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Vancouver softphone firm buys NewHeights

Vancouver softphone firm buys NewHeights

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 06 Aug 2007 For: Network World Canada Creator

The brains behind CounterPath, which makes consumer products for Vonage and others, hope Terry Matthews' name and a startup founded by his son will bring it some added cache in the enterprise. Also: In search of a sticky interface

Softphones are a niche communications product, a piece of software that mimics a desktop telephone but conveniently saves space by sitting on a PC or laptop, where it can interact with contact management applications. However, they may be about to become more interesting following the multi-million dollar merger of two Canadian softphone makers involving Mitel Networks chairman Terry Matthews.

Last Friday CounterPath Solutions Inc. of Vancouver, which makes consumer softphones for carriers including Vonage, AT&T and British Telecom, bought NewHeights Software Corp., an Ottawa developer of enterprise softphones for Mitel and Nortel Networks customers co-founded by Matthews’ son, Owen.

As part of the deal Terry Matthews’ private investment company, Wesley Clover – which partly owns NewHeights – is putting $6 million into CounterPath, becoming that company’s biggest shareholder.

Terry Matthews becomes chair of CounterPath, while Owen Matthews and CounterPath founder, chairman and CEO Mark Bruk are now vice-chairmen of the merged firm. NewHeights president Greg Pelling becomes the new CounterPath CEO. The result of the complicated deal will see CounterPath with some $8 million of new cash or cash commitments involving the money from Wesley Clover, NewHeights, shares issued by CounterPath and some $2 million from CounterPath’s original investors.

That money, said Bruk, serves two purposes: to assure carriers that CounterPath is financially stable and to fund growth including building a VAR channel. Just as important, Bruk added, is having Terry Matthews’ name at the top of the organization chart.

“To have him agree to be part of CounterPath really puts the stamp of approval on the company,” he said. While CounterPath is known among mid-level managers of telcos and cable companies, Matthews can bring the company’s name to C-level executives, he said.

Ronald Gruia, a telecom industry analyst with Frost & Sullivan in Toronto, said the deal could be timely. Telcos and service providers worry that Skype and Google could issue their own softphones and carry away customer loyalty, he said, and carry away possible revenue if the softphone carries ads or links to other companies’ services.

What providers want is a softphone with a “sticky interface” with their brand name that will keep customers with them, Gruia said. “I think as carriers start wanting to deploy personal communications managers that will allow users to build an affinity with their brand there is opportunity for this market to explode.”

Other softphone makers include FirstHand Technologies of Ottawa, SpectraLink and Nuvoiz.

CounterPath was founded in 2002 as Xten Networks by Bruk and two others to create Windows softphones for Internet service providers like Vonage. A Macintosh version was added later.

A reverse take-over of a company on the Nasdaq over-the-counter board put the company public in 2004. Despite a roster of leading telcos it had trouble raising more money, forcing Bruk’s brother being one of the leading investors.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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