Jasmine: Wall Street's Way to San Jose

A metro optical startup with top talent, Jasmine plans to compete with Cisco, Cyras, Redback, et al.

November 9, 2000

6 Min Read
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A new metro optical vendor has blossomed in San Jose, but it has its rootson Wall Street.

The company’s name is Jasmine Networks, and it has three things going for it. First, it’s developing some novel,silicon-based service provisioning technology. Second, it has attracted sometop-of-the-line technology talent. Third, and most importantly, it hasexceptionally close ties to Wall Street investment banks –- something thatshould make its path to an IPO both short and sweet.

“Most startups now hope to go from formation to IPO in 18 months. We’ll doit in 15 months,” says Mouli Ramani, vice president of business developmentat Jasmine. The company was founded in February this year -- and the plan isto take it public mid-2001, he says.

The few people who have been briefed by Jasmine have been wowed by itsstory. “This is a kick-ass company, and it seems to have appeared out ofnowhere,” says Scott Clavenna, president of PointEast Research and directorof research for Light Reading.

So what’s it working on?

Jasmine is developing a multi-protocol edge switch, called the CNS (forConverged Network Services) that will be installed in metropolitan areanetworks (MANs).The CNS will support a bunch of different protocols and interfaces (IP, ATM,gigabit Ethernet, voice, Sonet, and so on), according to Jasmine, and willallow service providers to mix and match different speeds and feeds toaccommodate their network needs. At the product’s heart are twin buses -- onefor packet traffic, and one for TDM. Each runs at 80 Gbit/s.

So far, so what?

Well, Jasmine says that’s just the basics. What sets their product apart fromthe plethora of optical startups now trying to shoehorn intothe MAN market, Jasmine contends, is its ability to make money for service providers by lettingthem quickly and easily roll out differentiated services.

“A lot of startups are focused on building the infrastructure, and that’smissing the point where service providers are concerned,” says Ramani. “Wedon’t just want to build them a box; we want to build their business casefor them as well, by giving them the means to make money over thatinfrastructure.”

That may sound like the same lame service-provisioning spiel some otherstartups are starting to trot out, but it’s not. For one thing, Jasmine’sgot a new and different take on service-provisioning technology.Specifically, it’s planning to bake (or “fuse”) support for differentapplications and services right into the product’s ASICs (application-specific integrated circuits), rather than running them as software. TheASIC approach will ensure that these services can be easily and quicklyactivated, and also that they will run at top speed, Jasmine claims.

Right now they’re planning to do this for three services: bandwidth trading, allowing carriers to trade capacity in real time; virtual lambdas, enabling them to subdivide and resell wavelengths; and virtualprivate networks (VPNs). Jasmine intends to support other services in software.

Another difference: This startup’s got the technical know-how to make its ASIC-bake asuccess.Its CTO is N. S. Rao, who has quite the track record when it comes todeveloping networking silicon.

Rao previously worked at Cerent (subsequently bought by Cisco Systems Inc. [Nasdaq: CSCO]), developingsome small, high-performance ASICs that pretty much revolutionized the Sonetmarket when they were bunged into svelte add-drop multiplexers(ADMs). He then moved to Cyras Systems Inc., where he developed stillsmaller ASICs. Now at Jasmine, he’s working on his tiniest chipsyet.

Jasmine says the wee silicon will allow it to make a switch “the size of amicrowave oven,” saving service providers huge amounts of money by makingmaximum use of available power and space in colocation facilities.

For now, however, the microwave-size switch is still on the drawing board. Alarger beta version of its CNS product -- which Jasmine claims is already inbeta tests -- is based on chunkier field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs),which represent a sort of halfway house between software and ASICs. TheASIC edition won’t ship until next year.

Rao isn’t the only notable staffer at Jasmine. Ramani was formally VP ofstrategic marketing for optical Internet products at Nortel Networks Corp. (NYSE/Toronto: NT), where he workedfor eight years. Also on board is David Robert, formerly a VP of sales atNortel, where he worked for 15 years.

And, significantly, the company also has some heavy-duty Wall Streetconnections -- which should serve to smooth its path to an IPO.

Jasmine’s founding chairman and director of the board is E.S.P. Das. Untilsix weeks ago, Das was vice-chairman of investment banking at Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. (NYSE: MER).Its CEO is Ravi Dattatreya, who previously served as senior vice presidentat Sumitomo Bank Capital Markets, as well as with Prudential Securities, andGoldman Sachs & Co. (NYSE: GS). (It’s a sign of the strength of Jasmine’s Wall Street tiesthat executives like Ramani have homes in Silicon Valley andcorporate apartments in Manhattan, near The Street).

Wall Street’s gain is the VCs’ loss. In fact, Jasmine appears to be yetanother example of the waning influence of venture capital firms in opticaldeals.Das and Dattatreya are wealthy enough that they put up the first $10 millionround of funding for Jasmine themselves. VCs were persona non grataat this stage of the company’s inception.

More recently, Jasmine deigned to allow three VC firms to contribute $80million to their war chest. But its Wall Street connections allowed it tomake an end run around the usual tier one VCs -- such as Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers,New Enterprise Associates, or Sequoia Capital.Instead, it picked Baker Capital Corp., Optical Capital Group (which is backed by Corvis Corp.’s DavidHuber – see Huber Extends His Reach), and Jackpot Enterprises. (As its name suggests,Jackpot Enterprises started life in the gaming industry, recently moving to reinvent itself as a VC and incubator. It is shortly to be renamed JNetEnterprises -- not a moment too soon).

“That’s not so much a ‘who’s who?’ [of VCs] as a ‘who cares?’ It’s clearfrom Jasmine’s choice of backers that they aren’t just blasé about VC money -- they’re not especially interested in getting their advice either,” commentsone industry observer.

Ramani says that’s not true: “We think the VCs we picked are exactly theones we need. They will provide us with senior management discipline,without being pushy or nosy or trying to tell us how to try to run atelecom operation. They won’t be so hands-off that they are invisible.”

However, he also notes: “Each of the founders has a healthy skepticism overthe value of VCs. We wanted partners who would give us flexibility.”

Jasmine now has a staff of about 150 -- 45 of whom were rattling around itscavernous new offices in San Jose when Light Reading paid a visitlast week. Once word gets out of the company’s plans for a shake ’n’ bakeIPO, it should have little trouble in filling the rest of the space.

Stephen Saunders, US Editor, Light Reading http://www.lightreading.com

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