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Estimated reading time: 1 minute

Beyond Design: The Maturing EDA Industry
The EDA industry has evolved from its humble, free-for-all, Wild West beginnings into a mature industry employing a record 35,000 professionals and turning over a staggering $2 billion per quarter. Whilst the Americas market is still recovering, Asia-Pacific and Japan have experienced double digit growth. But Europe the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) have experienced a downturn over the past quarter.
Cadence Design Systems, Mentor Graphics, and Synopsys, a.k.a. “The EDA Big Three,” have realized significant growth in IC design and signoff and the functional verification sectors. However, revenue for the PCB segment grew just 5.3% in 2014 to $853.1 million.
Although only a small part of the total EDA revenue, the PCB sector has a different pecking order: Mentor Graphics, Cadence, Zuken, Altium, Pulsonix, Intercept Technology and CadSoft. Mentor, Cadence and Zuken are all competing in the enterprise and the mainstream markets and all have double-digit market share. In terms of seat count, Altium, the relative new kid in town, is lower in the spectrum, but positioning themselves into enterprise-level solutions.
There are also many free or low-cost PCB applications available such as KiCad, Diptrace, Toporouter, DesignSpark, Circuit Maker, PCB123 and PCB Artist to name a few. But these packages mainly cater for the electronics enthusiast or entry-level market.
The major EDA revenue streams come from the following operations:
- Perpetual and term licensing of EDA software and intellectual property
- Software support and post-contract maintenance
- Professional services, including consulting and training
EDA companies generally innovate through acquisitions and mergers as it is easier to buy new technology than expend time and resources developing a product and risk losing market share. However, some tend to focus on partnering with other EDA vendors rather than acquisition. But this leaves them vulnerable to outside influence. Many small EDA start-ups develop niche technology, an innovation that adds value in a specific area. But their fast growth soon reaches a burn-rate threshold whereby their momentum can no longer be sustained. These companies are ripe for the picking, as their technology can be merged into existing applications to provide an end-to-end solution.
To read this entire article, which appeared in the December 2016 issue of The PCB Magazine, click here.
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