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Former Facebook CFO led start-up buys Bower & Wilkins

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  • Former Facebook CFO led start-up buys Bower & Wilkins

    Speaker Maker Bowers & Wilkins Sells Out to a Tiny Silicon Valley Startup
    In an unusual deal, a 40-person startup run by a former Facebook executive has swallowed a 1,100-person company that has been around for half a century.
    Joshua Brustein
    @joshuabrustein
    May 3, 2016 — 3:00 PM CEST Updated on May 3, 2016 — 9:58 PM CEST

    Joe Atkins, chief executive officer of Bowers & Wilkins, has owned a majority stake in the half-century-old British speaker business for the last 30 years. On Tuesday, he plans to tell his 1,100 employees that he’s selling it to a tiny company that almost no one has heard of, run by a man he met just 30 days ago.
    Over the weekend, Atkins reached a sale agreement with Eva Automation, a 40-person Silicon Valley startup that hasn’t yet sold a single product or service. The company was started in 2014 by Gideon Yu, a former Facebook Inc. chief financial officer, ex-venture capitalist, and current co-owner of the San Francisco 49ers. Yu has said little about his startup. According to the company’s website, it is “making products that will change how people interact and think about the home.” About a quarter of its employees have worked at Apple, according to their LinkedIn profiles.

    The companies declined to disclose financial terms of the deal. Eva is looking to raise as much as $252 million in a round that could value it at more than $600 million, according to an analysis of its public filings by VC Experts, a firm that studies private market data. Eva is backed by at least $20 million in funding, and the additional round of financing will help fund the acquisition. Yu said the Formation Group would lead the investment but declined to comment on how much money the company is raising. Both Eva and Bowers & Wilkins noted that the structure of the deal was unusual. Older, bigger companies usually acquire younger, scrappier upstarts in hopes of injecting some innovation into their ranks, not the other way around.

    Bowers & Wilkins became a household name before speaker companies had to distinguish themselves through Spotify integrations and voice recognition capability. While Bowers & Wilkins does sell speakers designed to accommodate people used to listening to music through their smartphones, Atkins acknowledges that his company lacks the expertise needed to build software that communicates with cloud services. Any company that wants to sell speakers at a significant premium would need to integrate high-end hardware with sophisticated software. Yu plans to begin selling new products that incorporate Eva’s work by early to mid-2017.

    While the details of the sale are odd, Atkins’s decision to sell isn’t a total surprise. He hinted at a potential acquisition in an interview with the Guardian last year, but that was long before talks started with Eva. Bang & Olufsen A/S, another high-end audio-equipment maker, walked away from takeover talks with a Chinese billionaire last month and replaced its CEO.

    Bowers & Wilkins’s most devoted customers will probably be skeptical about a Valley startup being the best steward for a fancy speaker brand. Audiophiles often turn their noses up at digital music companies, which have a reputation for sacrificing fidelity for convenience. “It will take some explaining,” said Atkins. “I think when the verdict comes back, it will be clear that this is exactly what Bowers & Wilkins should be doing.”

    Atkins will become CEO of the combined company, and Yu will be executive chairman. They will drop the name Eva in favor of the much more familiar Bowers & Wilkins brand. Yu and Atkins said there will be no staff cuts, and the company will continue to sell the current lineup of Bowers & Wilkins products. Atkins, who owns 60 percent of Bowers & Wilkins, will take a significant ownership stake in the new company. Bowers & Wilkins’s outside investors, Caledonia Investments and Sofina, will cash out.

    Yu has been a Silicon Valley dealmaker for years. He was chief financial officer at YouTube when Google bought the company for $1.65 billion. At Facebook, he helped the social network raise money from Microsoft Corp. As a partner at Khosla Ventures, he was an early investor in Square Inc. He also owns part of the 49ers and championed the football team’s new stadium in the Valley.

    Yu said his latest deal is a potential model for other well-funded startups. “I think there will be others to follow,” he said. “This is the way that Silicon Valley and other industrial companies raise the game for consumer-brand electronics.”

  • #2
    Interview: B&W Acquired by Owner of San Francisco 49ers, a Super-Geeky Audiophile
    Silicon Valley start-up Eva Automation, co-founded by 49ers president Gideon Yu, acquires leading audio firm Bowers & Wilkins. Leadership packed with Harvard MBAs, venture capitalists, digital gurus and audiophiles.

    San Francisco 49ers owner Gideon Yu and his team at Eva Automation promise only to enhance the vaunted B&W brand they just acquired.

    Julie Jacobson · May 3, 2016
    The vaunted audio brand Bowers & Wilkins has been acquired by Silicon Valley start-up Eva Automation, whose CEO Gideon Yu is president of the San Francisco 49ers and an unapologetic “geek that really loves audio/video, technology and sports,” he tells CE Pro.

