Archive for January, 2009

Banking crisis exposes guesswork gap in revenue forecasts

Monday, January 26th, 2009

· 83% of directors feel they cannot trust the sales forecasts they are given
· 72% of directors apply a discount factor of between 5% and 90% to sales forecasts
· 53% of directors believe they do not have the financial resources to survive a 10% shortfall in revenue for three consecutive months
· 50% of directors believe their bank is unlikely to provide extra support if it is needed
· NXDs lead the way with the need to focus on cash management
· Research highlights cash management and director compliance issues

Many businesses are running the risk of running out of cash simply because they rely on inaccurate revenue forecasts according to research published today. It highlights that 83% of directors do not trust the sales forecast they are given. As a result almost three quarters (72%) apply a discount factor of up to 90% – with the average discount factor being 34%. The cash implications of this level of potential inaccuracy are significant as over half (53%) of directors do not believe they have the cash resources to survive a shortfall in revenue of just 10% for three consecutive months. And, 50% of directors believe their bank is unlikely to provide additional cash support if needed.

Cash management is king but revenue consistently fails to match forecasts
While two thirds of directors (64%) rank cash management as their number one priority, over eight out of ten (83%) feel that they cannot trust the sales forecasts they are given – making cash management much more challenging. This challenge (and the reason for the distrust) is confirmed by the fact that revenues consistently come in lower than forecasted. Two thirds (65%) of directors feel that forecasts have hyped revenue expectations at least once in the last three months. In fact one in five (21%) directors believe that sales forecasts have exceeded revenue every month for the last three months.

Cash resources are under threat by inaccuracies in sales forecasts
The threat this gap between promised and real income provides to businesses is highlighted by the fact that less than half of directors (47%) think they have the financial resources to manage just a 10% shortfall for three months. The significance of this gap is brought home by the fact that 72% of directors apply a discount factor to sales forecasts of between 5% and 90% with the average discount factor being over a third at 34%.In fact, almost four out of ten directors discount forecasts by 50% or more. One in 10 directors think that they would breach their bank facility if revenues miss forecast by just 10% for three months.

Mixed views about the likelihood of support by banks – but demands could be high
There is an equal split between directors who think banks will advance further credit if needed and those that think they will not. Slightly more directors (9%) believe there is absolutely no chance of extra support than those that think it is guaranteed (7%).

If extra banks support is available, directors expect it to come at a price. Half of directors expect to provide directors guarantees to secure more credit; one in 14 expect the bank to demand a debenture or other physical assets as security; only three out of ten (29%) do not think the bank would demand any extra security.

Non-executive directors lead the way with a prudent cash view
Not only do NXDs lead the chart for giving cash management the highest priority (83%) but they also have the lowest levels of trust in the forecasts provided to them – 17% complete distrust and 83% partial distrust. If sales miss forecast by 10% for three months NXDs would expect redundancies and a third would expect the firm to go into administration. If more cash is needed, NXDs would look to alternative sources of private equity rather than approach directors or shareholders which are the preferred routes of other directors.

Chairmen seem less concerned by cash implications of shortfalls in revenue
Perhaps surprisingly, as the chairman is the guardian of shareholder interests, only 50% of chairmen assign cash management the highest priority. In fact chairmen have the highest levels of trust in the forecasts with 21% trusting them completely. However, if they have cause not to trust the forecast, they then apply the highest average discount factor at 46%. This may be because nearly all chairmen (83%) believe they have sufficient cash resources to ride a 10% shortfall in sales for three months and, 70% believe they have a very high probability of being advanced further credit by their bank if needed.

CEOs share distrust levels and lead cynicism about bank support
Almost eight out of ten CEOs discount sales forecasts by an average of 34%. Only four out of ten believe they have the cash resources to survive a 10% shortfall for three months with 23% expecting to cut costs and draw on a bank overdraft facility. One in ten would expect to breach this facility. One in eight believe the banks would not advance further credit with 60% ranking this as highly unlikely (1-5 on ten point probability scale).

CFOs will look for redundancies to balance the books
60% of CFOs will expect redundancies if revenue misses forecast by 10% for three months – twice as high as NXDs and five times the rate for CEOs at 12%.

ExaGrid Systems Achieves Record Q4 and Full Year 2008 Sales Results

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Company Continues to Gain Significant Market Share for Disk-Based Backup Appliances with Data Deduplication in Mid-market/Small Enterprise Companies

ExaGrid Systems, Inc. (http://www.exagrid.com), the leader in cost-effective and scalable disk-based backup solutions with data deduplication, today announced record sales for the fourth quarter ending December 31, 2008.  Fourth quarter sales for the company were up 23% compared to the previous quarter, and up 120% vs. the same quarter last year. Business through channel partners continues to grow and was 60% of the business in Q4.

With over 1,200 systems installed in more than 550 unique locations at more than 300 customers, ExaGrid has the industry’s second largest installed base of disk-based backup appliances with data deduplication in mid-market/small enterprise companies.

Along with strong sales results, the company continued to execute in a variety of important areas during the quarter. Key achievements in Q4 2008 included the following:

• Growing Market Share:  ExaGrid has surpassed 300 customers and in Q4 announced that a recent study conducted by TheInfoPro, an independent research firm, showed that ExaGrid Systems is the second most installed disk backup with data deduplication appliance vendor cited by study respondents in mid-market/small enterprise companies. ExaGrid targets customers with 1TB to 100TBs of data to be backed up.

• Worldwide Customer Acquisition:  ExaGrid continues to win against its competitors, gaining a long list of new customers throughout the world in key industries such as: Healthcare, Legal, Engineering Services, Manufacturing, Oil and Gas, Education and State/Local Government. View more than 84 real-world ExaGrid customer case studies on the ExaGrid web site, including success stories from leaders like Adventist Health, Kawasaki, Kingston Technology, Konica Minolta and Morningstar, via: http://www.exagrid.com/why_exagrid/customer_success_stories.asp.

• Global Channel Growth:  ExaGrid added dozens of partners to its global base during the quarter and now has hundreds of VARs and several key distributors throughout the world.  ExaGrid continues to invest in building a robust global channel.  60% of ExaGrid’s Q4 business was sold through channel partners. In EMEA, ExaGrid sells solely through a two-tier approach with value-added distributors and resellers.  The UK distributor is Zycko (UK) Ltd.

• Product Leadership:  During the quarter ExaGrid announced and shipped several customer-focused product enhancements, including an industry-first, instant disaster recovery (DR) capability, 10 Gigabit Ethernet connectivity options, expanded data handling and automated system health reports. These product enhancements allow customers to significantly improve the way they manage their backups by providing greater flexibility in handling disparate backup data types, delivering backup data more rapidly for DR purposes and providing proactive system health reporting on key operational metrics.  With this release, ExaGrid supports leading backup applications such as Symantec Backup Exec™ and NetBackup™, CA ARCserve ®, EMC Networker®, CommVault® Galaxy™, and Vizioncore vRanger Pro; as well as other data types including VMware® VMDK, Oracle® RMAN, Linux/Unix data dumps and Microsoft ™ SQL dumps. ExaGrid’s future product plans include the support of many additional backup applications and utilities.

• Continued Industry Partnerships:  In Q4, ExaGrid continued joint sales and marketing campaigns with several backup software and industry leaders, including Symantec and Vizioncore. Joint ExaGrid and Symantec/Vizioncore on-demand Webcasts are available now via:
http://www.exagrid.com/news_and_events/disk-based_backup_webcasts_and_podcasts.asp

About ExaGrid Systems, Inc.:
ExaGrid offers the only disk-based backup appliance with data deduplication purpose-built for backup that leverages a unique architecture optimised for performance, scalability and price. ExaGrid is the only solution that combines compute with capacity and a unique landing zone to permanently shorten backup windows, eliminate expensive forklift upgrades, achieve the fastest full system restores and tape copies, and rapidly restore files, VMs and objects in minutes. With offices and distribution worldwide, ExaGrid has more than 6,500 systems installed at more than 1,700 customers, and more than 320 published customer success stories.

For more information, contact ExaGrid at 800-868-6985 or visit www.exagrid.com. Visit “ExaGrid’s Eye on Deduplication” blog: http://blog.exagrid.com/.

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ExaGrid is a registered trademark of ExaGrid Systems, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective holders.