Opsware Inc. was an American software company specializing in data center automation, offering products for server and networkdevice provisioning, configuration, management, and compliance enforcement.[1] Founded in 1999 as Loudcloud by Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, Tim Howes, and In Sik Rhee, the company initially provided managed hosting services for web applications during the dot-com boom, raising over $350 million in funding and going public on the NASDAQ in March 2001 under the ticker LDCL.[2]Amid the dot-com bust, Loudcloud faced severe financial pressures and pivoted its business model in 2002 by selling its hosting operations to Electronic Data Systems (EDS) for $63.5 million, allowing it to refocus on software products and rebrand as Opsware Inc.[3] Under the leadership of CEO Ben Horowitz, Opsware developed its flagship Opsware Server Automation System, which enabled large-scale IT operations to automate infrastructure tasks across thousands of servers, addressing the growing complexity of enterprise data centers.[4] The company's software was adopted by major enterprises for its ability to reduce manual IT labor, ensure regulatory compliance, and scale operations efficiently.[1]By 2007, Opsware had achieved annual revenues exceeding $100 million and a market capitalization that reflected its turnaround success, culminating in its acquisition by Hewlett-Packard (HP) for $1.6 billion in cash ($14.25 per share), marking HP's third-largest acquisition at the time after Compaq and Mercury Interactive.[5] Post-acquisition, Opsware's technology was integrated into HP's IT management portfolio, enhancing capabilities in business technology optimization and contributing to the evolution of modern cloud automation tools.[4] The company's alumni, often referred to as the "Opsware Mafia," have since founded or led prominent tech firms, including Andreessen Horowitz and numerous startups, underscoring Opsware's lasting influence on Silicon Valley entrepreneurship.[5]
History
Founding as Loudcloud
Loudcloud was founded on September 9, 1999, in Menlo Park, California, by Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, Tim Howes, and In Sik Rhee as an application service provider (ASP) specializing in hosted IT infrastructure for internet-based businesses.[6][7] Andreessen and Horowitz, who had previously collaborated at Netscape Communications where Andreessen co-founded the company and Horowitz served as a product manager, brought their expertise in web technologies to envision a service that would handle the complexities of scaling online applications.[8] Howes, known for co-inventing the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), contributed technical leadership as chief technology officer, while Rhee focused on operational architecture as vice president.[9] The company's model aimed to outsource the management of web infrastructure, allowing enterprises to deploy and scale applications without building their own data centers.From its inception, Loudcloud focused on delivering scalable, on-demand computing resources to enterprises, which anticipated key elements of software-as-a-service (SaaS) and cloud computing models years before the term "cloud" gained widespread use.[10] The firm emphasized automation to streamline the deployment, configuration, and maintenance of internet applications, enabling rapid scaling to meet surging demand during the late-1990s internet boom.[11] Early operations involved constructing and operating data centers—eventually expanding to 12 facilities—and managing client applications, with a heavy reliance on proprietary software to automate server provisioning and network adjustments for high-traffic sites.[12] This approach positioned Loudcloud as a pioneer in infrastructure-as-a-service concepts, addressing the era's challenges of unpredictable web traffic and limited in-house IT capabilities among dot-com startups.[13]Loudcloud experienced rapid funding success amid the dot-com enthusiasm, raising $120 million in a Series C round in June 2000 led by investors including Benchmark Capital, valuing the company at a $700 million pre-money valuation despite minimal revenue.[14][8] The company went public on March 9, 2001, via an IPO on Nasdaq under the ticker LDCL, raising approximately $150 million at $6 per share for an initial market capitalization of about $450 million, even as it reported net losses exceeding $100 million on just $1.9 million in revenue for the prior six months.[15][16]The dot-com bust soon imposed severe financial strain on Loudcloud, as investor sentiment soured and demand for hosted services plummeted.[17] The company's stock, which reached a 52-week high of $7 shortly after the IPO, declined sharply to around $2.50 by mid-2001 and further to below $1 by 2002, reflecting broader market turmoil and operational cash burn of about $10 million per month.[18][19][20] This downturn threatened the company's survival, highlighting the risks of its capital-intensive model in a contracting economy.
