Systems.

Arris Braces For Customer Consolidation (Multichannel News)

FCC asked six more ISPs, content providers to reveal paid peering deals (Ars Technica)

Tableau revenue up 82 percent in Q2, ups 2014 guidance (Diginomica)


Tableau Software continues to grow, tops 1,500 employees (GeekWire)