In 1999 Savvis was acquired by
Bridge Information Systems. After a year as a Bridge Company, Savvis was spun off by Bridge as a public company. Savvis' February 2000
initial public offering (IPO) was listed on the NASDAQ stock exchange as "SVVS". Since its IPO, Savvis has grown both organically and through strategic acquisitions. In 2002, Savvis purchased WAM!NET, a content management and media application service, followed in 2003 by a purchase of the hosting operation and customers of Intel Online Services. In 2004 the company purchased the assets of
Cable & Wireless America which included 15 data centers and the customers of
Exodus Communications, the
Tier-1 Internet backbone previously owned by
MCI, the
content delivery network (CDN) from
Digital Island, and a significant professional services organization for $155 million in cash and assumed liabilities of approximately $12.5 million. Until January 21, 2014, Savvis was referred to as Savvis, a CenturyLink company, an autonomous managed-hosting entity under the CenturyLink umbrella. In early 2014, the company name was changed to CenturyLink Technology Solutions, in order to better align the Savvis business unit and the CenturyLink parent company. In early 2015 CenturyLink Technology Solutions was fully absorbed within CenturyLink's IT Services group, it is now unified under one name "CenturyLink".
Content delivery network divestitures In 2006, Savvis announced that
Level 3 Communications would acquire Savvis’ content delivery network (CDN) services business for $135 million; the deal included network assets, customer contracts and intellectual property used in Savvis’ CDN business.
Expanding EMEA presence In 2007, Savvis opened a data center in
Singapore, increasing its presence in the Asia Pacific region. The following year, it opened a new data center in
London, increasing its services in Europe.
Acquisition of Fusepoint In June 2010, Savvis acquired Canadian technology firm
Fusepoint, including data centers in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver.
Recovery In January 2011, Savvis was positioned in the Leaders quadrant of the
Magic Quadrant for Cloud
Infrastructure-as-a-Service and Web Hosting (2010 Edition) by
Gartner, an IT research and advisory firm. Savvis is positioned alongside 19 other web hosting providers, including
AT&T,
Rackspace,
Verizon Business,
Terremark, and
Sungard in the measurement of "completeness of vision" and "ability to execute". As well, the company launched its global, cloud-focused Savvis Alliances Program for channel partners. Savvis also entered into partnership with
Bharti Airtel Limited to launch a major strategic managed hosting and cloud computing initiative in India.
Acquisition by CenturyLink On April 27, 2011,
telecommunications firm
CenturyLink, Inc. and Savvis reached an agreement whereby CenturyLink acquired Savvis through a buyout of outstanding common shares in cash and stocks, for approximately $2.5 billion
USD. This valued Savvis at $40 per share, which represented an 11% premium over Savvis’ closing price on April 26, 2011. Under the agreement, Savvis shareholders are to receive $30 per share in cash and $10 in shares of CenturyLink common stock. In September 2011, Savvis announced facility expansions in existing markets including Atlanta, Boston, and Toronto; as well as the opening of 2 new data centers in Seattle and Piscataway, New Jersey. This adds 100,000 square feet of raised data center floor space in the 5 cities, bringing the total sellable global footprint to 2 million square feet. ==Controversy==