Cisco Completes Tandberg Purchase

Video conferencing and networking giant Cisco Systems has completed its acquisition of Tandberg

Cisco Systems has completed its acquisition of Tandberg, a fellow leader in video communications.
 
With the close of the transaction on 18 April, the full line of Tandberg products has become part of Cisco’s TelePresence portfolio.

The technology, which involves using large screens to make users feel like they’re in a face-to-face meeting, has been deployed by major enterprises such as PepsiCo and Bank of America to help reduce travel expenses and improve collaboration within and between companies. 
 
Under the terms of the offer, Cisco will have purchased all outstanding shares of Tandberg for 170 Norwegian kroner per share, for a total purchase price of 19 billion kroner, or $3.3 billion (£2.2bn).

“Today we are celebrating a very important step for our customers in the journeys to put people at the centre of collaboration and change the way we work,” Marthin De Beer, a Cisco senior vice president, said in a statement. 

”We strongly believe that telepresence—the next generation of video conferencing—along with Cisco’s entire rich collaboration portfolio powers this new way of working where everyone, everywhere, can be more productive through the pervasive use of video and face-to-face collaboration,” De Beer continued.

Tandberg Purchased For £2.2bn

With the transition, former Tandberg CEO Fredrik Halvorsen will become the senior vice president and leader of the new TelePresence Technology Group within De Beer’s organisation.

On 29 March, Cisco and Tandberg were given approval to proceed with the deal by regulators in the United States and Europe. Tandberg has headquarters in both the United States and Norway.

The U.S. Department of Justice and the European Commission each had concerns about how the deal would affect competition within the market. Ultimately, Cisco promised European regulators that it would divest itself of the TIP (TelePresence Interoperability Protocol) standard, which EC Vice President for Competition Joaquín Almunia found “suitable to safeguard competition in the market for video communications where the merged entity will have a strong presence.”
 
Previous to the acquisition, Cisco had approximately 600 global customers.

With the acquisition of Tandberg, it hopes to extend its presence to new markets, including small and midsized businesses, and to better compete against competitors such as Hewlett-Packard—which on 19 April announced its plan to acquire 3Com—and Logitech.
 
With Tandberg in the mix, Cisco executives have estimated that company revenue could reach $1 billion dollars, in a worldwide market set to increase from $3 billion to $10 billion in five to seven years.