sábado, 14 de julio de 2012

Lightspeed Ventures Positions For The New Age of Data With Investments in Storage Space

Lightspeed Venture Partners has had a phenomenal run in the next generation storage market. In the past 12 to 14 months, four of its portfolio companies have been acquired and one has gone to IPO. Here they are:

This week  the venture capital firm made an investment in storage provider Avere Systems. The Series C funding round was led by Lightspeed and also includes previous investors Menlo Ventures, Norwest Venture Partners and Tenaya Capital.  Avere has now received $52 million in overall funding.

Avere Systems  gives a window into the disruptions facing storage companies and why Lightspeed has had such success by investing in the sector.

Lightscale Partner Chris Schaepe says flash, virtualization and the cloud are the big disruptors in the storage market.

Flash makes data available far faster than hard disk, which relies on mechanical parts to spin its discs.  That's increasingly important in this age of big data. Hard disks don't spin fast enough to manage the new deluge of data that runs in and out of the enterprise.

Virtualization has allowed companies to consolidate its servers but with a storage cost. It  often means finding new ways to keep the apps running at the same performance level. Servers get overloaded as virtualization taxes the system. New storage environments are needed to accommodate virtual machine loads.

Cloud computing has changed the way IT  views the enterprise. Over the next few years, we will see continued focus on how companies turn IT into a service. They will need ways to bridge its existing infrastructure with public, scaled out architectures from providers such as Rackspace and Amazon Web Services.

Schaepe says that Avere is at the center of this disruption. It has hardware that speeds up performance by caching data and integrating a hierarchy of storage media from DRAMthrough Flash memory and disk drives. This allows the most frequently accessed data to be served quickly. Less frequently accessed data is migrated to slower and cheaper storage tiers such as storage disk systems.

For Schaepe, it makes for a compelling story. Avere's "edge filers," helps an enterprise provider get better performance. Capacity issues are handled by traditional disk-based storage. That means companies don't have to keep adding storage boxes to optimize performance. Performance is managed by the edge filers. Avere is also well-suited to companies adopting the cloud as the technology is designed to integrate on-premise and off-premise infrastructure.

Looking from the outside, it's the data story Avere offers that I find most compelling. Avere's products helps IT organizations consolidate the management of distributed data across different locations and vendors. The data is pooled, That solves a key challenge. Data is often left in solos. By pooling it, a company can capitalize on its data assets.

Schaepe said Lightspeed identified disruptive trends in the storage about five years ago. They saw the price of Flash and DRAM begin to drop. That became a critical factor for the innovation cycle. It helped startups innovate with next generation storage architectures that fit well with the maturing trends in IT around virtualization and scale-out architectures. Other Lightspeed portfolio companies:

  • Tintri combines Flash and disk media. it has developed a storage management software that is customized for the needs of  needs of virtual machines.
  • Nimble combines primary storage and backup in a system with Flash and disk media.
  • Nutanix combines compute and storage. That allows for consolidation of infrastructure environments – a huge priority as companies seek to shed their data centers.

Data is the disruptor. Lightspeed seems to understand this by investing in companies that will be crucial in shaping next generation architectures for the new age of data.


Avere Systems was founded in 2008 in order to develop NAS solutions that would allow enterprises to scale storage network performance independently of capacity - driving up performance while driving down cost. This single-minded goal became the guiding philosophy behind the development the architecture that has produced Avere's Demand-Driven StorageTM products, coming to market Fall 2009.

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Lightspeed Venture Partners is an early stage, global venture capital firm with offices and partners inMenlo Park, China, India, and Israel. Lightspeed focuses on investments in enterprise infrastructure, internet media and commerce, mobile, digital media, semiconductors, and cleantech. Past notable investments include Brocade communications, Ciena, DoubleClick, Phone.com, and Riverbed. Selected current portfolio companies in the enterprise infrastructure space include: AppDynamics Cirtas Delphix Embrane FusionIO MapR Technology Nimble Storage Pliant Technology DataStax Tintri Selected current portfolio companies in internet media and commerce space include: Thefind.com Kosmix Living Social MediaV Playdom RockYou Shoedazzle Wikio Selected current portfolio companies in the mobile and...

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