CEO Kevin Johnson said those results for the enterprise business represent “a starting point for a level of momentum” Juniper believes it can achieve in that market.
“Our vision of the data center architecture of the future is resonating,” Johnson said in a conference call with analysts. Johnson added that the IBM-branded Juniper products offered under a recent OEM arrangement are now available.
Juniper’s EX LAN switching line, which debuted in the first half of last year, accounted for $50 million in sales in the quarter and is on a $200 million annual run rate. The MX series Ethernet router, deployed mostly in carrier networks but also in some enterprise data centers, is on a $400 million annual run rate. The MX debuted in 2006.
The SRX firewall, which was unveiled a year ago, is on a $100 million annual run rate. Together, the EX, MX and SRX product lines accounted for $180 million of Juniper’s $634 million in product revenue in the quarter.
“We are executing better, and that’s coming mainly from the US,” Johnson said of the enterprise results in the quarter. Sales were particularly strong in the US federal government marketplace.
“We will continue to throttle up execution globally. We’re share takers in the enterprise market, we’ve got a lot of upside. As the economy improves, enterprise investments will improve, but at a slower rate than service providers.
“The level of buzz with customers in the enterprise continues to grow,” Johnson added. “It’s indicative of our opportunity. But we’ve got to execute and engage with customers.”
Juniper experienced increased sales of its Service Layer Technology products – traditionally enterprise security and WAN acceleration gear – to service providers in Q3 as well. SLT revenue was a record for the quarter at $229 million, Denholm said, an increase of $11 million from 2008’s Q3.
In general, Juniper sees the economy and its business improving.
“Our visibility has improved in key areas of our business,” Johnson said. “We’re in an economic recovery. The pace varies across geographies” with improvements domestically, stabilization in Asia and a slower uptick in Europe.
For the fourth quarter, Juniper expects revenue of $860 million to $895 million, and earnings per share in the 23 cents to 26 cents range.