Networking startup Nile raises US$175 million – Networking


Nile, a networking startup co-founded by former Cisco Systems executives John Chambers and Pankaj Patel, has raised US$175 million ($265 million) in a new round to fund its efforts to build a Cisco competitor, the company said.

Networking startup Nile raises US$175 million


The new round, co-led by March Capital and Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, Sanabil Investments, also attracted corporate investors including the venture capital arms of Saudi Telecom Company and Liberty Global.

Nile, which has previously raised US$125 million, did not disclose its valuation, but said it had doubled since the last round.

Data from PitchBook pegged the company’s valuation at US$395 million in 2020.

Nile provides network-as-a-service (NaaS) solution focusing on secure wired and wireless products, offering an alternative in building corporate wi-fi, which has been dominated by players including Cisco, Juniper Networks, and HPE’s Aruba Wireless.

Since its technology became available last May, Nile has signed customers such as Stanford University and startup Carta.

Pankaj Patel, chief executive at Nile, said the young company can challenge the incumbents by offering ease of use at lower cost and advanced security features in its network.

Nile’s services-only offering could save clients 30 percent to 50 percent at each location, partly because it is a consumption-based model, so users don’t have to pay upfront fees on equipment or spend on maintenance, Patel claims.

“We really equate this very much like a utility, that customers are really looking for something which is invisible. That is the level of ease and reliability and simplicity that people need and that is what we have done,” Patel told Reuters.

With 185 employees, the company now plans to expand its sales and marketing team, targeting mid-sized enterprises from 500 to 5000 employees.

“I think the ambition is to be global and that’s why you have the kind of entities that have invested in this round as good partners for the company’s expansion plan,” said Sumant Mandal, managing partner at March Capital who led the investment.



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