Ericsson’s acquisition of Vonage: short or long-game? (2024)

By Dimitris Mavrakis | 4Q 2021 | IN-6374

Vonage is a US-based cloud communications provider that started in the consumer and Small-Medium Enterprise (SME) domain in early 2000 to offer Voice over IP (VoIP) services.

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Ericsson acquires Vonage

NEWS

Vonage is a US-based cloud communications provider that started in the consumer and Small-Medium Enterprise (SME) domain in early 2000 to offer Voice over IP (VoIP) services. At that time, voice services were still the biggest revenue driver for carriers and Vonage offered an alternative approach to bringing voice to homes and businesses. The company has since then grown to offer enterprise services and has acquired several companies to progress its enterprise strategy. Vonage reported US$1.25bn revenues for the 2020 financial year and $170m, indicating a healthy business. The cloud communication provider has also created a global developer ecosystem with more than 1 million developers and has created a global API-based platform with sourcing agreements with more than 200 global communication system providers.

Ericsson on the other hand, is a Swedish Tier-1 cellular infrastructure vendor that is considered the leading company in 4G and 5G networks and now aiming to break in the enterprise domain. The US market is by far the most lucrative one for Ericsson, especially now that geopolitical challenges have limited the reach of Western vendors in the Chinese market. Ericsson announced the acquisition of Vonage on 21st November 2021 for Euro 6.2bn, an unexpected announcement that caused confusion in the market as there are major differences in the business models of the two companies.

Ericsson’s announcement includes many interesting details. For example, Vonage operations will not be impacted, and the company will continue to operate normally using its current name with all its employees. The current Vonage CEO will report to the Ericsson CEO and company financials will be reported as a separate segment in Ericsson accounts. Ericsson aims to help Vonage grow its business and take advantage of synergies available through the combination of the two companies unique selling points.

Immediate and Long-term implications for Ericsson

IMPACT

The Ericsson acquisition strategy could have two distinct implications, one for the short term and one for the long term.

In the short term, Ericsson will get access to an extensive client list that Vonage already has and can potentially increase its odds of breaking into the North American enterprise market with its 5G expertise. The US is arguably the biggest priority and opportunity for all Western infrastructure vendors and the enterprise domain promises to bring the next wave of profitability beyond the consumer business. There are synergies between the two companies’ product lines here, but Ericsson will need to address specific enterprise requirements and proceed gradually, especially with the cloud communications market is extremely competitive in the US.

Ericsson has also commented on the long-term strategy: they will aim to take advantage of Vonage’s global API platform to extend its reach to 5G networks, including network slicing, to create new use cases and applications. Vonage will be well positioned to introduce its developers to the 5G opportunity and Ericsson will be able to use this unique value proposition to its global customer base. Similar developer platforms may also become an interest for infrastructure vendors as they are planning to accelerate their enterprise strategies. The question is whether these platforms are the correct size and have the right global enterprise footprint to be acquired by a telecoms company. For example, Twilio is a similar company to Vonage and has a very diverse developer community behind its API programs.

The Vonage acquisition is a long-term investment

RECOMMENDATIONS

The acquisition highlights that all infrastructure vendors need to evolve their product portfolio and help CSPs become Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) providers for enterprises. The combination of Ericsson expertise in access networks with Vonage’s platform will help Ericsson become a valuable partner for CSPs, not just an infrastructure provider. All infrastructure vendors are facing a turbulent future with open networks, competition from hyperscalers, market saturation and a complex, long-tail enterprise opportunity. The acquisition of Vonage is definitely a positive move, but Ericsson’s challenge is now to orchestrate a seamless integration of two distinct businesses, something that many similar companies have failed with in the past. For example, Telefonica attempted to start an API business with Bluevia but failed to attract developer interest and generate a significant revenue stream. The Bluevia and Telefonica’s Digital initiative was discontinued.

ABI Research expects similar acquisition, partnership or co-creation strategies to become the norm in the enterprise space, especially as enterprise 5G matures. The Ericsson-Vonage case is an extreme strategy, where an infrastructure vendor acquires expertise, but ABI Research expects more partnerships and co-creation programs rather than acquisitions in the future. For example, the Vodafone-Google Cloud partnership for managing data or the AT&T-Microsoft Azure partnership for edge cloud development. These partnerships will likely shape how 5G will be deployed in the enterprise space, and the race is just starting.

