Quantcast
JAN 27, 2012 10:25am ET

Related Links

What Will Technology Look Like in 5 Years?
JAN 1, 2012

Web Seminars

Dashboards: How's Business? Ask your Data!
March 15, 2012
10 Ways to Achieve Better IT Credibility…and Save Money | A Financial Services Case Study
Available On Demand
Is there Money in the Mobile Wallet?: Business Models and Prospects for Mobile Payments in the U.S.
Available On Demand

Remember EarthLink? It's Now in IT Services and Targeting Banks

Print
Reprints
Email

When was the last time you emailed somebody @earthlink.net?

Once a venerable supplier of Internet connectivity, EarthLink Inc. has reinvented itself — as a vendor for banks, among other businesses.

"EarthLink has had its ups and downs, but it is the poster boy of a company that continuously reinvents itself," says Phil Blank, a senior analyst with Javelin Strategy and Research.

In the decade since many industry experts wrote off EarthLink as yesterday's ISP, it has been on an acquisitive tear, buying the abilities to offer private-cloud, data co-location, server-virtualization, disaster-recovery and other services. It has also improved the capacity and scope of its voice and data offerings.

Regions Financial Corp., of Birmingham, Ala., uses EarthLink's myLink portal, a dashboard that allows banks to view and control telecommunications applications.

"If something happens in one call center, or an [interactive voice response] goes down, I can use my Blackberry and reroute traffic in real time," says Ann H. Sears, an IT officer for Regions telecommunications.

That process, which might have taken the better part of the day before, can now be accomplished in a matter of minutes, and Sears says there's no need for her to be in the office to facilitate any changes.

EarthLink counts 175,000 business customers and more than 3 million consumer customers. About 10% of its Business unit's revenue comes from banking, roughly $27 million in the third quarter, the company says. The rest comes from construction, health care, government and retail. EarthLink's total third-quarter revenue was $357 million.

"Our strategic intent is to position EarthLink as an IT services company for businesses who see the need for IT and network security as essential to their future success," EarthLink's chairman and chief executive officer Rolla Huff told investors during a third-quarter earnings call with analysts in October.

EarthLink's reinvention as a banking and business service provider had the air of inevitability, experts say.

EarthLink built its capabilities not only through acquisitions of competing ISPs like MindSpring Enterprise in 2000, but through more recent purchases of telecommunications and data networking companies.

It acquired New Edge Networks, of Vancouver, Wash., in 2006. New Edge "was a leading provider of MPLS networks, a special highly secure method of transmitting IP traffic, and something you use to build a private cloud," which is a private group of remotely networked servers, says Vikram Desai, president of advanced services for EarthLink.

That was followed in 2010 by the acquisition of regional telecom provider ITC DeltaCom Inc., of Huntsville, Ala., and last year of One Communications, a telecom provider based in Burlington, Mass.

The last two acquisitions brought with them 150,000 new customers, including some banks.

Among EarthLink's benefits to banks is "a nationwide platform that's highly secure and completely private, that helps financial services … in a secure and cost-effective manner," Desai says.

EarthLink would not reveal how many banking customers it has, but it's most likely fewer than a couple of dozen, experts say. Besides Regions, which was a former ITC DeltaCom customer, it also counts Suntrust Banks Inc., which uses its voice and data services, an EarthLink spokeswoman says.

EarthLink can potentially develop a solid niche with smaller banks and credit unions, which are eager to reduce IT costs and which often lack internal IT departments, experts say.

A big bank, by contrast, "is unlikely to take its data centers and give them to EarthLink," says Alan Mattei, a partner at Novantas LLC of New York.

Comments (0)

Be the first to comment on this post using the section below.

Add Your Comments:
You must be registered to post a comment.
Not Registered?
You must be registered to post a comment. Click here to register.
Already registered? Log in here
Please note you must now log in with your email address and password.

Email Newsletters

Get the Daily Briefing and the Morning Update when you sign up for a free trial.

Already a subscriber? Log in here
Please note you must now log in with your email address and password.