ML 10/30/01: NTAP, EMC, industry trends:
We think it is important to put the recent Dell and software announcements in context as EMC is executing a clear strategy here. We have long argued that intelligence, complexity, and, therefore, margin are migrating to network. This is not any network but data center networks that we think will ultimately be three SAN’s—a storage area network, a server area network, and, ultimately, a system area network. The long term value add in these three SAN’s and the products to which we see margin migrating are three software stacks—a network OS stack, a virtualization stack, and a management stack. In turn, we have argued, that this industry evolution will produce secular storage hardware pricing pressure and force EMC and most other enterprise vendors to go through multi-year transitions. In EMC’s case, we have argued that this means transitioning EMC go to market and sales model away from high-cost direct sales and building new software for the 3 SAN’s. Automated Information Storage—Critical Seeds Sewn If EMC executes, the products in the Auto IS announcement could be the backbone of the management stack that we think will be one of the keys to enterprise leadership. Yesterday EMC announced four products: 1. ECC Open Edition, 2. WideSky, 3. ECC Replication Manager, and 4. ECC StorageScope. While we discuss the architecture in much greater detail in a longer piece that we will shortly publish, we want to cut to the chase as well. Over the next 90 days, the different products will be released and, if they deliver as promised—always the key “if” with software, this could be a very important step for EMC to reassert leadership. Management is one of the critical, enabling elements to making SAN’s real. EMC strategy is to provide holistic management of servers, storage, switches, and software that will eventually comprise the 3 SAN’s. Don’t Get Bogged Down in API’s or Interoperability— Remember What Happened with SRDF While many rightly point out that this depends on cooperation from the server, switch, software, and non- EMC storage vendors, we think that this misses a fundamental, but subtle point. Device discovery, monitoring, and other rudimentary function can be achieved without the cooperation of the product OEM. And yes richer interoperability can be achieved with reverse engineering and R&D spending. But we should remember what happened with SRDF when EMC started to make RAID intelligent. SAN’s, when made manageable, can often more than double disk and server CPU utilization and drastically reduce the headcount required to run and manage systems. In the joint piece that we published with McKinsey, we found that people costs account for nearly 45% of the total cost of ownership for direct attached storage. If EMC can make SAN’s manageable and accelerate their adoption, storage and server vendors will face the unhappy choice of working with EMC to drive deeper integration and ceding the management opportunity to EMC or of refusing and seeing their hardware do poorly as SAN’s are deployed. Remember that server vendors “chose” to play ball with EMC on SRDF because their customers wanted the functionality. And also like SRDF, there is a noticeable hardware cost savings. In small SAN deployments, we have seen disk utilization jump from the 20 to 35% range to 70% and server utilization jump from 25% to 50%. These savings coupled with people costs can reduce the total cost of ownership by over half. In our report, “The Storage Report—Customer Perspectives and Industry Evolution,” we saw the cost per managed terabyte drop from $0.80+ to the $0.30 to $0.35. While the move to SAN’s does not mean good things for storage or server hardware, we think the migration will be inevitable. That EMC has rolled out the beginning of a management stack that should not only spur SAN adoption but grant EMC an important control point is important. Yes, it may not spur sales of Symmetrix and it might reduce sales for SRDF, it also shows that EMC recognizes that the subsystem battle is over and that its is focused on being a leader in the next wave of enterprise computing. What About the Competition We have also long argued that three vendors, Brocade, EMC, and Veritas, seem uniquely positioned to deliver the three software stacks (network OS, management, and virtualization) for the 3 SAN’s. While we expect the competition to be long and drawn out, EMC’s intentions here seem a bit more clear. The Auto IS architecture, if successful, would effectively transform fabric management into a niche task and would limit Brocade’s addressable market. Similarly, it would transform volume management and tape back up into niche tasks as well. Next, if Auto IS takes of as the management standard, EMC may have the opportunity to differentiate its hardware again. EMC hardware would presumably be better integrated and offer better performance. But transitioning out of that business model once proved a bit difficult. This architecture would also nicely position EMC to begin delivering virtualization capabilities for the 3 SAN’s. And owning two of the three key software stacks for the next wave that will be dominated by the 3 SAN’s ain’t such a bad thing.
