There has been interest in its approach. The company announced that its revenue reached $69.5 million in 2009, up 27 percent from $54.7 million a year earlier. While many other IT sectors experienced dramatic downturns, wireless LANs did well in 2009, with many vendors realizing growth from 20% to 40%.
Meru still faces significant challenges as the wireless LAN market continues to evolve. The company has been generating more revenue but is not close to turning a profit. In 2009, the start up lost $17.4 million. Theoretically, money raised from the IPO could be used to expand its sales and marketing efforts, boost revenue, and close that gap.
Yet, the question remains: Is Meru large enough to be a viable competitor in the wireless space moving forward? Consolidation has been the industry watchword as interest has grown in multi-purpose network systems. Increasingly, businesses are looking to consolidate management of their wired and wireless networks. In addition, interest is growing in integrated devices that combine server, storage, and network functions. Meru lacks the pieces and the mass needed to deliver such systems. The IPO illustrates that company has had successfully navigated one growth phase but other hurdles remain as it moves forward.