Pivot to Software Business
In June 2002, Loudcloud sold its capital-intensive hosting and managed services operations to Electronic Data Systems (EDS) for $63.5 million in cash, along with a three-year, $52 million software licensing agreement, enabling the company to exit the services business and focus exclusively on software.[21][22] This transaction transferred 50 customers and approximately 140 employees to EDS, allowing Loudcloud to retain and repurpose its internal automation tools for external sales.[23]In August 2002, the company rebranded as Opsware, Inc., shifting its business model to sell automation software for data center management, including server provisioning and configuration, rather than providing hosted services.[24] The core software platform was developed from internal tools originally built to manage Loudcloud's own infrastructure, generalized into an enterprise version called Opsware 3.0 to automate IT operations for other organizations.[25] To achieve financial stabilization, Opsware reduced its workforce by about 75 percent, trimming payroll significantly amid the post-dot-com market challenges.[26]By 2003, these changes led to Opsware's first profitable quarter, supported by initial revenue from software licenses, including the EDS deal, as the company positioned itself as a key player in IT operations management (ITOM) during the economic recovery.[26][25] This pivot enabled Opsware to generate $18 million in revenue for the fiscal year ended January 31, 2004, primarily from licenses, establishing a foundation for growth in data center automation.[27]
Growth Through Acquisitions
Opsware experienced significant expansion from 2003 to 2007, fueled by strategic acquisitions that bolstered its data centerautomation offerings and contributed to robust revenue growth in its software business. Non-EDS software revenue, which formed the core of its operations post-pivot, accelerated from $16.7 million in the first quarter of fiscal 2006 (up 124% year-over-year), contributing to a full-year projection of $100 million for fiscal 2007, reflecting strong demand from large enterprises for automation solutions.[28] By fiscal 2007, total revenue reached $101.7 million, with the company achieving profitability for the first time in the second quarter of 2006 and maintaining positive net income thereafter.[1][29]The acquisition strategy targeted complementary technologies to address gaps in IT infrastructure management, enabling Opsware to deliver comprehensive end-to-end data centerautomation. In February 2004, Opsware acquired Tangram Enterprise Solutions for $10 million in stock, incorporating its IT asset management and security software to enhance systems oversight capabilities.[30] This was followed in February 2005 by the purchase of Rendition Networks for approximately $33 million (including $15 million in cash and stock valued at the time), which integrated network device configuration and change management tools to strengthen network automation features.[31][32]Continuing this approach, Opsware acquired CreekPath Systems in August 2006 for $10 million, adding storage resource management technology that improved compliance and resource allocation in data centers.[33] In April 2007, the company bought iConclude for about $54 million in cash and stock, incorporating run-book automation software to advance process orchestration and IT workflow efficiency.[34] Each deal aligned with Opsware's goal of automating the full IT lifecycle, from provisioning to compliance, positioning it as a leader in integrated data center solutions.[35] The acquired technologies were swiftly integrated into Opsware's core product suite to expand functionality without disrupting existing offerings.By mid-2007, ahead of its eventual sale, Opsware had grown to over 550 employees and operated from its headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, leveraging the region's talent ecosystem.[36] The company's market capitalization reflected this momentum, culminating in a valuation that underscored its transformation into a profitable, high-growth enterprise focused on enterprise software sales.[1]
Acquisition by Hewlett-Packard
On July 23, 2007, Hewlett-Packard Company (HP) announced its agreement to acquire Opsware Inc. for $14.25 per share in cash, representing a total enterprise value of approximately $1.6 billion net of Opsware's cash and debt, and a 38% premium over Opsware's closing stock price of $10.28 on July 20, 2007.[36][37] The deal was structured as a tender offer for all outstanding shares, subject to customary closing conditions including regulatory approvals.HP's motivations for the acquisition centered on strengthening its business technology optimization (BTO) portfolio to address the growing complexity of enterprise data centers, where automation was increasingly essential for managing servers, networks, and storage.[1] Opsware's data centerautomation software was seen as a complementary addition to HP's existing OpenView suite, enabling end-to-end automation from provisioning to incident resolution and enhancing HP's ability to help customers control operational costs and scale IT infrastructure efficiently.[38][1]The transaction closed in September 2007, with Opsware integrating into HP's Software Division as a wholly owned subsidiary.[39] Following the acquisition, Opsware CEO Ben Horowitz departed to co-found the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, while most of Opsware's approximately 550 employees transitioned to HP.[40] In the immediate aftermath, Opsware's products retained their branding and were promoted through HP's extensive global sales channels, facilitating accelerated customer adoption and market expansion in data center automation.[36][41]The acquisition delivered substantial financial returns to Opsware's investors and employees, providing a successful exit that rewarded those who had held shares since the company's public debut as Loudcloud during the dot-com era, with the $14.25 per share price ensuring positive outcomes for long-term stakeholders despite earlier market volatility.[1][40]