    Yu is a Stanford-educated engineer with a Harvard MBA and a rich career in venture capital. He served as CFO for both Facebook and YouTube. His co-founders and colleagues are equally accomplished, with strong academic credentials and successful careers in consumer electronics, digital media, user experience (UX) and venture capital. Eva’s investors and advisors represent the who’s who of technology, finance and UX, from the likes of Yahoo!, Alibaba, YouTube, National Semiconductor, Facebook and Sequoia Capital.

    But Yu doesn’t want us to care about all of that. He wants integrators to know that the acquisition of B&W, including sub-brands Classe and Rotel, was born of a “sincere enthusiasm” for high-quality audio and a long-term adoration for B&W in particular.

    To be sure, Yu and his start-up Eva have broad-market aspirations but he promises, “You won’t see any changes whatsoever in audio quality. All the audiophiles out there have nothing to worry about.”

    Who is Eva Automation?
    Eva is a two-year-old firm operating in stealth mode to create the ideal multiroom audio and video system . Yu has been seeking such a thing for decades – something that combines high-end A/V with a “really fantastic user experience.”

    “You won’t see any changes whatsoever in audio quality. We plan to invest in quality. Otherwise, why would we acquire B&W?
    — Gideon Yu, CEO Eva Automation, executive chairman Bowers & Wilkins
    Despite improvements in both areas over the years, “What I want for my own living room has not been created,” he says. “There’s components, like some good interfaces and really good high-end audio/video. If I could buy it, I would, but it hasn’t been created.”

    Yu says Eva has already developed the core of a multiroom A/V system, developed with the expertise of digital gurus and UX experts from the ranks of Apple, Facebook, YouTube and others. But the solution, aimed at discriminating users, was incomplete without the power of a beloved brand and the craftsmanship of true A/V artisans.

    “We went out to talk to a lot of the brands you [CE Pro] cover,” Yu says. “We asked: Is there a way to take our technology, our user experience, our expertise in apps – things we’re good at – and help you guys or partner with you guys?”

    When Yu met B&W owner Joe Atkins and the team, “It was a whirlwind romance,” Yu confesses. “I’ve been a fan for decades and a customer recently. Their views of where they want to go in the future is just amazing.”

    Like virtually every big brand in high-performance audio, B&W has contemplated its role in the multiroom-audio business, especially in the broader market served by … broader-market consumer brands.

    “They [B&W] were saying there’s a lot of good technology out there, but still not the quality that B&W will put its name on,” Yu explains. “When we talked to Joe about their product roadmap, their passions, their dreams, it made a lot of sense for them to partner with us.”

    He adds, like a giddy school girl going on a first date with the quarterback, “The opportunity for us to partner with a brand like that is just a dream come true. … From the minute I thought there was a possibility, I was bouncing off the walls.”

    As such, don’t expect to see Eva dismantling the fundamentals that made B&W great. There won’t be any “real changes” at B&W in the near term, Yu says, and definitely, “You won’t see any changes whatsoever in audio quality. We plan to invest in quality. Otherwise, why would we acquire B&W? … All we want to do is find a way to deliver the next level of user experience that meets the quality expectations of the B&W customer.”

    Also, don't expect to see much from the "Eva Automation" brand itself. The business now is all B&W and the company's new products, expected to ship in Q4 of this year, will be worthy of the brand, Yu says.

    He emphasizes the acquisition is part of a “growth story,” not a cost-cutting scheme nor an evil takeover plot.

    A big part of that “story” is the specialty A/V channel, which Yu and team “absolutely appreciate.”

    B&W is a perennial favorite among home-technology integrators. In the 2015 brand preference survey of the CE Pro 100 highest-revenue integrators, B&W ranked #2 in the in-wall speaker category, with 29% of the CE Pro 100 saying they specified the brand (compared to 52% for Sonance). B&W was  #1 in the floorstanding-speaker category, with 30% of Top 100 integrators specifying the brand for their installations. In the 2016 brand-preference survey (to be posted soon), B&W slipped slightly, losing ground to Klipsch in both categories.

    While Yu is not at home cheering on the 49ers, you can be sure, “This channel will see me a lot.”

    Statement from Joe Atkins, B&W Chairman
    Over the last few years the global environment in which we operate has become very complex while the audio space we occupy is increasingly impacted by transforming technologies and retail consolidation.

    As a result we have for some time now been looking at a host of possible strategies to best position the Bowers & Wilkins Group to take full advantage of the tremendous opportunities these changes present.

