Business Standard

START-UP CORNER: Securing the network frontier

After 17 years, Network Intelligen­ce has opted to raise funds to invest freely in product innovation and HR developmen­t, writes

- ROMITA MAJUMDAR writes

After 17 years, Network Intelligen­ce has opted to raise funds to invest freely in product innovation and HR developmen­t.

What do your bank, your neighbour’s bank, your last order from your favourite e-commerce site and a large IT MNC have in common? Well, all require cybersecur­ity for protection from the ever-rising danger of cyber snooping and data leaks.

One of the major headaches a lot of companies, especially in banking and financial services, face is the large number of regulatory security requiremen­ts that they need to fulfil. It results in multiple security products, different forms of access based on employee roles and varied levels of security, even for accessing the company networks. With a background in network security, Kanwal K Mookhey saw an opportunit­y to help businesses consolidat­e all of the above solutions and also manage them.

Bengaluru-based cybersecur­ity solutions provider Network Intelligen­ce recently raised ~330 million from private equity firm Helix Investment­s, wherein the company was valued at a little over ~1,550 million.

Varun Didwania, director at Helix Investment­s, said, “With the fast pace of digitisati­on in India, the need for cybersecur­ity services is only going to go up.”

The company offers different forms of managed security services, apart from partnershi­ps with major technology players like IBM, Microsoft and HP. While the company was founded in 2001 and has establishe­d itself among BFSI clients as far as West Asia, this was the first fundraiser for the entirely bootstrapp­ed company. Operations Network Intelligen­ce offers two primary products: Insight that helps manage assets, assess their vulnerabil­ities, determine compliance status, and adopt an effective workflow to address the discovered vulnerabil­ities so that it does not affect your organisati­on. FireSec helps firewall rulebase analysis in medium to large enterprise environmen­ts.

“These technologi­es are complex and skillset availabili­ty is low, but companies are investing increasing­ly in security solutions. So our products help to create a clear interface between all the solutions and optimise the configurat­ions,” said Mookhey.

Almost 60 per cent of their customers are from the BFSI sector, followed by oil & gas as well as IT and ITeS companies. Subscripti­ons are mostly based on annual contracts ranging from one to three years duration. The company also specialise­s in providing General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)-based security solutions for clients that have a base in the European Union. The company also offers managed security services to clients apart from audit facilities.

“Since we have been bootstrapp­ed from the beginning, we had to turn profitable very early on. We have always been focused on getting long-term projects which constitute 70 per cent of revenues,” he adds.

Challenges

But why would a company that has been around since 2001 look for funding 17 years into the business when you are already growing at 30 per cent compound annual growth rate (CAGR)?

“De-risking became a primary focus for us. We are looking at product developmen­t as well as seeking to hire on-site in the US, West Asia, etc,” he said. He adds that investment­s in these areas tend to be riskier and the company wanted to grab the opportunit­y head on, instead of waiting for incrementa­l investment­s from their profits within a certain time frame.

The key challenges for the company so far have been winning new business, maintainin­g cash flow collection­s and building scale without sufficient funding in the initial years. The launch of its inhouse training division which has helped the firm meet talent needs. Since it started receiving traction from their client base, it was able to rapidly expand into other geographie­s.

Mookhey puts maintenanc­e of quality service as the top priority in the long-run while continuous­ly upgrading skill. “Obviously, making relevant products will be the top priority for us. Maintainin­g a CAGR of 40-50 per cent while holding on to a healthy Ebidta of 20 per cent is definitely a medium-term goal. Most importantl­y we will continue to build the business into a strong brand,” he said.

 ??  ?? Kanwal K Mookhey, Network Intelligen­ce founder
Kanwal K Mookhey, Network Intelligen­ce founder
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