Products
Server Automation System
The Server Automation System (SAS) was Opsware's flagship product, designed to automate the full lifecycle management of physical and virtual servers across diverse operating environments including Windows, Unix, and Linux platforms.[42] It provided core functionalities such as automated provisioning of operating systems and applications, patch management to address vulnerabilities, configuration enforcement to maintain consistency, and compliance auditing to ensure adherence to regulatory standards.[43] These capabilities enabled IT teams to handle server deployment and maintenance at scale, supporting environments with thousands of servers without proportional increases in manual effort.[43]Developed from the internal automation tools that Loudcloud used to manage client infrastructure during its hosting operations, SAS evolved into a standalone commercial offering after Opsware's pivot to software in 2002.[44] The product incorporated scripting languages and orchestration engines to automate repetitive tasks like software distribution and recovery processes, significantly reducing the time required for IT operations.[45] Key features included agentless discovery for identifying unmanaged servers via network scans, policy-based automation that applied rules for configuration and patching across heterogeneous systems, and seamless integration with change management workflows to track and approve modifications.[46] Built-in auditing tools generated detailed reports for regulatory compliance, supporting standards such as SOX and HIPAA through automated policy enforcement and remediation.[47][48]By 2007, Opsware SAS had been deployed in hundreds of enterprises worldwide, collectively managing millions of server instances annually and demonstrating scalability in large-scale data centers.[49] For instance, one deployment automated operations across 7,500 servers in days, while another provisioned hundreds of software packages efficiently.[43] As part of Opsware's broader suite, SAS complemented network automation tools by focusing on server-side operations, enabling end-to-end data center efficiency.[50]
Network Automation System
The Network Automation System (NAS), launched by Opsware in March 2005, originated from the company's acquisition of Rendition Networks in February 2005, which provided foundational technology for automating network device configuration management.[31][51] This system was designed primarily to manage network devices such as routers, switches, and firewalls through automated provisioning, real-time change detection, and policy enforcement, enabling organizations to maintain consistent configurations across complex infrastructures.[31][52]Key capabilities of NAS included automated compliance reporting via its Compliance Center, which generated dashboards and documentation to support regulatory standards like Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, and COBIT, while facilitating audit trails developed in collaboration with Deloitte & Touche.[51] The system also supported firmware updates and configuration deployments, with features for scripting and patching to enforce policies and mitigate risks from unauthorized changes.[52] Integration with Cisco IOS was a core strength, highlighted by Opsware's OEM agreement with Cisco in 2006, under which NAS powered the CiscoWorks Network Compliance Manager for collecting, tracking, and analyzing device configurations and changes.[53] This product offered multivendor support and automated security assessments, starting at $34,000 for managing 100 nodes.[53]Technically, NAS provided vendor-agnostic support for over 250 device types in multi-vendor environments, automating discovery, auditing, and standardized security management to reduce human-induced errors.[52] Configuration errors, which studies indicate account for over 80% of network downtime, were addressed through real-timemonitoring and policy-based enforcement, minimizing outages from misconfigurations.[54] Additional features like rollback mechanisms allowed reversion of failed changes, ensuring operational continuity.[52] For broader data centerautomation, NAS integrated with Opsware's server tools to provide unified visibility into network-server interactions.[51]Adoption of NAS was prominent among large enterprises requiring high-availability networks, including financial services firm Countrywide Financial, which managed 6,000 devices across 2,000 branches, and Microsoft Network, overseeing more than 10,000 devices in seven global data centers.[52] Telecom and financial organizations leveraged its reporting and access controls for compliance and risk management in mission-critical environments.[52]
Process Automation System
The Process Automation System (PAS), introduced by Opsware following its acquisition of iConclude in March 2007, served as a run-book automation tool designed to orchestrate complex IT workflows and reduce mean time to resolution (MTTR) in operational environments. Originally developed by iConclude as OpsForce—a product Opsware had been reselling under the name Orchestrator since late 2006—PAS was rebranded to emphasize its role in automating multi-step IT processes, including incident response, software deployments, and compliance audits. The acquisition, valued at approximately $54 million in cash and stock, integrated iConclude's expertise in IT process automation into Opsware's broader datacenter management portfolio.