by CIO Staff

IBM’s Planned Vallent Buy to Give It More Telecom Expertise

News
Nov 28, 20062 mins
Mergers and Acquisitions

IBM is looking to better meet the needs of wireless service providers with its planned purchase of network performance monitoring and service management software vendor Vallent.

IBM announced Tuesday its intention to purchase privately held Vallent for an undisclosed sum. The vendor hopes to close the deal, subject to regulatory approval, in the first quarter of 2007. At that point, IBM will fold Vallent into its Tivoli Software systems management business unit.

Vallent’s 200-plus customers include Bharti Airtel in India, Brasil Telecom, China Mobile Communications and Cingular Wireless as well as mobile equipment providers like Alcatel, Lucent Technologies and Motorola. The company with headquarters in Bellevue, Wash., employs more than 400 staff.

IBM plans to add Vallent’s software to the Netcool products it gained through the US$865 million acquisition of network management software vendor Micromuse, which closed in February. Bringing the offerings together will better position IBM to provide software to help mobile service providers manage their increasingly complex networks as they converge fixed-line and mobile infrastructure.

IBM said there’s minimal product overlap between Vallent’s products and its existing Tivoli software. The vendor is particularly interested in Vallent’s abilities to manage wireless radio access networks, which it expects to mesh well with Netcool’s management of wireless infrastructure and IP-based services.

-China Martens, IDG News Service (Boston Bureau)

Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage.