Oracle and Sun – An Acquisition Review
Today’s news is not exactly a shocker, especially after Oracle was in the rumor mill for Sun as the deal with IBM started to fade last week. And since this blog is focused on marketing and sales in technology, what better time to comment on two of the all time best in the industry.
To start this out (and to be totally above board), I’ve had the opportunity to work for Sun from 1995 – 1999 in New York City. And until very recently owned shares in the company. I still own shares of Oracle and my advisor just suggested I purchase some more a couple of weeks ago. So I hope this bodes well for both companies, their employees and customers. Here’s my analysis:
Culture: this should be one of the great cultural fits. Oracle and Sun were always linked tightly together and the employees were always encouraged to work closely together. Sun’s and Oracle’s sales forces both took the gun slinger approach, and their R&D plant was based on UNIX/Solaris, C/C++ and Java, not (dot)Net for instance. Both tended to be thin on marketing (perhaps not so much for Oracle – but similar). I think the entire marketing plan for Sun when I was first there was about 5 pages. So they tend to be less bureaucratic – although that has changed over the years. All in all looks like a natural marriage.
Products: for the most part their product suites are highly complimentary, except for Sun’s acquisition of MySQL, an open source database software, which put Larry Ellison slightly on edge. However, that hiccup should be so minor that it isn’t worth talking about. Oracle uses Java oriented software and Oracle has no hardware company, so Sun can continue to sell its wares. Oracle’s high end database software needs the compute cycles that a Sun server delivers. Again potentially all good stuff.
Leadership: Larry and Scott McNealy have typically been on the same side and are neighbors in Silcon Valley so to speak, but the top leadership will rest in Larry’s hands ( I would assume). Since the product sets are complimentary, most of the mid-senior level managers may have already been purged by Sun in their recent round of layoffs. As a result, it appears that a lot of the downsizing has already been captured pre-deal, although it’s likely that some expensive and redundant mid-layers may be further shedded.
Market: while it’s a tough market, Oracle got Sun for a decent price. It’s doing $10+B in business and with the recent cuts it could be a win-win for the customer long term. More stability for the customer, better integrated product sets and a re-focus on innovation and R&D could be forthcoming.
Cons: it doesn’t address the soft side of the business for Oracle (professional services) which is the big cash generator in today’s IT market. The EDS acquisition by HP for example. The acquisition also throws a wrench into the recently extolled relationship with HP that Oracle has been talking about (as a result of Sun’s MySQL foray mostly). But nevertheless both HP and IBM compete head to head against Sun on the hardware side, so this will not make either ecstatic. Ditto EMC, who has been an arch enemy of Sun for years. So let’s hope Oracle, while buying a great company, didn’t paint itself into a corner with its other alliance partners.
Personally, I feel that the IBM acquisition would have benefitted both companies more, vis-a-vis the entire market landscape in general, especially as IBM could have reaped some economies of scale from its own server sales units as well as having a full armament of professional services to back it up (Oracle doesn’t). This is beginning to sound like I’m about to short Oracle, but Larry’s a tough and savvy guy. I think I’ll sit tight – maybe he has another move up his sleeve to buy a services firm.



The services business will be huge. Oracle has $4.5 bn a year in services.
And Sun has about $5bn a year in services
they together will be a $10bn in services company with huge footprint of Channel /Var that is huge in the mid to large enterprises.
The hardware is a big market also for them as Sun enterprise class servers can be optimized for Oracle products to run 10-200% faster, solid state apps etc.. tuning the technology to Solaris. It will give Solaris a huge boost when you look at the Software stack that will be first built on it release to release over the next 3 years.
The HP Oracle deal is not a big deal its in the long line of Hardware deals Oracle has done over the last 10 years (IBM, DELL, HP, SUN) etc..
Oracle /Sun in the next 3-5 years could increase hardware sales by $5Bn a year to $10bn a yr. This could put huge pressure on Dell and focus 25% of Oracle’s customers on Sun servers.
The big gain is Oracle tech servers are in 150k organizations of which Sun has about 10% of those if Oracle can increase that to 15-20% that would be an increase of 25k+ servers
Oracle apps ERP & edge are in 50k organizations. Sun is about 15% of those servers. If they increase that to 25+%
You have some notable facts and figures – thanks Aaron
I don’t see this putting as much pressure on Dell as on HP and IBM, as they directly
compete in the mid to hi-end server space. But it wouldn’t surprise me either as Dell is
trying to move up further into the server markets.
Most of all I think this is much better culturally for the Sun employees and I hope that
goes a long way to making to this work for everyone concerned. Sun has (and has had) some great talent and let’s hope Oracle keeps as much as possible.
I agree, I still think the super deal out there is Oracle buying Adobe!
That would give them a super set of web 2.0 tools & servers for their middleware & apps
They should buy Tibco & Informatica to finish their core middleware stack.