Public limited company | |
Traded as | : , OTC Pink: |
Industry | Telecommunications |
Founded | 1936 |
Headquarters |
Crawley, West Sussex, United Kingdom (Corporate) San Jose, California, United States (Operational) |
Key people
|
Alex Walker (Chairman of the board) Eric Hutchinson (CEO) Paula Bell (CFO) |
Products | Network diagnostics |
Revenue | US$477.1 million (2015) |
US$10.1 million (2015) | |
Profit | US$13.5 million (2015) |
Total assets | US$592.0 million (2015) |
Number of employees
|
1,700 (2015) |
Website | www.spirent.com |
Spirent Communications plc is a multinational telecommunications testing company headquartered in Crawley, West Sussex, in the United Kingdom. It is listed on the .
The company was founded by Jack Bowthorpe in 1936 as Goodliffe Electric Supplies. In 1949 it changed its name to Bowthorpe. It acquired Optima Electronics in 1987 and disposed of its defence businesses in 1990. The company's electronics business grew rapidly during the dot-com boom of the 1990s, with the 1997 purchase of businesses such as Adtech, a digital test equipment concern based in Hawaii, and the company was a member of the FTSE 100 index from time to time. It disposed of its automotive industry businesses in 1999, the same year that it bought Netcom Systems, a US telecoms testing business which makes network equipment testers, and DLS, a Canadian telecoms testing business. In 2000 it also bought Hekimian, a major Operations Support Systems business,Zarak Systems, another communications software business and Net-Hopper, an access systems specialist.
In 2000 it changed its name to Spirent. The name is derived from the words "inspired innovation."
It acquired Caw Networks, a Santa Clara company which makes network performance testing appliances including Avalanche, in 2002,Scientific Software Engineering, a United States-based developer of software including Landslide for testing the performance and functionality of wireless network infrastructure, in 2006,Imperfect Networks, a IDS/IPS testing company, in 2006, and Fanfare Software, a United States-based developer of the iTest automation software, in 2011.