EMC Tops IBM In Huge Deal For StorageEMC Tops IBM In Huge Deal For Storage

One of Australia's largest hosting providers has bypassed incumbent storage provider IBM and instead picked EMC to deliver 261 terabytes of of storage. The customer's CTO said big factors were EMC's tight three-way alliance with Cisco and VMware and its willingness to extend service coverage from three years to four.

Bob Evans, Contributor

October 19, 2009

2 Min Read
information logo in a gray background | information

One of Australia's largest hosting providers has bypassed incumbent storage provider IBM and instead picked EMC to deliver 261 terabytes of of storage. The customer's CTO said big factors were EMC's tight three-way alliance with Cisco and VMware and its willingness to extend service coverage from three years to four.From an itnews.com.au article citing customer Melbourne IT's CTO, Glenn Gore:

While VMware and Cisco tend to play down their technology trinity, the VCE (VMware, Cisco, EMC) partnership was top of mind for Gore as a customer. "It was important to see our roadmaps and theirs line up," he said. "We want to move to a highly dense environment.

"There is also lot of value to be gained from buying off vendors with a mutual support matrix between them. It stops the finger-pointing between vendors when there is a problem. This is especially important as the grey area between servers, network and storage is blurred further."

The iTnews article said the four new EMC storage units will come fairly close to matching the capacity of the 19 IBM systems currently in place: 261 terabytes of usable capacity in the four EMC SANs versus 330 terabytes 19 IBM SANs.

In addition, customer CTO Gore said he was very impressed by EMC's willingness to add a fourth year of service into the mix:

Gore said EMC has for the first time offered a four-year TCO (total cost of ownership model), an extra year on most other vendors. "We have usually looked at a three-year TCO model, but tried to stretch it out to four or five years if the fifth year is used for migration to a new platform," he said. "The EMC deal packages four years of service life upfront."

Read more about:

20092009

About the Author

Bob Evans

Contributor

Bob Evans is senior VP, communications, for Oracle Corp. He is a former information editor.

Never Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights