Microsoft bids $1.2B for Fast Search and Transfer

·

By integrating Fast Search's products with SharePoint, Microsoft hopes to bring the Norwegian enterprise search company's products to a wider audience .
Microsoft has offered to buy enterprise search software company Fast Search And Transfer for 6.6 billion Norwegian kroner ($1.2 billion), it said Tuesday.
The acquisition will bring Microsoft powerful high-end search technologies to complement its enterprise infrastructure offering, the company said.
Microsoft's recent efforts in the enterprise search market have been aimed at the other end of the market. In November, It introduced two new low-end enterprise search products, Search Server 2008 and Search Server Express 2008, both based on its SharePoint Server 2007 business productivity platform. It is pitching Search Server 2008 as a cheap entry into enterprise search, while the Express version is free for single installations.
By integrating Fast Search's products with SharePoint, and drawing on its worldwide network of partners, Microsoft hopes to bring Fast Search's products to a wider audience, it said Tuesday.
It is also counting on Fast Search's Norwegian research team to bolster its research efforts in Europe. Microsoft has laboratories in Cambridge, England, and in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The directors of Fast Search, based in Oslo, have recommended that shareholders accept the offer, which represents a premium of 42 percent over Fast Search's share price at close of business on Friday. The companies expect the deal to close in the second quarter, subject to customary closing conditions, including the approval of the holders of at least 90 percent of Fast Search's shares.
Fast Search's rivals in the market for specialized enterprise search tools include Google, with its Search Appliance; French search company Exalead, and Autonomy, which recently acquired Meridio and Zantaz.
Representatives of Fast Search could not immediately be reached for comment.

Enter your email address: