Recession Continues to Take Its Toll on the Market, Even Server Virtualization, Although There Are Signs of Recovery as Customer Adoption Expands, According to IDC
26 Oct 2009
FRAMINGHAM, Mass., October 26, 2009 – According to
IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Virtualization Tracker, 16.5% of all new
servers shipped in the second quarter of 2009 (2Q09) were virtualized, an
increase from 14.5% in 2Q08. However, actual shipments decreased 21.0% year
over year to 246,000 physical servers in 2Q09 as customers continue to limit
spending on new server hardware relative to last year. Similarly, worldwide
virtualization software revenue declined 18.7% year over year in 2Q09 to $344
million. Virtualization licenses did grow quarter over quarter in 2Q09. The
server virtualization market continues to shift towards the use of paid
hypervisors, with paid virtualization software now running on 60.8% of all new
server hardware shipments virtualized in 2Q09, an increase over 57.2% in 2Q08.
"In the second quarter, IDC observed a number of signs
indicating that stability is beginning to take hold in the worldwide server
market," said Matt Eastwood, group vice president of Enterprise Platforms
at IDC. "The worldwide server installed base has aged significantly and virtual
machine densities on these systems have increased sharply over the past year.
As a result, the market is poised for the beginning of a significant
infrastructure refresh cycle in the months ahead. IDC believes that
virtualization will be a cornerstone technology as medium and large enterprise
organizations around the globe accelerate the need for more dynamic and
converged infrastructure designed to support the business needs of the next
economic cycle."
Server Virtualization Maturity Signals Changing Behaviors and Buying
Intentions
"Server virtualization has forever changed how customers
manage their datacenters," said Michelle Bailey, research vice president of
Datacenter Trends at IDC. "'Virtualization First' is now the default
approach for new server deployments at most enterprise IT organizations and is
quickly becoming the foundational platform for cloud computing initiatives
among service providers. Additionally, growth in emerging regions is
accelerating as the economic downturn limits the ability of organizations to
raise capital. The next phase in virtualization will require a reinvention of
IT policies and procedures and continued adoption of automation tools will be
key as virtual machine densities rise and customers find themselves facing virtual
server sprawl issues."
Overall New Server Shipments Virtualized Market Standings, by Vendor
Hewlett-Packard held onto the number 1 spot for worldwide
new server shipments virtualized with 36% market share. HP's shipments declined
18% year over year in 2Q09 but grew 1% sequentially. These results were driven
primarily by its x86 Proliant server business. Dell continues to distance
itself from the remainder of the field as the number 2 vendor with its market
share growing 9% over 1Q09. Dell’s relatively strong performance was driven by
growth of Intel-based x86 servers in a weak market. IBM remained in the third
position with 15% market share. IBM achieved 14% sequential growth driven by a
solid performance from its converged System p and x86-based servers.
x86 Virtualization License Market Standings, by Virtualization Platform
VMware continues to hold the number 1 (VMware ESX) and
number 2 (VMware Server) virtualization platforms despite revenues declining
22% year over year. This was slightly more than the decline of 21% in total x86
virtualization licenses. Microsoft saw its virtualization license shipments
decline 16% year over year, due to the continued depreciation of Virtual Server
2005. However, Hyper-V showed a sharp increase of 54%, one year after its
official launch and entrenching itself into 4th place while it cannibalizes
itself into the number 3 position, past Virtual Server 2005. Parallels
Virtuozzo rounds out the top 5 with license shipments declining 36% year over
year. Citrix XenServer showed the largest increase, growing 108% year over year
due to the company changing its business model and offering the product for
free with certain management functionality. It's a bold seeding strategy that
will see market share gains, but will take some time, if ever, to monetize.
"Despite economic
worries, we are seeing the continued increase of paid virtualization platforms,
as it now accounts for more than 60% of all x86 virtualization license
shipments," said Brett Waldman, research analyst for System Software at IDC. "This is due to the maturation of virtualization deployments and the need for
greater control with higher quality, fine grained management tools as IT
departments continue to strive towards internal cloud computing environments."
IDC's Server
Virtualization Taxonomy
Virtualization licenses represents the amount of
virtualization platform shipments for a given vendor in a given quarter. New
server shipments virtualized maps the amount of virtualization platforms
shipments that are sold directly by the hardware vendors. Virtualized server
revenue represents the hardware revenue of new server shipments virtualized.
Virtualization software revenue represents the software revenue associated with
virtualization platform sales.
IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Virtualization Tracker is a
quantitative tool for analyzing the global server market on a quarterly basis.
The Tracker includes quarterly virtualization license shipments, new server
shipments virtualized, virtualized server revenue and virtualization software
revenue, segmented by region, cpu type, vendor, form factor, sockets,
virtualization platform, and primary guest operating system. For more
information, please contact Hoang Nguyen at 508-935-4718 or hnguyen@idc.com.
Contact
For more information, contact:
Brett Waldman
bwaldman@idc.com
508-988-6748
Matt Eastwood
meastwood@idc.com
508-935-4503
Michael Shirer
press@idc.com
508-935-4200
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