From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
BMC Software, Inc. (NASDAQ: BMC) is a multinational corporation
specializing in Business
Service Management (BSM) software, with record annual revenue
in fiscal 2009 of $1.87 billion. BMC is one of the largest software
companies in the world[2]
and has grown total revenue each fiscal year since 2002.
Headquartered in Houston,
Texas, BMC develops, markets and
sells software used for multiple functions, including IT service
management, data center automation, performance management, virtualization
lifecycle management and cloud computing management. The name
"BMC" is taken from the surname of its three founders—Scott
Boulett, John Moores, and Dan Cloer.
Employing nearly 6,000, BMC is often credited with pioneering
the BSM concept as a way to help better align IT operations with
business needs.[3] [4]
Location
"Building Four" on the Houston campus
BMC is a multinational firm operating in North America,
Australia, Europe, and Asia and has multiple offices located around
the world. [5]
The company's international headquarters is located at 2101
CityWest Boulevard, Houston,
Texas, United States [6].
In June 2006, Thomas Properties Group Inc., through its joint
venture with the California State Teachers' Retirement System,
agreed to buy BMC Software Inc.'s Houston campus for $295 million
[7]
Products
and Services
Screenshot of BMC Configuration Discovery's ability to detect bad
batteries in computers
BMC Software began as a mainframe software vendor, but since the
middle 1990s has been developing software to monitor, manage and
automate distributed and mainframe systems. BMC is divided into two
main business units: [8]
- A Mainframe Management segment
[6][9]
focusing on reliability of "business critical data" and includes
the BSM subgroup, “Service Optimization.” [9]
- An Enterprise Service Management segment [6]
which focuses on servers and networks, and includes the BSM
subgroups, "Service Support," "Service Automation," and "Service
Resource Planning.” [9][10]
In August 2009, BMC had over 450 software applications to
primarily manage mainframes and distributed systems, as well as
virtual and cloud computing IT environments.[5]
Generally, the software is used to help information technology
managers, typically in large enterprises or agencies, manage
operations, make IT more efficient, remediate issues, increase
compliance and lower IT costs.
For example, BMC’s BSM platform improves efficiency for
government agencies such as New York City's Department of
Information Technology and Telecommunications. A June 2009 press
release issued by the City of New York[11]
credits the implementation of BMC’s IT Service Management (ITSM)
software and integration of automated monitoring tools “has
produced dramatic improvements in interagency communication and
streamlined City services with considerable cost avoidance.”
In October 2009, BMC announced an initiative called Dynamic
Business Service Management[12] to
improve IT’s proactive approach to data center management. All
major product offerings, BMC BladeLogic Server Automation, BMC
ProactiveNet Performance Management, BMC Atrium CMDB and BMC IT Service
Management were updated as part of this initiative.[13]
BMC uses its own software in a private cloud computing
environment for developing applications. [14]
BMC also offers consulting, implementation, integration, and
educational services related to its software products and sells
directly through a sales force and indirectly through channel
partners which include "resellers, distributors, and systems
integrators." [9]
Partial List of Software Products
- BMC Analytics for BSM
- BMC AppSight
- BMC Atrium CMDB
- BMC Atrium Discovery and Dependency Mapping
- BMC Atrium Orchestrator
- BMC Batch Discovery
- BMC Batch Impact Manager
- BMC BladeLogic Client Automation
- BMC BladeLogic Network Automation
- BMC BladeLogic Server Automation Suite
- BMC Capacity Management
- BMC Change Manager
- BMC
Control-M
- BMC Database Management for DB2 for zOS
- BMC Database Management for IMS
- BMC Recovery Management for VSAM
- BMC Database Administration for DB2
- BMC Event and Impact Manager
- BMC Human Capital Management
- BMC IT Business Management Suite
- BMC Mainview AutoOperator for zOS
- BMC Mainview Transaction Analyzer
- BMC Mainview for Websphere MQ
- BMC Middleware Management - Performance and Availability
- BMC Middleware Management - Transaction Monitoring
- BMC Performance Assurance for Mainframe
- BMC ProactiveNet Analytics
- BMC ProactiveNet Performance Management
- BMC Remedy Change Management
- BMC Remedy IT Service Management
- BMC Remedy Service Desk
- BMC Service Desk Express Suite
- BMC Service Desk Express on Force.com
- BMC Service Impact Manager
- BMC Service Request Management
- BMC Vendor Relationship Management
Directors
and staff
The company was founded by John Jay Moores in
1980; Moores was a "former Shell Oil computer specialist ... whose
software made Shell's computers more efficient." [15]
Max Watson Jr. was chairman and chief executive officer of BMC
Software from April 1990 to January 2001. [16] At
one point, he was listed as one of Houston's highest paid
executives; in 2000, his salary and bonus was $1.2 million. [17]
In 2001, BMC had a policy of only awarding stock options once every
three years. [17]
But one report described Watson as earning nearly "$37 million for
running the Houston company during its period of turmoil." [18] In
2001, BMC appointed the company director, Garland Cupp, to the post
of chairman, succeeding Max Watson, who quit the post in January
2001. [19]
"Mr. Cupp has been a director since 1989 and was chief information
officer at American Express Co.'s travel-related services unit."
