2016 Trends in Datacenter Technologies

Similar documents
2016 Trends in Storage

Web and Application Hosting 2015

Social Intranets and the Supply Chain

Telco Multi-Play and Content Strategies

Cloud Management Platform Market Map 2016

Data Platforms and Analytics Market Map 2016

The Data Management of Things

Seattle EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW MULTI-TENANT DATACENTER MARKET

Mexico EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW MULTI-TENANT DATACENTER MARKET

Cloud Brokers EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW MAKING ITAAS A PRACTICAL REALITY?

CLOUDSCAPE. IT SERVICES Tooling up for ITaaS KEY FINDINGS

DATACENTER INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE. Monitoring, Managing and Optimizing the Datacenter

Global Case Studies in Highly Efficient Datacenters 2014

TOTAL DATA WAREHOUSING:

MOBILE APP LIFECYCLE

DATACENTER CANADA MTDC MARKET ASSESSMENT REPORT EXCERPT SUPPLY AND PROVIDERS MICHAEL LEVY WRITTEN BY DECEMBER 2012

OF THE CLOUD, FOR THE CLOUD

The ServiceNow Effect

WEB AND APPLICATION HOSTING

Using Converged Infrastructure to Enable Rapid, Cost-Effective Private Cloud Deployments

Worldwide Cloud Systems Management Software 2013 Vendor Shares

THE CYBER-SECURITY PLAYBOOK

IT BUSINESS. Hal Grant, EVP IT. February 19, 2015

Drivers for the Growing Adoption of Cloud-Based Disaster Recovery PREPARED FOR VMWARE BY 451 RESEARCH

Analytics In the Cloud

Eight Critical Forces Shape Enterprise Data Center Strategies

Global Headquarters: 5 Speen Street Framingham, MA USA P F

I D C T E C H N O L O G Y S P O T L I G H T. L e ve r a g i n g N e tw o r k Virtualization for B u s i n e s s D i fferentiation

Worldwide Datacenter Automation Software Market Shares, 2014: Year of Cloud and DevOps

I D C V E N D O R S P O T L I G H T. H yb r i d C l o u d Solutions for ERP

The Trellis Dynamic Infrastructure Optimization Platform for Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM)

Elevate Your Customer Engagement Strategy with Cloud Services

Convercent Predictive Analytics

Top 10 Technology Trends, 2013: Cloud Computing and Hybrid IT Drive Future IT Models

How To Understand Cloud Economics

MarketsandMarkets. Publisher Sample

Agenda Overview for Social Marketing, 2015

Design the Future of Your Human Resources with SuccessFactors Solutions

Agenda for Supply Chain Strategy and Enablers, 2012

WHITE PAPER Making Cloud an Integral Part of Your Enterprise Storage and Data Protection Strategy

O p t i m i z i n g t h e N e t w o r k t o M e e t T o m o r r o w ' s I C T D e m a n d s

Q&A: The Many Aspects of Private Cloud Computing

IT as a Service Emerges as a New Management Paradigm in the Software-Defined Datacenter Era

Research Agenda and Key Issues for Converged Infrastructure, 2006

Integrated and federated: TDB Fusion aims to bring seamless management to datacenters

Midsize Enterprises Lead in Adoption of Payment Outsourcing

Title here. Successful Business Model Transformation. in the Financial Services Industry. KPMG s Evolving World of Risk Management SECTORS AND THEMES

Business Intelligence: The European Perspective

Software-as-a-Service: Managing Benefits for SMBs

Accenture Technology Consulting. Clearing the Path for Business Growth

The Business Value of VCE Vblock Systems: Leveraging Convergence to Drive Business Agility

Leverage the Internet of Things to Transform Maintenance and Service Operations

What Makes A Good Hosting

DATACENTER BRAZIL MTDC MARKET ASSESSMENT EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW. Supply and Providers MARCH 2013

