Thursday, January 10, 2008

VMware - A SWOT Analysis

Strengths

One of the major strengths of VMware is its adaptability on a variety of platforms from the large, such as IBM’s x445, to the small, such as HP blade servers. They also sell an add-on called Virtual SMP that allows its customers operate virtual dual-processor servers. This allows their software to be purchased by a wider swath of customers, from large corporations to the small firms with a one person IT staff.

Another strength of VMware is the ability to perform “live migrations” for its users. The live migration is the ability to move running virtual machines between physical servers. This migration ability, which VMware calls VMotion, is far and away more advanced than its competitors, such as Microsoft.

One more strength is VMware’s lead in the industry. VMware’s virtualization software is ahead of its strongest competitor, Microsoft, by 18 months to three years. This lead allows it to set the industry standards, with competitors following its lead and looking like copiers instead of innovators.

VMware also allows a company to enter the virtualization world gradually. It allows its customers to implement it in increments and not all at once. That way the IT staff can become accustomed to it at its own pace.

Weaknesses

While its strengths are good, VMware does have its weaknesses. One of these weaknesses is cost. The amount of memory needed to run VMware is large. In order to run more than one virtual machine, the minimum amount of memory is 1GB, more is recommended. This can add to the costs a company must pay. Along with being a memory hog, the customers must also run a very powerful CPU when running machines concurrently. Another cost factor is VMware charges a per workstation license fee. For a large company, this can quickly add up.

While Microsoft is way behind VMware in virtualization software, the mere presence of Microsoft in the field is a weakness. VMware may have the better software but there are numerous companies that run in a pure Microsoft environment. According to an article entitled “Buying off the plans, CHH opts for Microsoft roadmap”, Carter Holt Harvey (CHH) is going with Microsoft’s virtualization software.

After a SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats) VMware and Microsoft came in very close, says Modkov. In the end, the company decided to go for Microsoft’s virtualization product, even though it was a relatively new technology, “miles behind VMware”, he says.

“We knew that we were basically the only early adopter,” he says.

But the company, a Microsoft shop, found the technology fit-for-purpose for its current IT environment. In addition, because the IT team was already familiar with Microsoft, it was easy for staff to learn and adopt the Microsoft virtualization platform, he says.

Taking Microsoft’s virtualization strategy and technology roadmap into consideration, Modkov felt that the long-term benefits far outweighed any current issues. “We looked at Microsoft’s roadmap, and we believed them,” he says.

This soft of loyalty to a company’s brand is hard to overcome, even for an industry leader like VMware.

Opportunities

With virtualization moving from leading edge to mainstream, more opportunities are becoming available for VMWare. VMWare’s purchase of Dune Technologies in September of 2007 positions it to enlarge their remote desktop management areas of products. “The application from Dunes is a natural fit for the most recent version of Virtual Desktop Manager”. With the growing numbers of intercontinental companies, the market for remote and virtual desktop management systems is sure to be a growing market.

The virtual application arena is another promising expansion area for VMWare. As virtual machine environments continue to grow, more business will realize the flexibility and low overhead of virtual applications. “Virtual appliances are pre-built, pre-configured, ready-to-run enterprise applications packaged with an operating system inside a virtual machine”. From the definition, it is easy to imagine the advantages virtual appliances will have for smaller businesses. Businesses of all size will be able to run enterprise applications without the high overhead of traditional hardware. Virtual appliances also give independent software vendors (ISVs) opportunities to reach a greater customer base. Since the virtual appliances include the operating system they run on, ISVs can save development time and resources by deploying virtual appliances that run on a single operating system thus avoiding compatibility issues. Additionally, customers can download and install the virtual appliance on their hardware of choice regardless of cost. This creates a larger market for enterprise applications that would otherwise be out of price range for smaller businesses.

Threats

One of the largest threats to the VMWare virtualization software is security breaches. "There hasn’t been a significant security breach in virtualization, not a public one," says IDC analyst Stephen Elliott. "At some point, you have to figure it's a matter of time". According to Laurianne McLaughlin’s article, hypervisor malware and hypervisor weaknesses may make it possible for a hacker to breach VMWare’s guest operating system and access the host operating system of the server.

In addition, virtualization technology has made it more difficult for the IT team to see the traffic running between VMs. The security tools have not kept up with virtualization technology meaning that network and security departments have lost visibility to network traffic.

Although a public security breach has not yet occurred, it is important that VMWare and other competitors continue to develop the security tools to protect the virtual environments. Security issues that place corporate data at risk will diminish the sale of virtualization software at fast rate.

From a business perspective, the largest threat to VMWare’s continued growth is the number of companies that are going to enter the virtualization arena in the near future with differentiating technology. Among them are start-up Virtual Iron a Lowell, Mass.-based company whose software is designed not only to run multiple operating systems on one machine but also to let a single operating system span several machines”. VMWare is clearly the leader in the virtualization space but to grow its market share and continue to justify its price tag, VMWare must continue to offer the latest and greatest in virtualization technology.

Sources:

VMware calls for IT organisational overhaul –

http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2198798/vmware-chief-virtualization

Logicalis - Virtualization on the Inside - http://www.us.logicalis.com/custexp_logicalis_vmware.htm

Microsoft's feature cuts imply virtualization weakness - http://www.cbronline.com/article_feature.asp?guid=1AAD53D7-B1ED-4FC2-8AB7-A99830E8DE91

What can you do with VMware Workstation 5 - http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/window-on-windows/?p=436

Buying off the plans, CHH opts for Microsoft’s roadmap - http://computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/spec/8AD5AC5AA657965CCC25734700798D82

Hickins, Michael. "VMware Buy Expands Virtualization Opportunities."

http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,2181898,00.asp

"Learn About Virtual Appliances." VMWare
http://www.vmware.com/appliances/learn/

"Future Threats to Virtualization Security: Fact vs. Fiction http://www.cio.com/article/155050/

"Virtualization companies vie for advantage

http://www.news.com/Virtualization-companies-vie-for-advantage/2100-7344_36035212.html

Thursday, January 3, 2008

VMware: Market Share Analysis

New technology and lower costs have transformed the business of virtualization software into a booming market. Virtualization is a framework for enabling the resources of a computer to function as multiple “virtual” systems, thereby dividing up its resources into multiple environments.

VMware Inc. (NYSE:VWM) sells software that is integral to the operation of efficient network resources and data centers. VMware's virtualization software can make multiple physical computers behave like a single, ultra-powerful "virtual" machine, or split apart a single physical machine and make it behave like multiple computers (for example, to host several different websites on the same server). In addition to software sales, thirty percent of VMware's revenue comes from services such as maintenance and upgrades and training.

In 2007, VMware is expecting to post an impressive 67% sales increase over 2006’s figures. These numbers reflect virtualization's rising popularity in the marketplace. As IT professionals become more familiar with virtualization, the technology should become more commonplace. By the year 2010, it is estimated that around 15% of all physical servers will be virtualized, as opposed to 2% in 2006.

VMware is currently the leader in the virtualization market, with its estimated market share ranging from 55% to 80%. Depending on how one defines the virtualization market, VMware's competitors include Microsoft, Citrix System, IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, and Sun Microsystems.

The Main Competitors

VMware leads the market today, but competition looms. Though Microsoft hasn't released much virtualization software yet, it is expected to include a free version of its proprietary virtualization software, called Hyper-V with Microsoft Server 2008. It is expected to hit the market in mid-2008. Hyper-V is expected to be pretty basic compared to VMware's fine-tuned virtualization programs. The fact that it is free and carries the Microsoft name makes it a notable competitor.

In August 2007, Citrix jumped at the chance to gain market share through acquisition. They spent $500 million to buy privately held virtualization vendor, XenSource. XenSource’s flagship product is XenEnterprise 4, which is in a direct competitor to VMware Infrastructure 3. XenEnterprise 4 features premium functions such as live migration of virtual machines among physical servers, but with a significantly lower price tag.

The Here and Now

Seekingalpha.com recently surveyed ChangeWave Alliance corporate IT members about their company’s spending on virtualization software and services. Of those that use virtualization software, 55% chose VMware. Note: some companies use more than one vendor.


What the Future Holds

To get an idea of where the virtualization market is headed, Seekingalpha.com asked the respondents about future virtualization purchases. Seventy-one percent said VMware should be their software of choice, easily eclipsing the competition.



Customer Satisfaction is the Key

According to the respondents of the ChangeWare Alliance survey, VMware customers are reporting the highest satisfaction levels in the industry. Fifty-six percent say they are Very Satisfied with VMware.




With VMware customers reporting the highest satisfaction levels in the industry – it’s clear why VMware leads the market.