according to BMC. [19]
Watson was succeeded by BMC's former senior vice president of
product management and development, Robert Beauchamp (pron.
"Bee-chum"). During his tenure as BMC's president and CEO,
Beauchamp oversaw business changes including the move of BMC's
stock to the New York Stock Exchange, the
reorganization of BMC into two primary business units, and the
introduction of Business
Service Management.[20] In
October 2009, BMC returned to NASDAQ‘s electronic trading platform,
remaining under the ticker symbol, BMC.
Beauchamp continues to be CEO and president in 2009.[21] His
total compensation for 2009 is $10,902,868. [22]
Beauchamp has been at BMC since 1988; in August 2009, he was 49
years old. [22]
In 2009, other executives include the president of the
Enterprise Service Management unit—Dev Ittycheria; the president of
the Mainframe Service Management unit—Bill Miller; and the chief
financial officer—Stephen Solcher.[23][24]
BMC had 5,900 employees in December 2008, including 1,100 in
Houston. [1]
BMC is a member of the S&P 500[25] and
was listed as being a member of Fortune's "400 Best Big Companies"
in 2009. [26]
History
1980s
During the late 1970s, BMC Software founders Scott Boulett, John
Moores, and Dan Cloer began a contract programming partnership.
All three had worked at Shell Oil doing computer programming.
By 1980, the company was incorporated in the state of Texas and
officially became BMC Software.[27]
Moores was the company's first CEO. The firm primarily wrote
software for IBM mainframe computers, the industry standard at the
time. Sometimes BMC wrangled with IBM about issues such as
"software tie-in claims." [28]
In 1987, Moores was succeeded by Max Watson as CEO and
president. In July 1988, BMC was re-incorporated in Delaware and
went public with an initial public offering for BMC stock. [29][30] The
first day of trading on the New York Stock Exchange with its symbol
BMC was August 12, 1988.[31][32] Since
then, the firm has filed quarterly and annual statements with the
SEC. [29]
Annual stockholder meetings are typically held in Houston during
July or August.
BMC programmers received commissions for their designs since the
beginning of the firm. As a cost saving measure from the early days
of the company sales were handled via direct mail and
telemarketing. In 1991 BMC placed one quarter of pretax revenues
into the budget for research and development. The employees at the
headquarters in Sugar Land often wore Hawaiian shirts rather than
business suits. [33]
1990s
The growing firm needed more space. In 1989 BMC leased property
in Sugar Land, Texas. [34] In
1991 BMC had 640 employees with $139 million in revenues. Revenues,
net earnings, and earnings per share increased approximately 50%
over 1990.[33]
By 1991 it had offices in several complexes in the Houston area
including Stafford and Sugar Land. [35]
Later in 1991 BMC announced it was building a new headquarters
complex for $65 million.[36]
The 20 story tower (120,000 square feet) opened in late 1993. [15][35][36][37]
Incidentally, in 1991, John Moores and his wife gave $51.4 million
to their alma mater, the University of Houston. [38] Greg
Hassell of the Houston Chronicle stated in a 1991 article
that after 11 years of growth in the company, BMC "has the soul of
the little guy" and "still run like a start-up company" since it
still used tactics used by smaller firms to expand. [33]
Beginning about 1994, BMC began a pattern of consistently buying
both small and large software firms. From 1994 to 2009, BMC has
bought approximately 32 firms. While many were acquisitions of
small privately held firms with undisclosed terms of sale, there
were sizeable purchases too. Most firms are American, although
there have been firms from Belgium and two from Israel. BMC was
able to expand software product offerings, extend new capabilities,
bring new talent into the firm, and integrate solutions into a
comprehensive product line. [39]
As a result, few acquisitions were followed by substantial layoffs
of redundant employees. [40]
In addition, BMC made cooperative arrangements with other computer
and software firms. The firm invested in research and development.
