Meru Networks has raised USD30m in a private funding round led by a new investor managed by Vision Capital Advisors of New York City.
Existing investors, including Clearstone Venture Partners, NeoCarta Ventures, BlueStream Ventures, The D. E. Shaw Group, Evercore Partners, Tenaya Capital and Monitor Ventures, also participated in the funding round.
‘We are experiencing unprecedented enthusiasm for IEEE 802.11n solutions, and enterprises’ rapid adoption of the 802.11n standard presents us with the opportunity to accelerate our WLAN market share growth,’ says Brett White, Meru’s chief financial officer.
‘CIOs are looking for a wireless solution that is easy to deploy, secure and manage so their organizations can not only run all business-critical applications reliably over their WLANs but can do so with reduced budgets and more efficient utilization of precious networking staff. The latest round of funding will give us the resources to continue our mission of solving application performance problems over wireless while meeting the strong demand we’re seeing from the health-care and education markets and Fortune 2000-size companies.’
Firas Abi-Nassif, director of tech and telecom investments at Vision Capital Advisors, adds: ‘In this difficult economic environment, our investment criteria limit us to choosing companies with a clear technological edge over their competitors. Their solutions must be essential to lowering costs and increasing productivity for their customers, as this provides those companies a financial advantage which offers strong protection against further deterioration in the market. We believe that Meru is a case in point, having established the dominant technological position in enterprise wireless networking by bringing the cost and performance benefits of virtualization to that arena. We are very excited to be an investor in Meru.’
Meru’s 802.11n virtual cell WLAN products outperformed enterprise-class WLAN solutions from Cisco and Aruba in a competitive test recently conducted by technology analyst firm Novarum.