Cohesity and SoftBank Announce Joint Venture to Empower Japanese Enterprises to Back Up, Store, Manage and Derive Insights from Their Data

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Cohesity Inc. , the leader of hyper converged secondary storage and a portfolio company of SoftBank Vision Fund, and SoftBank Corp. (“SoftBank”) announced a joint venture that ushers in modern data infrastructure in Japan, enabling Japanese enterprises to back up, store, manage and derive insights from all of their secondary data and applications through the Cohesity Data Platform. The joint venture operates under the name Cohesity Japan KK (“Cohesity Japan”). SoftBank and SoftBank C&S Corp. will distribute and resell Cohesity solutions in Japan, along with other partners including Networld Corporation and ITOCHU Techno-Solutions Corporation. Solutions from Cohesity are available today to Japanese enterprises.

Cohesity and SoftBank share a belief that technology is fueling an Information Revolution and the impact of that revolution can transform industries around the world. As the Information Revolution continues to accelerate, more secondary data is created which needs to be backed up, stored and analyzed. Cohesity provides technology that unlocks the power of secondary data and applications.

“We are thrilled to collaborate with SoftBank in enabling Japanese enterprises to use modern data infrastructure to advance their digital transformation journeys,” said Mohit Aron, CEO and Founder, Cohesity. “SoftBank and Cohesity both believe that if enterprises can derive maximum insights from secondary data and applications, the possibilities are endless across a variety of industries including financial services, healthcare, public sector, life sciences, media, technology, telecommunications and education.”

“Collaborating with SoftBank Vision Fund, we support their portfolio companies in deploying cutting edge technologies and services to Japan,” said Kunihiro Fujinaga, Senior Vice President, Head of Enterprise Business Strategy Division, Enterprise Business Unit, SoftBank. “Cohesity is disrupting the $60 billion secondary data and apps market. We look forward to working with Cohesity to deliver data infrastructure technology that empowers Japanese enterprises to provide better customer experiences and accelerate innovations that can change the world.”

Secondary data includes data used for backups, archives, analytics, testing and development and other workloads and comprises 80 percent of an enterprise’s total data volume.

Many organizations today manage secondary data in silos utilizing multiple point products that do not integrate and are very costly to run. This creates a phenomenon called mass data fragmentation. According to a global survey conducted by market research firm Vanson Bourne in October 2018*, 91 percent of surveyed IT decision makers in Japan believe their secondary data is fragmented and is or could become nearly impossible to manage long term. Of those who believe their secondary data is fragmented in Japan:

  • 40 percent are concerned about major data compliance issues with data privacy regulations that could lead to large fines and reputational damage.
  • 43 percent fear it puts their organization at a real competitive disadvantage, especially if competitors are able to exploit their data more effectively.
  • 35 percent are concerned about offering inferior customer experiences.
  • 50 percent worry about depleting their organization’s IT budget by spending too much on unnecessary storage.

Cohesity Japan solves mass data fragmentation challenges by consolidating secondary data silos onto the Cohesity DataPlatform. Customers no longer need multiple products to backup, archive, manage and analyze their secondary data, which reduces infrastructure costs and management complexities.

This approach is similar to a smartphone that consolidates a phone, camera, flashlight, navigation services and other features on to a single platform with one user interface. And, like the smartphone, customers can also run Cohesity and third-party applications directly on the Cohesity DataPlatform to conduct granular analysis, help ensure data compliance, and improve security, among other functions.

Customers are embracing Cohesity technology around the world. Cohesity announced(Open in a new window) a 300 percent increase in revenues when comparing its fiscal 2018 and fiscal 2017 results. The company also announced that it quadrupled the size of its customer base globally compared to the previous fiscal year. Cohesity customers(Open in a new window) include Cisco Systems, Inc., Hyatt Hotels Corporation, LendingClub Corporation, NASA, Northern Trust Corporation, the San Francisco Giants, the U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Air Force.

Cohesity has appointed Hiromasa Ebi as Representative Director of Cohesity Japan. Hiromasa is based in Tokyo and has more than 25 years of experience in IT, with a focus on storage and data infrastructure. He has held senior leadership positions at a variety of companies including Scality Inc., Dell EMC, and NetApp, Inc.

“Enterprises in Japan are looking for cutting-edge technology that consolidates data silos, eliminates mass data fragmentation and makes it easy to extract more value from their data,” said Hiromasa Ebi, Representative Director, Cohesity Japan. “Data is the key to digital innovation and we are excited to partner with SoftBank to help Japanese customers realize the full potential of this business-critical asset.”

About Cohesity Inc
Cohesity makes your data work for you by consolidating secondary storage silos onto a hyperconverged, web-scale data platform that spans both private and public clouds. Enterprise customers begin by radically streamlining their backup and data protection, then converge file and object services, test/dev instances, and analytic functions to provide a global data store. Cohesity counts many Global 1000 companies and federal agencies among its rapidly growing customer base and was named to Forbes’ “Next Billion-Dollar Startups 2017,” LinkedIn’s “Startups: The 50 Industry Disruptors You Need to Know Now,” and CRN’s “2017 Emerging Vendors in Storage” lists.