    In that regard I am very pleased to announce this morning that we have been acquired by Silicon Valley based EVA Automation Inc a two year old Company founded and led by Gideon Yu. Gideon has been instrumental in building world class technology Companies including Facebook, YouTube and Square.

    EVA brings with it a signifi cant amount of business and technological expertise and considerable fi nancial resources, all of which are necessary to take Bowers & Wilkins to the next level.

    I am confident that this is the right transition for Bowers and our global family and therefore have retained a signifi cant equity interest in the combined business.

    I will continue to direct the day to day business as our Chief Executive Officer reporting to Gideon who will be our Chairman and I will join the EVA Automation Inc board of directors. I fully expect that the integration of the EVA team in to our operations will be seamless.

    Exciting times but I’m sure lots of questions so please reach out to Evert, Hans , Geoff or myself for more detail.

    Best Regards, Joe Atkins, Chairman

    Statement from Eva Automation
    EVA Automation joins forces with Bowers & Wilkins
    A letter from our founder

    Friends of EVA,

    I am beyond thrilled to announce that we have acquired Bowers & Wilkins—in my opinion, the absolute quality and design leader in high-end audio equipment. I’ve personally been a huge fan and loyal customer of Bowers & Wilkins for decades and truly admire and respect their Chairman, Joe Atkins. What he and his team have created over the past 30 years is simply inspiring.

    Since I founded EVA Automation two years ago, we have been working hard to create fantastic home A/V user experiences. When it was time to seek out partners for our journey ahead, Bowers & Wilkins was unquestionably our #1 choice, and after I met Joe and his team, it was immediately clear that we share the same long term product vision and sincere passion for home entertainment.

    To my new friends at Bowers & Wilkins: I can’t wait to meet all of you! Your brand and heritage are second to none, and we at EVA are excited to operate as one combined company under the Bowers & Wilkins name. Joe Atkins has graciously agreed to remain the CEO of our combined company, while I will be our Executive Chairman. There are very few leaders in home A/V as experienced, respected and successful as Joe, and I look forward to partnering with and learning from him…and all of you.

    One of the most important parts of our acquisition is that Joe is maintaining a significant equity stake in our combined company and will be joining our board of directors, further aligning all of our interests.

    We will have much, much more to announce when the time is right about our vision and our products. In the meantime, we will continue to work hard on developing a truly special, highly integrated, and easy to use home A/V experience that I know you’ll love.

    Until then,

    Gideon Yu
    Executive Chairman
    Bowers & Wilkins

    Comment


    • #3
      May 3, 2016 - Bowers & Wilkins, the British audio brand founded in Sussex, England, in 1966, has been acquired by Silicon Valley based EVA Automation Inc, a technology company founded by Gideon Yu.

      Bowers & Wilkins is the market leading maker of high-end audio equipment. It has forged its position through a relentless commitment to high quality innovative research, development and build. EVA Automation will integrate fully with Bowers &Wilkins’ unmatched acoustic engineering prowess by offering innovative A/V technologies and product vision that will enable Bowers & Wilkins to grow faster and further.

      Joe Atkins, incumbent owner of Bowers & Wilkins, will remain as CEO and will work closely with EVA and Yu to continue to develop Bowers & Wilkins’ position as a world class highly integrated AV company. Gideon Yu is well known for helping to build world-class companies including Facebook, YouTube and Square and will act as Executive Chairman for Bowers & Wilkins

      Gideon Yu commented, "Bowers & Wilkins brings an incredible brand, experienced and well-respected team and commitment to making high-end audio equipment of unmatched quality.  We at EVA share their same product vision and passion for home entertainment and look forward to creating fantastic home A/V experiences together as one combined company.“

      Joe Atkins commented, “This is an exciting time for Bowers & Wilkins – a brand of true heritage and quality. In Gideon Yu and EVA Automation we have a true innovator in the technology sector.”

      About Eva Automation
      Eva Automation, Inc is a Silicon Valley, California-based technology company that is reimaging the home entertainment experience. Our team is dedicated to creating simpler and better ways for people to enjoy the products they love. Find out more about us on our website at www.evaautomation.com

      About Bowers & Wilkins
      Bowers & Wilkins is a global leader for premium loudspeaker products and purveyors of “true sound” with nearly 50 years of audio heritage. Its innovative, award-winning audio products are an essential element to audio entertainment whether at home or on the move. Bowers & Wilkins loudspeakers are highly regarded as the definitive “audio reference,” as demonstrated by their use in leading recording studios throughout the world including Skywalker Sound in California. The notion that remarkable sound must be experienced to be fully appreciated is reinforced by the company’s motto -“Listen and you’ll see.” www.bowers-wilkins.co.uk

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