• About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • About
Thursday, May 15, 2025
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
iotarizona
  • Home
  • Tech
  • IoT
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Data & Analytics
  • Smart Cities
  • AI
  • IIoT
  • Manufacturing
  • Connected Cars
  • Home
  • Tech
  • IoT
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Data & Analytics
  • Smart Cities
  • AI
  • IIoT
  • Manufacturing
  • Connected Cars
No Result
View All Result
iotarizona
No Result
View All Result
Home Tech

What is Cohesity and why did it pull in $250M in venture money?

in Tech
What is Cohesity and why did it pull in $250M in venture money?
0
SHARES
10
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When a company scores $250 million – as Cohehsity has – for a grand total of $410 million raised, one has to wonder what all the hoopla is about, especially given some of the spectacular flameouts we’ve seen over the years.

But Cohesity isn’t vapor; it’s shipping a product that it claims helps solve a problem that has plagued enterprises forever: data siloing.

Founded in 2013 and led by Nutanix co-founder Mohit Aron, Cohesity just racked up a $250 million investment led by SoftBank Group’s Vision Fund, which includes funding from Cisco Investments, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Morgan Stanley Expansion Capital, and Sequoia Capital. Those are some big names, to say the least.

What Cohesity’s product does

Cohesity provides a unified view and access into corporate data by converging secondary data, such as system backups and analytics, and connecting these across the public cloud, private cloud, or storage hardware into one unified view. The company said secondary data accounts for up to 80 percent of total enterprise data.

“That secondary storage is fragmented, sprawling across many markets,” said Cohesity CMO Lynn Lucas. “It’s highly inefficient. CIOs don’t know what they have, just that they have lots of copies of it.”

Storage tends to be used as an all-encompassing word, but it entails many disparate functions, such as backup and recovery, media and data servers, and their backup servers, targeted storage such as tape archives, and deliberate duplications, such as test beds for application development testing.

Lucas notes that a typical data center has five vendors just for backup. Throw in master and media servers, backup servers, and tape archive, and you have multiple silos from multiple vendors that don’t see each other, let alone the cloud because most were built well before the advent of the cloud.

“No one ever took a step back and said, ‘What’s a different way to do this?’ Why do we have to have so many copies of data, and different systems for IT teams?” said Lucas.

Cohesity system works in existing data centers

Cohesity claims it can install its distributed file system into today’s existing data center environment and integrate into the existing infrastructure, so their customers don’t have to rip and replace. Customers can keep their software and when they do backups, point that software to Cohesity and all of the other systems see it. Or if they can replace all of their individual software UIs with one integrated platform.

Cohesity has been shipping production software for two years and are on the 6.0 generation.

It says the overall secondary storage market is a potential $60 billion, all of which it can reach since it covers the whole span of secondary storage. So it has the potential to reach many markets and customers.

The investment money will be used to help fund further global expansion. Cohesity says it has more than 200 enterprise customers.

Join the Network World communities on Facebook and LinkedIn to comment on topics that are top of mind.
Download WordPress Themes Free
Free Download WordPress Themes
Free Download WordPress Themes
Download WordPress Themes Free
online free course
download coolpad firmware
Download WordPress Themes
online free course
Tags: Related: Storage Data Center Disaster Recovery
ADVERTISEMENT
Next Post
Cisco makes SD-WAN integration a top priority

Cisco makes SD-WAN integration a top priority

Recommended

Most data center workers happy with their jobs — despite the heavy demands

Most data center workers happy with their jobs — despite the heavy demands

Triton and the new wave of IIoT security threats

Triton and the new wave of IIoT security threats

Facebook Twitter Youtube RSS

Newsletter

Subscribe our Newsletter for latest updates.

Loading

Category

  • AI
  • Analysis
  • Connected Cars
  • Connected Vehicles
  • Data & Analytics
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Healthcare
  • IIoT
  • IoT
  • Manufacturing
  • News
  • Oil & Gas
  • Security
  • Smart Cities
  • Smart Homes
  • Standards
  • Tech
  • Uncategorized
  • Wearables

About Us

Advance IOT information site of Arizona, USA.

© 2019-24 iotarizona.com.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Tech
  • IoT
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Data & Analytics
  • Smart Cities
  • AI
  • IIoT
  • Manufacturing
  • Connected Cars

© 2019-24 iotarizona.com.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In