USB Encryption Goes Mainstream As Kingston Completes IronKey Acquistion

USB Encryption Goes Mainstream As Kingston Completes IronKey Acquistion

Kingston’s $4.25 million acquisition of the IronKey assets from Imation was a rare occurrence, as the fairly conservative company is not known for merger and acquisition activity. Kingston tends to favor internal development of new technology and products, and the company has met with resounding success in its efforts thus far. However, Kingston decided to procure the USB technology and assets when the IronKey portion of the Imation portfolio became available, but sold the IronKey external HDD business. This choice makes sense, as Kingston is a company built upon its core flash competency.  

Kingston offered its own FIPS 140-2 Level 3 (the highest level) encrypted USB products for 12 years, but its encrypted USB products appealed more to the general client market and tended to be pricey. Kingston did not attain the traction that the IronKey brand gained with lucrative business and government customers. Kingston will integrate the full breadth of IronKey products into its portfolio, and the company will offer all of the existing and future IronKey products under “Kingston IronKey” branding.

 

Kingston bucks the long-held, and mostly accurate, industry predictions that indicate fab-less SSD vendors will fall to the wayside. It is incredibly hard to compete with firms that produce their own NAND, but according to the Trendfocus CQ2015 Total SSD Market report, Kingston still holds a commanding presence in the global SSD market. Surprisingly, its 10.1% share of the total global SSD market outweighs several of its fab-enabled competitors, such as Intel, Micron, Toshiba, SK Hynix and SanDisk.

Kingston innovates by staying on the cutting edge of NAND technology – it procures NAND wafers and processes and packages the raw NAND into packages, thus ensuring cost efficiency that allows it to compete with the fabs. NAND fabs are beholden to their own NAND, but Kingston has the flexibility of procuring NAND from a number of sources. This helps ensure that it has access to the best performance and price for each successive NAND generation.

Imation built its IronKey products on an older hardware platform. In the encryption market, reliability and security typically outweigh performance and cost considerations. In fact, Imation did not actually produce its own products; it sub-contracted that aspect of its business out to third parties. Kingston’s extensive experience and technology will allow it to upgrade the current IronKey products to new and more cost–effective controllers and NAND. This will allow Kingston to offer the IronKey products at lower prices, which should help foster wider adoption in diversified market segments beyond the core Imation business and government contracts.

The majority of Kingston’s purchase centers on the IronKey IP. Imation had no dedicated production facilities due to its third-party production model. Kingston will continue to use the third-party manufacturing for a short time as it spins up its own facilities. The manufacturing transition will obviously be a top priority, as it will lower cost and allow Kingston more control of the supply chain.

The hardest part of any M&A activity always centers on the successful melding of the different cultures inside each respective company, but Imation had laid off a number of IronKey staff in December of 2015, and it did not keep any full time employees. This unfortunate fact should help Kingston integrate the two companies quickly.

DataLocker procured the IronKey management service assets, which is an integral portion of the IronKey product portfolio. Kingston and DataLocker had an extensive working relationship in the past, and Kingston signed a three-year contract with the company to provide the software piece of the puzzle. This move makes sense, as Kingston wishes to focus on its own core capabilities, thus leaving the software piece to the software company. Kingston also divested the IronKey HDD assets to DataLocker.

There was a thirty-day transition period signed into the Kingston/IronKey contract that has already expired. Kingston is now shipping the full breadth of IronKey products under its own branding. Kingston will maintain its encrypted DataTraveler products for customers who do not require the extra brick wall of FIPS 140-2 level encryption.

Melding the Imation IronKey technology portfolio with Kingston’s deep NAND experience, design expertise and manufacturing prowess should be a win for the consumer. Imation had a reputation for high-priced products, which Kingston’s scale should help remedy.

Kingston plans to extend its full global sales and support mechanism to all existing IronKey customers, and the promise of newer and more cost-effective solutions will bolster the long-term prospects for Kingston’s security-conscious USB products.

 

Source: Toms IT Pro

http://www.tomsitpro.com/articles/kingston-ironkey-imation-usb-encryption,1-3182.html

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