Ericsson’s acquisition of Vonage: short or long-game? (2024)

FAQs

What are the main reasons for Ericsson having acquired cradlepoint and Vonage? ›

Cradlepoint is one of the leading players in the wireless WAN edge market in the US with around 23,000 customers, 1,500 channel partners and more than 1 million live SaaS subscriptions. Therefore, this acquisition will help advance Ericsson's strategy of targeting the enterprise sector.

When did Ericsson acquire Vonage? ›

In December 2021, leading communications company, Ericsson surprised industry analysts with a decision to purchase Vonage, a cloud communications leader. The purchase follows a year full of consolidation, with companies like Salesforce purchasing Slack, and 8x8 acquiring Fuze.

What is the impairment of Ericsson Vonage? ›

Yesterday, Ericsson said that it will record an impairment charge of $2.92 billion (SEK 32 billion) in its third quarter 2023, related to the impairment of goodwill attributed to the Vonage acquisition. Ericsson acquired the New Jersey-based cloud communications provider Vonage Holdings in 2022 for about $6.2 billon.

How much did Ericsson pay for Vonage? ›

Swedish telecom-equipment giant Ericsson has completed its acquisition of Vonage Holdings Corp., a deal worth $6.2 billion when it was first announced last November.

When did Ericsson buy Cradlepoint? ›

The investment is key to Ericsson's ongoing strategy of capturing market share in the rapidly expanding 5G enterprise space. Closing of the acquisition follows the announcement on September 18, 2020 of Ericsson's intention to acquire Cradlepoint.

What happened to Vonage? ›

In July 2022, Ericsson completed its acquisition of Vonage for $6.2 billion.

How long has Vonage been in business? ›

Vonage was founded in 2001 and became a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ericsson in 2022. Vonage is headquartered in Holmdel, New Jersey. We hope you'll join the conversation with us and welcome your feedback.

How long has Vonage been around? ›

Vonage launched its VoIP offering into this reality in 2001 under the name of Min-X.com (it changed its name to Vonage in December 2000). The firm was initially based in Melville, New York and was founded by CEO Jeffrey Citron, but in January 2001 Vonage moved to Edison, New Jersey.

What is Ericsson Vonage? ›

Vonage, a part of Ericsson, delivers a most comprehensive portfolio of communications and network APIs, unified communications and contact center solutions. It's all possible when you partner with us!

What are the Ericsson controversies? ›

The corruption schemes that were identified consist of bribing officials to win government contracts by tapping into slush funds. In China, for example, Ericsson distributed tens of millions of dollars in gifts to win contracts.

How secure is Vonage? ›

We use firewalls and logical access control to protect our servers from unauthorized system access, allowing only trusted operations personnel to manage our systems.

Who is the CEO of Ericsson Vonage? ›

Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) today announces the appointment of Senior Vice President Niklas Heuveldop as new Head of Business Area Global Communications Platform and CEO of Vonage. Mr. Heuveldop who has headed Market Area North America since 2017, will take up his new position on February 1, 2024.

Does Ericsson own Vonage? ›

Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) has completed its acquisition of Vonage Holdings Corp. (Vonage) (NASDAQ: VG), supporting Ericsson's strategy to leverage technology leadership to grow its mobile network business and expand into enterprise.

How much does Vonage really cost? ›

Vonage Pricing and Plans
MobilePremium
Starting Price$14.99 (per month, per line)$24.99 (per month, per line)
Contract LengthAnnualAnnual
Unlimited Domestic CallingYesYes
Unlimited Domestic TextingYesYes
8 more rows
Jan 5, 2024

Is Vonage owned by Verizon? ›

Ericsson-owned Vonage and US communications service provider Verizon have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) outlining their intention to introduce Verizon network Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) to the Vonage platform that will enable the developer community to access network services and ...

How much did Ericsson pay for Cradlepoint? ›

Ericsson paid about $1 billion cash-in-hand for Cradlepoint, which provides wireless wide area network (WAN) and edge gear for enterprises, primarily in the U.S.

What is the purpose of Ericsson? ›

We are a world leader in the rapidly changing environment of communications technology – by providing hardware, software, and services to enable the full value of connectivity.

Who acquired Cradlepoint? ›

Ericsson acquired Cradlepoint for US$1.1 billion in 2020.

Is Cradlepoint part of Ericsson? ›

Cradlepoint is now part of Ericsson and uniquely positioned to lead the Wireless WAN (WWAN) market transition — fueled by 5G and enabled by mobile operators.

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