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Divine seeking to become Net powerhouse
By Dennis Callaghan
eWEEK
August 24, 2001


Open Market Inc., an e-commerce pioneer and the holder of patents for the Web shopping cart
and online credit card processing, will soon be absorbed into Divine Inc., an Internet holding
company turned burgeoning e-business software vendor.

Chicago-based Divine is establishing itself as a force in the so-called extended enterprise space
to integrate customer data with internal data and share information with partners and suppliers.

"We want to offer not only the technologies that do collaboration, interaction and knowledge
management but also have the know-how of professional services to deliver those solutions and
manage those applications," said CEO Andrew "Flip" Filipowski.

"They`re all applications that affect the top line," Filipowski said.


Divine was formed two years
ago as Divine InterVentures
Inc. after Filipowski sold his
previous company, Platinum
Technology International Inc.,
which had bought more than
70 companies. Divine
InterVentures originally set out
to form a network of startup
companies that it had invested
in, all centered on
business-to-business
e-commerce. As the high-tech
market soured and stock
prices plummeted, the
company shortened its name
and began to buy companies
at fire-sale prices.

Indeed, some industry
watchers say they believe Divine got Open Market for a bargain in a stock swap valued at a
little less than $60 million.

Open Market, of Burlington, Mass., was down to just $9 million in cash at the close of the last
quarter, June 30, though it had a still-untapped $40 million credit line, said Joe Alwan, the
company`s senior vice president of worldwide marketing.

Open Market had repositioned itself as a content management provider with the March launch
of Content Server Enterprise Edition, abandoning future development of its core Transact
product for order and transaction management and divesting itself of its ShopSite e-commerce
offering.

But Open Market`s content management business didn`t grow fast enough to make up for the
sudden drop in e-commerce software revenues. For the first six months of this year, Open
Market recorded revenues of $26.9 million, compared with $51.3 million in the same period a
year ago. It recorded losses of $15 million through the first half of the year.

As for the rest of Divine, Filipowski plans more acquisitions, particularly in the services area.
"There`s only a few steps left in the product areas," Filipowski said. "We had no more than a
dozen mapped, but I don`t think there will ever be a time when anything will be completed.
We`re looking to expand professional services and looking for additional found items in
managed applications."

Filipowski seems to have more of a focused strategy this time around than when he built
Platinum. He said he also has a clearer vision of where the acquired companies will fit with the
new company, something that often took months to determine at Platinum, which had
applications in a number of areas, including data warehousing and analysis, database
performance, metadata management, and systems and network management.

Platinum had nearly $1 billion in revenues but had recorded net losses for five years straight
when Computer Associates International Inc. bought it in June 1999. Still, CA paid a staggering
$3.5 billion in cash for the company.

Open Market software user Brian Whitehead was encouraged that the company had been
bought but said that its financial position was still short of where he would like to see it.

Whitehead, vice president and chief technical architect at the Standard & Poor`s division of The
McGraw-Hill Cos., said Divine could bring some partnership opportunities to his own company,
which could provide content for Divine`s portal offerings. But he has some reservations about
Divine as well.

"There`s some concern as to whether they`ll truly integrate their products. With Platinum, they
never really did," said Whitehead, in New York. He is also waiting to see if Divine will be more
than just an Internet holding company. "I`m aware of Flip`s track record," he said.

All the applications Divine has acquired to date are built on the Java 2 Enterprise Edition
application framework and .Net, which should make integration of the different applications
easier, Filipowski said.

Filipowski said he doesn`t expect other companies that started out as venture capitals to take
Divine`s approach. Still, he said what his company is doing is hardly new. "There were 22,000
car companies; now there`s three. There were 500 PC companies; now there`s five. This is a
continuation of what happens in every economic cycle on the downside of the market,"
Filipowski said. "It`s what the Vanderbilts did with the railroads, the Rockefellers with oil, the
Morgans with the financial industry."
 
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