[55][34][56]At its core, PAS enabled the creation and execution of structured workflows known as Ops flows, which automated the maintenance, troubleshooting, repair, and provisioning of IT resources such as networks, servers, and applications. Users leveraged PAS Studio, a dedicated workflow designer, to build, modify, and test these flows, incorporating operations for tasks like health checks, diagnostics, software installations on physical and virtual machines, and repetitive status monitoring. The system supported conditional logic through embedded rules that evaluated outcomes—such as HTTP response codes—to determine subsequent actions, while error handling was facilitated by checkpoints that allowed flows to resume after interruptions. This design promoted reusable, permission-controlled automation for both scheduled and ad-hoc executions.[57][58]PAS featured rule-based engines that powered event-driven automation, triggering responses to alerts or conditions across IT infrastructure, and integrated with Opsware's Server Automation System (SAS) and Network Automation System (NAS) to enable end-to-end orchestration without manual intervention between tools. It was compatible with various ticketing systems through customizable Ops flows, allowing seamless incorporation into incident management pipelines. These capabilities contributed to the realization of "lights-out" data centers, where routine operations ran autonomously, minimizing human oversight.[57][59][49]Prior to Hewlett-Packard's acquisition of Opsware later in 2007, PAS demonstrated significant impact by automating diagnostics, repairs, and routine tasks in large-scale environments, thereby enhancing operational efficiency and accelerating MTTR for clients managing distributed datacenters. By streamlining predefined processes and workflows, it allowed IT teams to focus on higher-value activities rather than repetitive manual efforts.[60][61]
Leadership and Culture
Founders and Key Executives
Opsware was co-founded in 1999 as Loudcloud by Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, Tim Howes, and In Sik Rhee, a team drawn from the Netscape alumni who brought expertise in internet technologies and software engineering to build infrastructure for the emerging web economy.[25][62][63]Marc Andreessen, renowned as the co-creator of the Mosaic web browser and co-founder of Netscape, served as chairman of Opsware and provided strategic vision for scalable internet infrastructure solutions.[64][65] His emphasis on automation stemmed from recognizing the need for robust data center management amid the dot-com boom, though he stepped back from day-to-day involvement after the company's 2001 IPO while continuing to advise on major pivots.[66][67]Ben Horowitz, who had worked as a product manager at Netscape under Andreessen, took on the role of CEO from Opsware's inception in 1999 through its 2007 acquisition by Hewlett-Packard.[68][69] He navigated the company through the dot-com bust, leading the transition from managed services to software products and scaling operations to over $100 million in annual revenue.[62][70] Horowitz's experiences at Opsware later informed his 2014 book The Hard Thing About Hard Things, which draws on challenges like layoffs and strategic shifts during the early 2000s crisis.[68] Following the sale, he departed in 2007 to co-found the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz.[68][62]Tim Howes, a co-inventor of the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) and former Netscape CTO, focused on Opsware's technical architecture as its chief technology officer.[71][72] His background in directory services and network protocols shaped the development of Opsware's automation tools for data centers.[62] Howes remained with the company post-acquisition, serving as CTO of HP Software until 2008.[72]In Sik Rhee, another Netscape veteran, contributed to engineering and operations as co-founder and vice president, later titled chief tactician, emphasizing efficient scaling of infrastructure.[25][73] His role involved tactical execution during the pivot to software, and he left Opsware in 2007 shortly after the HP deal to join Accel Partners as a partner.[73][74]Other key executives included John O'Farrell as executive vice president, who oversaw product development and growth initiatives, and Mark Cranney, who led sales efforts during the company's turnaround.[25][75] Post-acquisition, several Opsware leaders, including Horowitz's successors, were retained by HP to ensure continuity in the integration of automation technologies, preserving the company's engineering culture.[62][76]
Management Philosophy and Company Culture
Opsware's management philosophy centered on directly confronting customer challenges to drive sales success, with sales teams identifying and amplifying acute IT pain points—such as manual server provisioning inefficiencies—through targeted demos that highlighted the costs of inaction versus the benefits of Opsware's automation solutions. By qualifying deals based on the customer's compelling urgency and sense of pain, Opsware achieved high win rates, exemplified by closing 12 out of 13 forecasted deals in the final two weeks of a critical quarter.[75]The company fostered an engineering-driven culture that emphasized wartime CEO tactics during periods of crisis, promoting a flat hierarchy and rapid iteration to ensure survival and agility. Horowitz adopted a wartime leadership style, focusing on a singular mission to pivot from services to software amid the dot-com bust, violating peacetime protocols like broad employee empowerment in favor of centralized, decisive actions. This approach was evident in the handling of the 2002 layoffs, where after an initial mismanagement, subsequent rounds were executed with transparency: the CEO publicly acknowledged the company's strategic failures, managers conducted personal notifications, and all-hands communications provided clear context and support, ultimately retaining key talent and preserving cultural continuity.