[41]
The firm's focus widened. In 1996, for example, it focused
primarily on software for IBM mainframe computers. [42]
Over time, its focus widened to include tasks associated with
monitoring information technology as well as its traditional focus
on mainframe software.
A primary BMC product during the early 1990s was its Patrol
Software, a "data base and systems management product (which)
monitors the status of computers, resources, databases and
applications on a network," according to a New York Times report.
[43] In
1994, BMC made an alliance with computer maker Digital Equipment
Corporation in which BMC would convert its Patrol
software to run on all Digital operating system environments.
In 1997, BMC bought Datatools, a privately based maker of backup
and recovery products based in Sunnyvale, California, for $60
million. [44]
In 1998, BMC bought Boole & Babbage, the first software
products firm in Silicon Valley,[45] which
"creates software to help corporations stitch together computer
networks." Estimates of the price paid varied; some suggested the
price paid in the stock swap deal was $1 billion [46][47]
while another estimate was more than $900 million [48]
while another estimate was $877 million. [49][50]
A New York Times business reporter praised the acquisition and
described what software products from the two companies (BMC and
Boole) do: "When they do their jobs right, products like Boole's
Command Post or BMC's Patrol are invisible to end users. But they
provide information systems management staff a virtual dashboard
with which to monitor problems and optimize performance. In many
cases, the programs can spot an error, alert network administrators
to its existence and repair the problem without ever interrupting
the system." [48]
The reporter elaborated: "Systems management software is a broad
category of programs that function behind the scenes to make sure
that big mainframes and far-flung networks of distributed computers
keep working reliably and efficiently", and noted that "a major
corporate computing system, whether based on a traditional
mainframe or spread among Unix servers, is a vastly more complex
environment than a personal computer, so the products that monitor
and trouble-shoot these systems must be powerful and sophisticated
as well." [48]
In another story, a reporter wrote: "Both companies sell software
that makes computer networks run smoothly and that manages data
bases on mainframe computers, but Boole & Babbage, of San Jose,
Calif., gains 58 percent of its revenue from international sales,
while the Houston-based BMC gets 35 percent of its revenue from
such sales." [50]
Also in 1998, BMC bought Massachusetts-based BGS which "makes
software tools that help companies analyze and predict the
performance of their systems" in a stock deal valued at $285
million. [51][52]
The Houston Chronicle wrote: "The move enabled BMC to strengthen
its software offerings, which are used to monitor the health of a
computer network." [52]
Acquisitions didn't necessarily mean layoffs. [40]
While a common merger pattern is when "one big company buys another
and the job cuts soon follow," a Houston Chronicle reporter wrote
that BMC has acquired businesses with the goals of "adding new
products and keeping the skilled people who create them." [40]
A BMC spokesperson commented "very good technologists are very hard
to find ... The value of a software company all comes back to its
intellectual capital." [40]
In 1999, BMC acquired the Israeli firm New Dimension
which made application service as well as management software for
$673 million cash. [41][52][53]
New Dimension software code handled such tasks as security,
document management and job scheduling. [52]
In 2000, BMC bought "an Israeli maker of enterprise application
management software for mainframe computer system", named
Optisystems, for $70 million.[41][54]
2000s
During these first years of the new century, BMC spent heavily
on research and product development. "In fiscal 2000, 2001 and
2002, research and development spending, net of capitalized
amounts, represented 23%, 29% and 37% of total revenues,
respectively," according to a 10K report filed with the SEC in
2002. [41]
BMC was making alliances and investing in new technologies. In
2000, BMC had reportedly invested with a firm called Interliant, a
Purchase, New York provider. which "rented software to corporations
over the Internet." [55]
The reporter explained: "By using an A.S.P. (application service
provider), a business does not have to buy the programs itself,
store them on servers and hard drives, or maintain and upgrade
