Will bring data center services to local businesses.

Mitch Wagner, Executive Editor, Light Reading

June 2, 2015

3 Min Read
32 Regional Telcos Buy Codero Cloud Hosting

A consortium of 32 rural and independent service providers is buying cloud provider Codero Hosting, planning to use the investment to beef up their business offerings.

Codero sees the sale to BLM Acquisition Corp. as providing a channel for Codero services. "It isn't just about the money. There's a lot of money to be had if it's about money," Emil Sayegh, Codero president and CEO, told Light Reading. (See Codero Hosting Acquired By 32 Regional SPs.)

"We just added 32 channel partners with vast resources, millions and millions of customers, thousands of feet on the street, millions of square miles," he says.

Figure 1: Image source: Codero Image source: Codero

"We will be putting data center footprints in their locations to enable them to serve customers better," he says.

Codero's investment in SDN technology is a big part of the appeal, Sayegh says. "We're able to put a minimal footprint at their locations," he says. The investment will help bring services such as video and the Internet of Things to smaller cities. "We will be developing products for all these non-NFL cities." (See SDN Drives Codero's Flexible Hybrid Clouds.)

Localized data center technology of about 5,000 square feet will be used for latency-sensitive applications such as video telephony and audio surveillance, and local government services that want equipment located locally, including emerging police bodycam video, Sayegh says.

Sayegh will stay on as CEO, and become chairman and president. The board will consist of eight people, with four from the investment companies.

The consortium doing the acquisition, BLM, was founded by Bill King, president of JSI Capital Advisors, which provides investment services to rural and independent telcos, along with Leo and Manny Staurulakis, principals in John Staurulakis Inc., which provides business management and regulatory consulting to rural and independent telcos. The three men set up BLM and recruited the 32 service providers to buy Codero.

The new buyers include:

  • The Horry Telephone Cooperative, in Horry County, S.C., largest telephone coop in the country

  • Golden West Telecommunications, which serves about a third of South Dakota

  • Hiawatha Communications, serving the upper peninsula of Michigan with Peninsula Fiber Network

  • Dakota Carrier Network, a fiber network in North Dakota owned by rural telephone companies and cooperatives

  • USConnect Holdings, which owns seven different telcos in Texas, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska and Georgia.

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BLM sees the acquisition as a means of helping small phone companies make the transition from the old business model to more complex services. "The small telephone company industry -- who have been around in many cases 100 years or more -- their bread and butter has traditionally been voice," King told Light Reading. That's transitioning to VoIP, broadband, DSL and fiber.

The phone companies provide "boots on the ground" and detailed knowledge of their specific markets, King says. Codero provides technology expertise.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

— Mitch Wagner, Circle me on Google+ Follow me on TwitterVisit my LinkedIn profileFollow me on Facebook, West Coast Bureau Chief, Light Reading. Got a tip about SDN or NFV? Send it to [email protected].

About the Author(s)

Mitch Wagner

Executive Editor, Light Reading

San Diego-based Mitch Wagner is many things. As well as being "our guy" on the West Coast (of the US, not Scotland, or anywhere else with indifferent meteorological conditions), he's a husband (to his wife), dissatisfied Democrat, American (so he could be President some day), nonobservant Jew, and science fiction fan. Not necessarily in that order.

He's also one half of a special duo, along with Minnie, who is the co-habitor of the West Coast Bureau and Light Reading's primary chewer of sticks, though she is not the only one on the team who regularly munches on bark.

Wagner, whose previous positions include Editor-in-Chief at Internet Evolution and Executive Editor at InformationWeek, will be responsible for tracking and reporting on developments in Silicon Valley and other US West Coast hotspots of communications technology innovation.

Beats: Software-defined networking (SDN), network functions virtualization (NFV), IP networking, and colored foods (such as 'green rice').

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