[77][78]Innovation at Opsware was supported by practices like weekly all-hands meetings, where leadership shared metrics and encouraged open discussion to align teams on priorities such as customer retention, achieved through rigorous focus on product reliability and automation advancements. The culture promoted risk-taking in R&D, particularly in developing server and network automation tools, by tying engineering efforts to measurable outcomes like reduced deployment times, fostering an environment where bold experimentation was rewarded despite uncertainties.[79]To build talent retention, Opsware attracted top engineering talent from Netscape, leveraging their expertise in scalable software to bolster post-pivot growth, while stock options aligned employee incentives with long-term company performance, creating a "software mafia" camaraderie that emphasized collective success. This post-pivot strategy, implemented after the 2002 transition, helped maintain low turnover rates from 2003 onward, as employees felt invested in the turnaround.[5]Despite these strengths, the high-pressure environment during the dot-com bust tested the culture, with intense workloads and survival imperatives building deep loyalty among the remaining team, as evidenced by sustained low voluntary turnover after stabilization in 2003.[78]
Legacy and Impact
Post-Acquisition Evolution
Following the 2007 acquisition by Hewlett-Packard (HP), Opsware's core technologies were integrated into HP's software portfolio, with its server provisioning and automation tools rebranded as HP Server Automation and its process automation capabilities evolving into HP Operations Orchestration.[42][80] These products were expanded to support hybrid cloud environments, enabling automated management across on-premises and cloud infrastructures during the 2007-2015 period under HP.In 2015, HP's enterprise division spun off to form Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), placing Opsware-derived products within HPE's IT Operations Management (ITOM) portfolio.[81] This transition introduced enhancements for DevOps practices and containerization, incorporating open-source technologies like Docker and Kubernetes to accelerate IT operations in dynamic environments.[82]The 2017 acquisition of HPE's software business by Micro Focus further integrated these assets into the Micro Focus IT Operations suite, with Server Automation and Operations Orchestration receiving updates for cybersecurity compliance to address escalating threats such as vulnerabilities and regulatory requirements.[83][84] These enhancements included real-time vulnerability feeds and automated remediation to mitigate risks in enterprise IT landscapes.[85]In 2023, OpenText completed its merger with Micro Focus, incorporating Opsware's legacy technologies into OpenText's application management offerings, where they now power AI-driven automation for IT processes.[86] As of 2025, these tools support modern workloads including Kubernetes orchestration, facilitating seamless hybrid cloud deployments.[87][88]Throughout this evolution, Opsware's standalone branding was discontinued following the acquisition as part of HP's integration and rebranding efforts, marking a broader shift from on-premises-focused automation to hybrid cloud-centric solutions that emphasize scalability and integration with emerging technologies.[89]
Notable Alumni and Industry Influence
Opsware's alumni network, often referred to as the "Opsware Mafia," has significantly shaped the technology landscape, with former employees ascending to leadership roles at major companies and founding influential startups. Notable figures include Michel Feaster, who led the Opsware team at HP post-acquisition and later co-founded Usermind; Eric Vishria, Opsware's former product head who joined Benchmark Capital; Frank Chen, a product manager who became a partner at Andreessen Horowitz; and Scott Cooper, the former COO who now oversees operations at Andreessen Horowitz. Other alumni such as Sunny Gupta (co-founder of Apptio, which went public) and Karthik Rao (early executive at Okta) have driven success in enterprise software. This network extends to over 100 executives whose Opsware experience influenced their careers at firms like Facebook, Twitter, and various startups.[5][62]The company's pioneering role in data centerautomation has had lasting industry influence, establishing early standards for server provisioning and configuration management that informed subsequent tools like Puppet and Ansible. Opsware's shift to a software-as-a-service (SaaS) model in the early 2000s helped lay groundwork for cloud computing practices, emphasizing scalable IT operations and virtualization. These innovations contributed to broader adoption of automated infrastructure management, influencing modern DevOps and cloud-native architectures.[62][40]Economically, Opsware's 2007 acquisition by Hewlett-Packard for $1.65 billion created substantial wealth for its approximately 550 employees, many of whom reinvested in the ecosystem. Alumni-founded ventures, including Andreessen Horowitz—which has raised over $46 billion across funds—and companies like Apptio and Okta, have collectively secured billions in venture capital and achieved high-profile exits, amplifying Opsware's financial legacy.[36][2][5]Opsware's contributions have received recognition in media and literature, including a dedicated episode of the Acquired podcast that explores its acquisition story and alumni impact. Ben Horowitz's book The Hard Thing About Hard Things codifies management lessons drawn directly from his Opsware tenure, offering insights into scaling tech companies under pressure that remain staples in Silicon Valley.[62][90]As of 2025, Opsware's legacy persists within OpenText's portfolio, where its core automation concepts underpin the Automation Center platform, integrating with AI-driven operations (AIOps) and zero-trust security frameworks to support hybrid cloud environments.[91]