Market Size People cost is currently about 45% of total storage cost of ownership for DAS environments. While no software product will eliminate this, it is important to note that people cost exceeds hardware costs. In theory, the market for the three software stacks ought to exceed the $45 billion storage hardware market. More important, however, is what the 3 SAN’s will look like. These platforms would comprise storage, servers, networking gear, and the software that runs them. The market for managing them must be quite large and robust.
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Field Check Feedback: • Pricing remains brutal and will likely start being quoted in $’s per Gigabyte instead of pennies per megabyte. • The additional capacity, processors, cache, and ports in the new Symmetrixes are helping EMC’s price performance but it is still ugly. Our contacts have reported buy-ins going for mid-teens per megabyte and guaranteed upgrades selling in the $0.11 to $0.10 range. • IBM pricing of Shark remains very aggressive—have seen as low as $0.07 per megabyte. • EMC will price as low as necessary on hardware, but the software picture is more mixed. Three CIO’s did report getting bundled and, therefore, discounted pricing on software. But, a high level consultant who advises customers on the pricing of roughly 40 deals per week disagrees—EMC has refused to discount software. • Most continue to believe that EMC maintains its lead in software, but some have argued that HDS True Copy and HARC have begun to narrow the gap with Time Finder and SRDF. The debate seems lopsided in EMC’s favor at this point. • Roughly half of the 40 EMC deals are EMC versus HDS. There were some HDS versus Shark inquiries earlier but the HP Compaq merger announcement killed them. While he hasn’t seen EMC lose deals to Sun/HDS, he’s getting feedback from buyers that suggest that it may be happening. • In dedicated Sun environments, many of those we contacted suspect that Sun will be able to shut out EMC and protect its installed base. Similarly, outside of the Solaris installed base, they see little chance of Sun/HDS gaining traction. Admittedly, this was before the EMC Dell deal. • It also appears that Sun/HDS may be able to sell the code that HP developed as part of its OEM arrangement with HDS. Since HDS licensed HP’s microcode, Sun will be able to resell it. • While HDS is compelling for Sun, Sun’s long wait and other failed attempts at storage seem to have hurt is credibility. The sales force has to argue, “we got it right this time, not like the other 6 efforts we tried to sell you.” • We also heard from one sales contact in EMC that the company did not aggressively close business last quarter since it new the quarter was already shot.
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Network Appliance Our Stance On The Stock: • Dominates NAS, but we see four risks for commoditization: 1. Subsystem margin pressure 2. Lack of enterprise penetration 3. Poorly positioned to deliver the three software stacks and needs a stronger data center presence. 4. Poor distribution and market reach • Its TCO proposition could attract interest in the short term. Field Check Feedback: • Heard that NTAP took some business from EMC in a major European telecom account. • NTAP plans to introduce richer capabilities to support and manage block and file data formats. • NTAP’s NT consolidation business continues to do well and we heard of one large financial services deal. • The fight with Microsoft over NAS support with Exchange continues. While Microsoft clearly wants to fight any other OS, like NTAP’s WAFL, IBM Global Services does help customers use NTAP filers to do consolidation without certification or compatibility. • Continue to hear about some nice improvement in the database market, but the sell there still remains missionary. Impact: While these data points don’t impact our long-term concerns about commoditization, distribution, and positioning in the enterprise, we are warming to the story near term. We are close to anniversarying the weak demand environment and the easier compares. Moreover, this environment is clearly motivating some accounts to look at filers as lower cost alternatives to DAS and other storage implementations. NTAP may finally be in a position to make numbers and not have to reduce guidance going forward. |