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By Phil Wainewright September 4, 2001 The past week has been one of good news from the ASP industry, with a big contract win for one ASP, news of others reaching profitability and a sizeable funding round for yet another member of the ASPnews Top 20 the second in as many months.
Arizona Goes ASP Arizona decided on the ASP model as the only way to ensure equal opportunity for students, whether they attend school in the prosperous suburbs of Phoenix or in the remote hinterlands of the Navajo. Equal access to facilities and equipment has become a major educational policy objective in Arizona, following a 1996 ruling by the state's Supreme Court.
ASPs in the Black As noted in a previous review, definitions of profitability vary enormously. And certainly there are many other ASPs in the enterprise space that would also claim to be profitable such as to name just two Appshop and OutTask. But Prentice's claims bear some serious scrutiny. The company, whose main business is the hosting of outsourced JD Edwards applications, claims to have completed its first year of profitability certainly a far more impressive achievement than Telecomputing Norway's single month in the black. Part of the explanation for Prentice's apparently laudable achievement is its decision to leave both consulting and data center operation to partners, enabling it to concentrate on the core business of application management. But it failed to provide further details of its supposed profitability, leaving the assertion open to multiple interpretations. From one point of view it is good to see ASPs now focused on achieving profitability, rather than simply expanding revenues at any cost in some misguided attempt to grab an illusory market leadership. But we still seem to be some way away from the day when an enterprise ASP conclusively demonstrates, on the basis of published, verifiable and GAAP -compliant figures (i.e. complying to generally accepted accounting principles), that it really, truly has passed that all-important milestone of cash profitability.
Portera Nets More Funding Last week, vertical service provider Portera Systems, which operates its own professional services automation software, became the latest such company to score a significant funding round see related news story, Portera Secures $16M. The latest round is Portera's fifth separate batch of funding, making it particularly noteworthy since only the most exceptional companies get so many bites of the funding cherry, particularly in today's investment climate. Portera follows in the footsteps of Internet-native Web service vendors UpShot (an ASPnews Top 20 member) and Works, which achieved rounds of $17 million and $15 million, respectively, in July. The willingness of venture capital groups to continue ploughing money into these companies demonstrates that they must be doing something right and in today's grim climate, that probably means garnering significant revenues from a low cost base. This review of the week's news highlights is by ASPnews.com founder and consulting analyst Phil Wainewright. A comprehensive news digest is published every month in the ASP News Review newsletter, available exclusively to subscribers. |