MySQL shoots for an IPO 5 years too late

by Kris_Tuttle on July 10, 2007

The open source soft­ware (OSS) blo­gos­phere has taken its eye off attack­ing Microsoft for a few days to focus on a recent Busi­ness­Week arti­cle that pre­dicted a 2007 ini­tial pub­lic offer­ing for MySQL. The sig­nif­i­cance accord­ing to OSS par­ti­sans is the way it indi­cates that OSS is tak­ing over infor­ma­tion tech­nol­ogy to the exclu­sion of all other soft­ware development/business mod­els and user choices. The sig­nif­i­cance to investors is that Red Hat (RHT), as the only sig­nif­i­cant pure play OSS provider that is already pub­lic, will act as a guide­post to estab­lish MySQL’s val­u­a­tions.  OSS will prob­a­bly suf­fer on both counts.

I leave dis­cus­sions of the com­mu­nity aspect of this to my OSS product/market research on ebizq.net. But as for the invest­ment research impli­ca­tions, don’t rush into sec­ondary and ter­tiary rounds of ven­ture fund­ing just yet for every OSS “plan” that crosses your desk. A good busi­ness case is still more impor­tant than a buzz­word such as OSS. And a good busi­ness case rests on the func­tion­al­ity that will be deliv­ered, not the buzz­word. Even the buzz won’t help assum­ing investors keep 1998–1999 in mind.

In my opin­ion, the invest­ment opportunities—and OSS’s future—lies on the appli­ca­tion func­tion­al­ity side of the mar­ket, not the infra­struc­ture side. I think the OSS oper­at­ing system/middleware/database train has left the sta­tion  The Busi­ness­Week arti­cle (as picked up in my link above by Linux Insider) reports that MySQL is only get­ting one in a thou­sand down­loads to turn into pay­ing busi­ness. The Busi­ness Week arti­cle does not pro­vide its source for its data but it appears in a sen­tence pre­ceded by a quote from MySQL’s chair­man and fol­lowed by a quote from MySQL’s founder. That’s pretty action­able to me. Pan­elists at a UBS tech­nol­ogy con­fer­ence I attended in 2006 said the same thing for OSS in gen­eral. I saw a sim­i­larly low ratio of con­ver­sions with JBoss when I was doing mid­dle­ware research for IDC in 2005 and before, a sta­tis­tic borne out in JBoss rev­enue num­bers revealed in sub­se­quent Red Hat SEC fil­ings after Red Hat acquired JBoss.

There is noth­ing inher­ently dif­fer­ent about the OSS model in terms of going pub­lic. But middleware/database oppor­tu­ni­ties will suf­fer because the lead­ing pub­lic infor­ma­tion tech­nol­ogy (IT) com­pa­nies have already taken over the OSS move­ment at the low end of the stack. There are very few infra­struc­ture mar­ket sec­tors where an OSS startup can build a rev­enue stream with­out run­ning right into IBM (IBM), HP (HP), Ora­cle (ORCL), and so forth. This group, even arguably Microsoft (MSFT) but that’s another post, have whole-heartedly embraced OSS and embed­ded Linux, Apache, and so forth into their prod­ucts and ser­vices. 

Red Hat’s tim­ing was excel­lent. This was true from a product/market per­spec­tive. What Red Hat wanted to do was essen­tially get users to migrate from a mori­bund Unix mar­ket made up of that IT Top 12 group of sup­pli­ers, not count­ing Microsoft, who were back­ing off their sup­port of Unix. And there it was true from an invest­ment per­spec­tive. But JBoss’ wasn’t able to achieve the same result either with the prod­uct or investors (other than Red Hat man­age­ment). Web­Sphere and BEA (BEAS) WebLogic were too well estab­lished to let JBoss do to the mid­dle­ware mar­ket what Red Hat had done to the oper­at­ing sys­tem mar­ket.  And in both cases it was the functionality—operating soft­ware in one case, appli­ca­tion serv­ing in another—that users cared about, not the OSS devel­op­ment or busi­ness model.

Using the same cri­te­ria, MySQL is prob­a­bly five years too late. IBM, Microsoft and Ora­cle will block any kind of growth from the main­stream. They will even do it with an OSS message.

If there will ever be a sep­a­rate OSS invest­ment story, it will be in the appli­ca­tions space, but even then that will be more a soft­ware as a ser­vice (SaaS) play than an OSS play.  — Den­nis Byron

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