News & Analysis
Panelists question fabless model viability
Anne-Francoise Pele
12/4/2009 5:40 AM EST
Moving to eSilicon's core business, Rajendiran said "eSilicon's Value Chain Producer (VCP) model has it all today so we can address the industry and help it grow."
Introduced at the 45th annual Design Automation Conference (DAC) in Anaheim, California, eSilicon's VCP model consists in providing a comprehensive suite of design, productization and manufacturing services, enabling a flexible, low-cost, lower-risk path to volume chip production.
To the question "Is the fabless IC model alive and vital", Stan Swirhun, senior vice president & general manager, Optical Products Group, Zarlink Semiconductor, answered "yes and no" as it depends on size, business focus and maturity.
There is a decreasing number of fabless startups, and Swirhun said VCs are increasingly taking a low-capital vision and, eventually, funding for fabless startups continues to decline.
To succeed, small and mid-size fabless companies must reduce operating risk by owning a great technology or market, by focusing on a long-lived product and by focusing on a core capability. He also encouraged to serve existing customer relationships, to rely on narrower internal capability and hired experts, to rely on partnerships for differentiation and cost benefit, and finally to continue to explore 'own less/risk less' business.

