American telecommunications software company
Mavenir Systems, Inc. |
Company type | Private |
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Industry | Telecommunications software |
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Predecessors | |
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Founded | 2017; 7 years ago (2017) (main predecessor companies 1997, 2005, and 2007) |
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Founder | merger led by Siris Capital Group, LLC |
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Headquarters | Richardson, Texas, U.S. |
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Key people | Pardeep Kohli (president and CEO) |
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Products | - Mobile Core software – including voice & video; multimedia messaging & RCS; IMS and connectivity control; Packet Core
- Mobile Access & Edge software – including OpenRAN vRAN; Multi-access Edge Computing (MEC); Private networks
- Mobile Service software – including monetization; unified communications and collaboration; digital engagement; analytics; Multi-ID; Enhanced security
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Revenue | ~$750 million (2022) |
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Number of employees | ~5500 FTE (2022) |
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Website | mavenir.com |
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Mavenir Systems, Inc. is an American telecommunications software company, created in 2017 as a result of a three-way merger of existing companies and technologies, that develops and supplies cloud-native software to the communications service provider (CSP) market.
The company is headquartered in Richardson, Texas, US, and has offices in multiple countries such as India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Romania, Germany, and the UK. Mavenir also has Centres of Excellence around the world, including in Bangalore and Brno, with a global employee headcount of over 5000. The company serves more than 250 Communications Service Providers in over 120 countries.[1]
History
Predecessor companies
Mavenir has a complex corporate history as a result of successive acquisitions and spin-offs. The main historical predecessors are:
- Xura, which was composed of pieces of Comverse, Inc.,[2] Acision, and a number of other acquired companies. Comverse, Inc derived from Comverse Technology, was active in traditional value-added services (VAS), digital cloud services, Unified Communications (VoIP & UC), and a suite of evolved communication services. Acision was a privately held secure mobile messaging and engagement services firm.[3][4] These entities were combined in 2015 to form Xura, which focused on two core product areas: digital communications services and converged communications (traditional and IP).
- An older entity with a similar name, Mavenir Systems, initially a company focused on transition from 3G to 4G with IMS products and solutions, founded in 2006. It acquired Airwide Solutions, Stoke and Ulticom and In 2013, the company went public on NYSE with MVNR ticker symbol. The company was acquired by Mitel Networks Corporation in 2015 to create Mitel Mobility.
- Ranzure Networks, a startup focused on developing 5G cloud-based radio access network technology.
How it came together:
In mid-2016, Xura was acquired by affiliates of Siris Capital Group in a deal that valued the company at approximately $643 million.[5] On 19 December 2016, affiliates of Xura agreed to acquire Mitel Mobility, for $385 million, and Ranzure Networks Inc., for an undisclosed sum.[6]
The New Mavenir
When the transactions completed on February 8, 2017, the newly merged company was renamed Mavenir Systems Inc., trading under the Mavenir brand.[7]
Mavenir has continued to acquire technology - including its acquisitions of Aquto, a cloud-based sponsored data platform (2018);[8] Argyle Data (2018), a machine learning security platform; Brocade’s vEPC,[9] and ip.access (2020), a specialist small cell vendor.[10]
On 6 October 2020, Mavenir announced that it had filed a registration statement for an initial public offering (IPO) of ordinary shares on Nasdaq. Due to market volatility in the run-up to the 2020 US elections the company postponed the IPO on 28 October but stated that it would keep market conditions under review in the following months.[11]
Company timeline
- 2005: Mavenir Systems founded
- 2008: Mavenir Systems completes round of funding for $17.5 million
- 2010: Mavenir Systems completes a round of funding round for $13.5 million backed by Alloy Ventures, Austin Ventures and North Bridge Venture Partners[12]
- 2011: Mavenir Systems completes round of funding for $40 million backed by August Capital and including existing investors Alloy Ventures, Austin Ventures, North Bridge Venture Partners and Greenspring Associates[13]
- 2011: Mavenir Systems acquired Airwide Solutions, a messaging specialist, for $40 million[14]
- 2013: Mavenir Systems IPO (NYSE) under ticker MVNR, raising $44.5 million[15]
- 2014: acquired security gateway vendor Stoke for $2.9 million plus $1.9 million of debt[16]
- 2015: acquired signalling vendor Ulticom for $20 million[17]
- 2015: acquired by Mitel Networks Corporation for $560 million[18]
- 2016: rebranded by Mitel to Mitel Mobile, then sold to Xura (for $350 million)[19]
- 2016: Pardeep Kohli and Ashok Khuntia founded Ranzure to disrupt the Radio Access Network market through cloud-based virtualisation. Ranzure raises $13 million in Series A funding.[20]
- 2016: Xura acquired Ranzure[21]
- 2017: Siris merges Xura, Ranzure and Mitel Mobile and rebrands as Mavenir[22]
- 2017: Brocade vEPCc acquisition[23]
- 2018: acquired Aquto[24]
- 2018: acquired Argyle Data[25]
- 2020: acquired ip.access[26]
- 2020: IPO postponed due to market volatility
CEO
Mavenir’s President and Chief Executive Officer is Pardeep Kohli who has been associated with several of the ventures that make up the company today.[27] He has been in his current post since December 2016 and was previously CEO of Xura, which he joined after it acquired Ranzure, a company that Kohli had founded earlier that year. Before Ranzure, Kohli had been President and CEO of Mavenir Systems, Inc,[28] guiding it through its IPO in November 2013, and subsequent acquisition by Mitel Networks Corporation in 2015.[citation needed]
Prior to Mavenir Systems, Pardeep was Co-Founder, President and CEO of Spatial Wireless, which was acquired by Alcatel in 2004.[citation needed]
Deployments
Customers
The company says it has 250+ operator customers in 120 countries, including 17 of the top 20 largest operators. Known examples include:
- 2012 – MetroPCS – VoLTE solution to support what was claimed to be a world's first[29]
- 2014 – T-Hrvatski Telekom – IMS HSS-FE[30]
- 2015 – T-Mobile USA – RCS[31]
- 2017 – Sprint – NFV Cloud Deployment
- 2018 – Telefonica Germany – Virtualised IMS for VoLTE and VoWiFi
- 2019 – Verizon – cloud core
- 2019 – Partner – virtualized mobile core
- 2019 - Cellcom – virtualised IMS mobile core and VoWiFi[32]
- 2019 – Telefónica Argentina - Signalling Firewall[33]
- 2019 – Vodafone – Open RAN[34]
- 2019 – Vodafone Idea – “Network as a Platform”[35]
- 2020 – T-Mobile Czech Republic and Slovak Telekom – NFV Harmonised IMS[36]
- 2020 – Telefonica “O2” UK - virtualised IMS[37]
- 2020 – Hudson Valley Wireless – Cloud-native LTE packet core[38]
- 2020 – Rakuten Mobile RCS[39]
- 2020 – Turkcell – Cloud-native IMS[40]
- 2020 – Dish - Open RAN[41]
- 2020 – Vodafone Idea – Open RAN[42]
- 2020 – Deutsche Telekom, Telefonica, Vodafone – RCS interconnection in Germany[43]
Trials
Mavenir has been involved in OpenRAN and other virtualisation trials with several operators. Partnerships in the public domain include:
- 2018 – Baicells – XRAN (Open RAN) interface testing
- 2020 – Telefonica “O2” UK - OpenRAN
- 2020 – Deutsche Telekom – web-scale validation of 5G SA core
- 2020 – Airtel – Open RAN RAN Intelligent Controller (RIC)
Technology partnerships
- 2019 – OEM agreement with Big Switch[44]
- 2019 – OpenRAN integration with Sunwave[45]
- 2020 – 5G private networks in Germany with Mugler[46]
- 2020 – Open RAN solutions in Japan with NEC[47]
- 2020 – Open RAN solutions in the USA with Goodman Networks[48]
- 2020 – Open RAN solutions in the USA with GDT[49]
- 2020 – Open RAN collaboration with Altiostar[50]
- 2020 – Open RAN collaboration with Comba Telecom in Turkey[51]
- 2020 – 5G campus networks systems integration in Germany with NTT Data[52]
- 2020 – 5G core UPF with NVIDIA[53]
- 2020 – RCS Business Messaging with Microsoft Azure
- 2020 – Open RAN Remote Radio Head development with MTI[54]
References
External links