them. That allows companies to slash costs in their information
technology departments... For monthly subscription fees, A.S.P.'s
give businesses access to specific software programs on the
Internet. Typically, the applications are used to manage a variety
of important business functions, from customer service to supply
chain management."[55]
In 2001, BMC cooperated with 20 other large companies in an IBM
initiative called Project Eliza, described as an effort to "develop
computer networks that can largely manage themselves, recognizing
faults and repairing them without human handlers." [56]
In 2002, BMC made a deal with Dell
computer to manage Dell's systems; "Dell Computer had agreed to
manage its systems with BMC's products and resell them", according
to an article in the New York Times. [57]
In November 2002, BMC acquired Mountain View (California) based
Remedy for $350 million. [47]
BMC president Bob Beauchamp said "the Remedy buy will take BMC
software from managing disparate IT elements to managing business
services across an enterprise." [47]
He elaborated: "This acquisition will change the landscape of
enterprise management for BMC. Our company will move from managing
IT components to managing the business itself." [47]
Remedy operated as an independent unit within the larger firm.
Before the Remedy Acquisition, BMC had had trouble integrating
acquired technology into its tool set, Beauchamp said in a
conference call, while Remedy software has been integrating with
BMC for years. [47]
Remedy had been acquired by Peregrine Systems in 2001, but in 2002,
Peregrine filed for bankruptcy, so BMC bought Remedy from the
bankrupt Peregrine. [58]
In 2002, Remedy had sales of $250 million, with 800 employees, and
6000 customers; it is a wholly owned subsidiary of BMC. [58]
The purchase had legal complications; at one point, BMC believed
seven former employees of Peregrine might use their knowledge of
trade secrets to develop competitive products; there were lawsuits
and counterclaims involving this matter. [42]
In 2003, BMC made a deal with a large maker of computer data
storage systems, EMC Corporation, exchanging rights to BMC's
discontinued storage software for access to fifty of BMC's software
storage customers. [59]
In 2003, BMC bought IT Masters of Belgium "for $42 million
to add software for managing computer-system services"; it added 75
employees to BMC as well as customers such as Toyota Motor,
Lockheed Martin and Bank of America. [60]
Also in that year, BMC left the market for storage software because
of a "lack of return on its investment amid intense competition
from rivals like I.B.M. and Veritas Software." [59]
In 2004, BMC bought the Magic Solutions unit of Network
Associates for $47 billion "to add customer-service programs for
small and midsize companies" and which makes "software used to log
and answer customer calls." [6][61][49]
In 2005, BMC bought OpenNetwork, based in Clearwater, Florida, for
$18 million to "expand its ability to let customers manage access
to Web-based applications." [62]
In May 2006, BMC acquired Israel-based Identify Software. [63]
BMC paid approximately $151 million. [8]
"This acquisition provides solutions that optimize application
development organizations through the automation of testing,
support and maintenance processes and enables dramatic increases in
development outputs," it said in the 10K report filed with the SEC.
[8]
In April 2007, BMC bought privately held start-up Service
Management Partners which had a software product that "helps
organizations to visualize and configure software tools." [64]
In May 2007, BMC bought privately-held ProactiveNet, a maker of
business service management software which helps "IT collect
systems data, which is then analyzed for potential problems" and
can "automatically alert IT staffs to problems and suggest
remedies." [65]
In July 2007, BMC bought RealOps, a provider of run book
automation solutions. [66]
The acquisition helped BMC create an "all-in-one service management
solution" that "integrates diverse multi-vendor technologies" while
enhancing "service availability" yet minimizing interruptions. [66]
In October 2007, BMC bought Emprisa Networks (based in Fairfax,
Virginia) "for its network compliance, change, configuration
management and automation product". [67]
Analysts from Gartner Group commented: "BMC is correctly framing
the Emprisa acquisition as a key step in its developing end-to-end
IT service automation strategy, which leverages BMC’s strength in
configuration management databases (CMDBs) and change management."