Sources:

Citrix Acquires XenSource, Heats up Virtualization Market
http://www.nemertes.com/free_content/research_notes/impact_analyses/nemertes_impact_analysis_citrix_acquires_xensource_heats_up_virtualization_market_0

Microsoft vs. VMware for the Virtualization Crown
http://www.glgroup.com/News/Microsft-vs.-VMWare-for-the-Virtualization-Crown-19944.html

VMware Sees New Competition
http://blog.trade-radar.com/2007/12/vmware-sees-new-competition.html

VMware Rules the Virtualization Market
http://seekingalpha.com/article/54307-vmware-rules-the-virtualization-market

Friday, December 14, 2007

Latest Marriage: SAP + VMware

On December 12th VMware and SAP announced a partnership that will support the SAP solutions on a VMWare Infrastructure. SAP will provide full support for its Windows and Linux based solutions.

"VMware Infrastructure has many benefits for hosted environments," said Benno Weidmann, vice president, hosting infrastructure management at SAP Hosting. "We've been able to automate internal business processes and increase service levels to internal customers. In addition, we have reduced costs with consolidation and automation of system deployment, as well as greatly reduced the required hardware for internal training and development systems. Altogether, virtualization helps us to lower costs, develop and automate user services, better manage hardware and software lifecycles, and improve production and capacity planning across a more unified infrastructure."

http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/prnewswire/AQW10612122007-1.htm <http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/prnewswire/AQW10612122007-1.htm>

How does this impact VMware and SAP? It meets a growing demand for current or potential SAP clients to run virtualization software. This is a product enhancement that SAP competitors such as Oracle do not have. This is a competitive advantage for both VMware and SAP, especially since Oracle is working to launch virtualization software but hasn't been able to do so yet.

Is VMware too Expensive?

With the emergence of competing hypervisor products coming in the next 12 - 24 months, VMware's CEO, Diane Greene, was asked if VMware could continue to sustain their margins and maintain 80 - 90% of the market.

And Diane Greene's response? "...while competitors are coming into the market, coming out with a hypervisor product isn't an easy task. VMware's software is far more feature rich and has far more advanced capabilities than rival virtualisation companies. VMware is a pretty progressive company and we have continued to develop new products that have added value to help enable us to maintain our price points because of all the amazing new functionality that is of very high value in terms of cost savings for our customers."

If VMware is concerned about the competition cutting into market share and driving down prices, Diane Greene isn't showing it.

http://www.techworld.com/opsys/features/index.cfm?featureID=3885&pagtype=samecatsamechan <http://www.techworld.com/opsys/features/index.cfm?featureID=3885&pagtype=samecatsamechan>

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

That Car Can't Fly!!

There's nothing more likely to get a "VMwarite" riled up than comparing Microsoft Virtual Server (MSVS) and VMware ESX Server. Although they both virtualize an x86 system, MSVS runs on top of Windows, and ESX Server doesn't.

VMware does have a server product that runs on top of a host operating system like MSVS, and it's the free VMware Server. MSVS should by all rights be compared to VMware Server, not ESX Server.

ESX Server is much more powerful, but comes at a higher price, a bit more complexity for enterprise-scale deployments, and a smaller universe of supported hardware.

So let's look at this article by Alex Barrett at SearchServerVirtualization. It starts with a fair premise -- for some small shops, it's a path of least resistance to just use MSVS and call it a day.

And when you read closely, Alex mentions VMware Server, but when the people he interviews start talking about price and VMotion in an article on MSVS, alarm bells should start going off.

Microsoft Virtual Server flawed, not broken, users say.

The More The Merrier...

VMware, Inc. today announced that more than 60 organizations have joined its co-development programs. Approximately 350 developers from VMware's ecosystem of partner organizations are actively working on co-development projects to bring VMware-enabled solutions to customers worldwide through collaborative development. These solutions include integrations for the new update of VMware Infrastructure.

VMware's co-development initiatives include the VMware Community Source program, which enables partners to contribute to and use the source code for VMware ESX Server, as well as ongoing product engineering projects with partners that leverage VMware APIs. These co-development programs enable industry collaboration that has resulted in new value-added products and functionality optimized for VMware environments.

The collaborative development resources offered by VMware have enabled partner organizations to develop products for VMware Infrastructure that offer increased interoperability and supportability, improved I/O capabilities, expanded storage and networking choices and improved desktop management. VMware co-development programs enable participants to work closely with VMware to develop products that further extend the value of customers' VMware deployments through enhanced functionality.