Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 September 2016

Why Google is paying $625 Million to Acquire API Company



Cloud chief Diane Greene is in charge as Google and Apigee announced a definitive agreement for Apigee to join the Googleplex in a deal valued at about $625 million. 
With the new acquisition announced on Thursday, Google continues to “get with the program” in building out a new-look cloud offering to go toe-to-toe with the likes of Amazon and Microsoft.
 And in a conversation with Forbes following the announcement, Greene said the Apigee acquisition is all about APIs.
“Almost every customer that I talk to is talking about how they’re using APIs, and what a step function they are for their business,” Greene says. “It’s an incredible fit for us to be able to offer enterprise customers what they need in their digital transformation.”
Google has raised its cloud profile under Greene, investing in reorganizing the unit’s structure while bringing in new faces and technology through hiring and acquisition. The company pitches itself as having particular strengh in back-end services, analytics and machine learning—who knows better than the search giant about how to crunch data, the argument goes—but Google lacked a true proxy tool that would connect on-premise back-end services to the increasingly mobile-first applications that businesses are building today. “We had pieces of it, but we didn’t have a full solution like Apigee,” Greene says.
Apigee, meanwhile, went public in April 2015 but endured a rocky year-and-change on the public market. After pricing at $17 per share, the company was trading as low as $7.75 in March, when CEO Chet Kapoor told Business Insider he had no regrets about the IPO. Apigee’s stock since made its way all the way back, up to $17.40 per share at the price Google plans to pay. On the phone with Greene, Kapoor told Forbes that his company has found traction especially with retail and financial services companies, as well as telcos. “They want to make sure they have a rich experience with customers and partners, and they have to take advantage of the back-end they have,” he says. Using APIs, “you can decrease time to market and make it a richer experience.”
Kapoor had better get used to his future boss Greene jumping in; those words had barely left the CEO’s mouth before Greene interjected that Google has found its enterprise customers to be moving faster than she’d originally expected. “It’s not so much that they’re being disrupted so much as it’s, ‘Whoa, there’s so much I can take advantage of here,’” she says.
But Kapoor is excited to be overruled by Greene. Apigee chose to sell to Google for two reasons, he says: Google’s cloud platform committing to an open architecture ecosystem that embraces multi-cloud and hybrid cloud strategies in which customers can mix and match products from different vendors and keep their own pieces on-premise, and to work with Greene.
While Amazon Web Services remains the first mover in cloud services, leading challengers like Microsoft and IBM pitch themselves as the most hybrid cloud-friendly partners for large-scale businesses that have complicated infrastructures set up on their own servers that they don’t plan to walk away from anytime soon. Greene argues that Google’s on-premise efforts are already considerable, though they’ll get a jolt from including Apigee. Just the day before, Greene and Google announced a new partnership with Box to bring Box-secured data to Google’s business apps.
Apigee’s product will help those customers make calls for data between their back end and their apps and also keep track of what happens on each one. That gives the company an analytics component, though both say the focus is on the APIs.
The deal is expected to close by the end of 2016.

(FORBES)

Wednesday, 7 September 2016

‘We don’t give businessmen, entertainers Police protection’


Niger State Police Command on Wednesday confirmed that businessmen and entertainers are not constitutionally entitled to private Police protection in the state.
The Police Public Relations Officer, Bala Elkana, in an interview with our correspondent in Minna, said that the primary role of the Police is to protect lives and property of the people. “We are not part of anything short of that,” he said.
Elkana said, “If you look at the bulk of our men, they are being deployed on patrol duties. We don’t even have enough, not to talk of giving businessmen and entertainers private police protection.”
He, however, said that there are classes of individuals who, by virtue of their positions, are entitled to Police protection.
Such classes include governors and tehir deputies, chief judge of states, high court
judges, Speakers Houses of Assembly, local government chairmen, and former heads of State.

Monday, 5 September 2016

BOI Promises More Efforts At Wealth Creation


The Bank of Industry (BOI) says despite the nation’s challenges , it would continue to work towards enriching economic activities among Nigerians to reduce the  poverty rate.
The Divisional Head, Small and Medium Enterprises in the Southwest, Abdul-Aniyu Mohammed gave this assurance at the quarterly Customers’ Networking Forum for the Southwest region held in Osogbo the Osun State capital.
He added that the aim of the forum was  to create a proactive path and direction for small business owners and entrepreneurs‎, to interact with them and get to know what their pains were.
Other speakers also pointed out the need to redefine satisfying the customers ‎to retain the business relationship in the face of competition.
The Customers Forum was an avenue for the participants to bare their minds on issues bothering their minds and proffer possible solutions.