[67]
But analysts commented that BMC still needs: "integration with
other network management disciplines where it has little or no
presence" as well as a "field training plan and more field sales
and technical expertise in network management" and "close
cooperation with its reseller partner Entuity." [67]
It paid $22 million. [39]
In April 2008, BMC bought BladeLogic, a data center automation
software company, for $854 million. [39][68]
In the May SEC report, it said "The BladeLogic acquisition expands
our offerings for server provisioning, application release
management, as well as configuration automation and
compliance."[39]
In June 2008, BMC acquired privately-held ITM Software, a Santa
Clara (CA) firm founded in 2001 that makes "software products and
services that advance the business management of Information
Technology." [69][70][71] The
integrated approach helps managers see their corporate information
networks "from the perspective of the business" and helps them get
a "comprehensive view" permitting "greater visibility and control."
[69]
An analyst explained: "Managing the business of IT has been a
critical message in BMC Software’s Business Service Management
strategy since its inception. However, the company lacked critical
applications to help senior IT leadership execute on that vision.
With its recent acquisition of ITM Software, BMC fills in some
critical gaps in its ITRP offering." [72]
Financial details were not disclosed. [73]
In June 2009, BMC received a "CIO 100 award" for "innovative use
of an internal cloud computing environment to achieve maximum
return on server and storage investments."[14]
In August 2009, BMC acquired privately held MQSoftware, a
"middleware management" software firm; "middleware is the
cornerstone for integrating disparate systems across the enterprise
to deliver business services," according to one source.[74][75]
In October 2009, BMC acquired privately held Tideway, a maker of IT discovery software, to
support BMC’s vision of Dynamic BSM. [76]
Partnerships
As the computer industry moves in the direction of cloud
computing, BMC is working with firms like Cisco and VMware to build a so-called Unified
Computing System described as a "private cloud in a box"; the
Economist Magazine elaborated: "instead of having to wire up
servers, storage devices and networking gear, companies can build
and reconfigure virtual computer systems with a few mouse clicks,"
reported the Economist in March 2009. [68][77]
Business analyst Richard Sherman said the alliance "raises BMC’s
profile in the server automation industry" and would raise future
revenues. [68]
According to the article, BMC's earlier acquisition of BladeLogic
in 2008 was key to the formation of the alliance with Cisco. [68]
In June 2009, BMC received a "CIO 100 award" for "innovative use of
an internal cloud computing environment to achieve maximum return
on server and storage investments."[14]
In July 2009, BMC and Amazon Web Services announced IT
organizations will be able to extend their internal data centers to
the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon ec2) through
BMC’s BSM platform.[78]
In November 2009, BMC announced Service Desk Express will be
sold, marketed and available via Salesforce.com. "By delivering
service desk technology via the cloud, you can abstract all the
complexity of the infrastructure that rely on IT services delivery
and follow best practices," said BMC chairman and CEO, Bob
Beauchamp. [79]
BMC also counts Dell, VMware and NetApp among its strategic alliance
partners.
Acquisitions
| Date |
Company |
Business |
Country |
Value (USD)
(millions) |
References |
| 02009-10 October 2009 |
Tideway |
IT Dependency Mapping |
United
Kingdom |
undisclosed&Expression error: Unexpected
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/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
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|
| 02009-08 August 2009 |
MQSoftware |
Middleware and transaction management |
United States |
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/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
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/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
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|
| 02008-06 June 2008 |
ITM Software |
Information technology management |
United States |
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/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
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[69][70][72][73] |
| 02008-04 April 2008 |
BladeLogic |
Data center automation |
United States |
$&0000000000000854.000000854 |
[39][68][14] |
| 02007-10-15 October 15, 2007 |
Emprisa Networks |
Compliance software |
United States |
$&0000000000000022.00000022 |
[39][67] |
| 02007-07 July 2007 |
RealOps Inc. |
Run book automation solutions |
United States |
$&0000000000000054.00000054 |
[66][39] |
| 02007-05 May 2007 |
ProactiveNet, Inc. |
Business service management |
United States |
$&0000000000000041.00000041 |
[39][65] |
| 02007-04 April 2007 |
Service Management Partners |
IT Information library software (ITIL) |
United States |
undisclosed&Expression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
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/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
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/ operator-1.000000 |
[64] |
| 02006-03 March 2006 |
Identify Software |
Root cause analysis, capture, and playback, |
Israel |
$&0000000000000151.000000151 |
[5][63] |
| 02005-08 August 2005 |
KMXperts |
|
United States |
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[5] |
| 02005-03 March 2005 |
OpenNetwork |
Access to Web-based applications |
United States |
$&0000000000000018.00000018 |
[5][62] |
| 02005-01 January 2005 |
Calendra |
|
United States |
$&Expression error: Unexpected
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[5] |
| 02004-07 July 2004 |
Viadyne |
|
United States |
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|
| 02004-07 July 2004 |
Marimba |
|
United States |
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|
| 02004-02 February 2004 |
Magic Solutions, Inc. |
Software to log & answer customer calls |
United States |
$&0000000000000047.00000047 |
[61] |
| 02004-01 January 2004 |
ASA Knowledge |
|
United States |
$&Expression error: Unexpected
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/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
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/ operator-1.000000 |
|
| 02003-03 March 2003 |
IT Masters |
Software for managing computer-system services |
Belgium |
$&0000000000000042.00000042 |
[60] |
| 02002-11 November 2002 |
Remedy_Corporation |
Service management software maker |
United States |
$&0000000000000355.000000355 |
[47] |
| 02002-04 April 2002 |
Simulus Limited |
|
United States |
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|
| 02002-03 March 2002 |
AgentSpring |
|
United States |
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/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operator-1.000000 |
|
| 02001-02 February 2001 |
Perform, SA |
|
United States |
$&Expression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operator-1.000000 |
[47] |
| 02000-10 October 2000 |
Sylvain Faust, Inc. |
|
United States |
$&Expression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operator-1.000000 |
|
| 02000-08 August 2000 |
OptiSystems Solutions |
Enterprise application management software |
Israel |
$&0000000000000070.00000070 |
[41] |
| 02000-04 April 2000 |
Evity Inc. |
|
United States |
$&0000000000000067.00000067 stock +
$10mil cash |
[41] |
| 01999-11 November 1999 |
OTL Software |
|
United States |
$&Expression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operator-1.000000 |
|
| 01999-04 April 1999 |
New Dimension Software |
Security, document management and job scheduling |
Israel |
$&0000000000000673.000000673 |
[41][47][52][53] |
| 01999-03 March 1999 |
Boole & Babbage, Inc. |
Systems management software |
United States |
$&0000000000001000.0000001,000 |
[46][47][48] |
| 01998-03 March 1998 |
BGS Systems |
System performance software |
United States |
$&0000000000000285.000000285 |
[47][52] |
| 01997-05 May 1997 |
DataTools |
Backup and recovery products |
United States |
$&0000000000000060.00000060 |
[44][47] |
| 01996-01 January 1996 |
HawkNet, Inc. |
|
United States |
$&Expression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operator-1.000000 |
|
| 01995-11 November 1995 |
Peer Networks, Inc. |
|
United States |
$&Expression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operator-1.000000 |
|
| 01994-01 January 1994 |
PATROL Software |
Data base and systems management |
United States |
$&Expression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operatorExpression error: Unexpected
/ operator-1.000000 |
[47][80] |
Competitors
Business analysts see BMC as a major software player in the
application software industry. BMC competes against firms with
large market capitalizations and resources, particularly IBM, Computer
Associates, Hewlett-Packard, Sun, and Microsoft. [66][41][58]
In addition, other firms have been mentioned as being competitors,
such as Candle, [48]
Platinum Technology, [48]
Network Associates, [58]
BeatBox Technologies, [63]
Quest Software, [63][81]
Oracle, [81]
Novell, [81]
Symantec, [81]
Red Hat, [81]
Sybase, [81]
Pervasive Software, [81]
and Compuware Corporation. [81]
But the industry is complex and ever-changing. Sometimes BMC
competes with these firms in some areas, and cooperates in
others.
Application Software Industry—Major Competitors
(August 2009)
| Firm |
Market capitalization (billions) |
Employees |
Revenue Growth % |
Revenue (billions) |
Gross Margin % |
EBITDA (millions) |
Operating Margin % |
Net Income (millions) |
Price to Earnings (P/E) |
| BMC Software |
$&0000000000000006.0000006 |
&0000000000005800.0000005,800 |
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$&0000000000000002.0000002 |
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$&0000000000000609.000000609 |
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$&0000000000000319.000000319 |
&0000000000000021.00000021 |
| Computer Associates (CA) |
$&0000000000000012.00000012 |
&0000000000013200.00000013,200 |
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$&0000000000000004.0000004 |
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"%".Expression error: Unrecognised
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$&0000000000001390.0000001,390 |
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$&0000000000000693.000000693 |
&0000000000000017.00000017 |
| Hewlett Packard |
$&0000000000000105.000000105 |
&0000000000321000.000000321,000 |
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$&0000000000000118.000000118 |
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$&0000000000014960.00000014,960 |
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$&0000000000007710.0000007,710 |
&0000000000000014.00000014 |
| IBM |
$&0000000000000156.000000156 |
&0000000000410097.000000410,097 |
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$&0000000000000097.00000097 |
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$&0000000000023250.00000023,250 |
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$&0000000000012650.00000012,650 |
&0000000000000013.00000013 |
Note: Numbers rounded to eliminate decimals Source: Yahoo
Finance. Retrieved Aug 2009. [82]
In 2002, in a 10K statement submitted to the SEC, BMC identified
its principal competitors as large software firms such as IBM,
Computer Associates, and Microsoft, as well as computer makers such
as Sun and HP. [41]
BMC officially described its business as competitive: "There are
several companies, including IBM, Computer Associates and
Microsoft, as well as large computer manufacturers such as Sun and
HP, which have substantially greater resources than we have, as
well as the ability to develop and market enterprise management
solutions similar to and competitive with the solutions offered by
us. In addition, there are numerous independent software companies
that compete with one or more of our software solutions. Although
no company competes with us across our entire software solution
line, we consider at least 60 firms to be directly competitive with
one or more of our enterprise software solutions. In systems
management, database management, application management, security
and storage management, there are hundreds of companies whose
primary business focus is on at least one but not all of these
solutions. Certain of these companies have substantially larger
operations than ours in these specific niches." [41]
Assets
While BMC's most significant asset is perhaps a workforce of
skilled software engineers, the firm owns considerable intellectual
property in the form of software code. It elaborated how it
protects this property in an SEC filing (2002): "We distribute our
products in object code form and rely upon contract, trade secret,
copyright and patent laws to protect our intellectual property. The
license agreements under which customers use our products restrict
the customer's use to its own operations and prohibit disclosure to
third persons. We now distribute certain of our products on a
shrink-wrap basis, and the enforceability of such restrictions in a
shrink-wrap license is unproven in certain jurisdictions. Also,
notwithstanding those restrictions, it is possible for other
persons to obtain copies of our products in object code form. We
believe that obtaining such copies would have limited value without
access to the product's source code, which we keep highly
confidential. In addition, we employ protective measures such as
CPU dependent passwords, expiring passwords and time-based trials."
[41]
While software can be considered as intellectual property like
screenplays and protected by copyrighting, some software processes
can be considered as "inventions" and protected by patent. BMC owns
software patents. For example, BMC owns a patent for "GUI
interpretation technology for client/server environment" developed
by software engineers David T. Sulcer, Lawrence M. Ackner, and
Donna S. Lowe-Cleveland which involves complex signals processing;
patent attorneys trying to describe this process wrote: "receiving
a message from a remote device, the message comprising either a
definition, a state change, a command or some combination thereof;
processing the definition (if any) before the state change (if
any); and processing the state change (if any) before processing
the command (if any)." [83][84]
BMC owns real estate property but it's mostly in four office
buildings totaling 1,515,000 square feet in Houston, Texas; sales
and development offices around the world are leased. [41]
See also
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External
links