Accelerate Your Enterprise Private Cloud Initiative

WHITE PAPER. Building Blocks of the Modern Data Center

Data Center Network Evolution: Increase the Value of IT in Your Organization

IDC MarketScape: Worldwide Datacenter Infrastructure Management 2015 Vendor Assessment

HP CLOUDSYSTEM. A single platform for private, public, and hybrid clouds. Simply the most complete cloud system for enterprises and service providers

DATACENTER MULTI-TENANT DATACENTER NORTH AMERICAN PROVIDERS 2013 EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW KEY FINDINGS

Transforming Business Processes with Agile Integrated Platforms

Magic Quadrant for Storage Services, 2Q05 25 May 2005 Adam W. Couture Robert E. Passmore

Are Small Consultancies Best for Big Data Projects?

Outlook for the CRM Software Market: Trends and Forecast (Executive Summary) Executive Summary

Vigilent shows market awareness with datacenter dynamic cooling update

Transcription:

PREVIEW 2016 Trends in Datacenter Technologies OCT 2015 Rhonda Ascierto, Research Director Andy Lawrence, Research Vice President Andrew Donoghue, European Research Manager Daniel Bizo, Senior Analyst Leading datacenter technology suppliers are attempting to respond to and anticipate significant changes in demand brought about by cloud and hyperscale datacenter operators, among other factors. These changes will unfold over the next several years, but all face growing pressure today to develop cost-effective and energy-efficient products, as many datacenters of all kinds seek to drive down costs. 2015 451 Research, LLC WWW.451RESEARCH.COM

ABOUT 451 RESEARCH 451 Research is a preeminent information technology research and advisory company. With a core focus on technology innovation and market disruption, we provide essential insight for leaders of the digital economy. More than 100 analysts and consultants deliver that insight via syndicated research, advisory services and live events to over 1,000 client organizations in North America, Europe and around the world. Founded in 2000 and headquartered in New York, 451 Research is a division of The 451 Group. 2015 451 Research, LLC and/or its Affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication, in whole or in part, in any form without prior written permission is forbidden. The terms of use regarding distribution, both internally and externally, shall be governed by the terms laid out in your Service Agreement with 451 Research and/or its Affiliates. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. 451 Research disclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Although 451 Research may discuss legal issues related to the information technology business, 451 Research does not provide legal advice or services and their research should not be construed or used as such. 451 Research shall have no liability for errors, omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibility for the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change without notice. NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO LONDON BOSTON 20 West 37th Street 3rd Floor New York, NY 10018 P 212-505-3030 F 212-505-2630 140 Geary Street 9th Floor San Francisco, CA 94108 P 415-989-1555 F 415-989-1558 37-41 Gower Street London, UK WC1E 6HH P +44 (0)20 7299 7765 F +44 (0)20 7299 7799 1 Liberty Square, 5th Floor Boston, MA 02109 P 617-261-0699 F 617-261-0688 ABOUT THE AUTHOR RHONDA ASCIERTO RESEARCH DIRECTOR Rhonda Ascierto is a Research Director in the Datacenter Technologies and Eco- Efficient IT practices at 451 Research. Rhonda has been analyzing the crossroads of IT and business for more than 15 years. She focuses on datacenter innovation and energy management in datacenters and across the enterprise. She also covers technologies that enable the efficient use of all resources and help to minimize the environmental impact of business activity. II

Key Findings The datacenter is becoming more software-driven, with infrastructure management systems increasingly integrating with IT management systems. This will make DCIM software more effective and more useful, including in hybrid datacenter environments but will force companies and suppliers to innovate more and to focus on integration. Prefabricated modular (PFM) datacenter designs are rapidly evolving. We expect PFM datacenters will become the new benchmark to beat for virtually all use cases, giving operators new options and with greater speed, predictability and agility than traditional approaches. The Open Compute Project and other hyperscale datacenter architectures represent both an opportunity and a threat to suppliers. The impact of cloud computing on the datacenter industry and its ecosystems of suppliers is both deep and wide. Technology suppliers need to adjust their strategies and products accordingly. The role of datacenters as passive users of energy is slowly beginning to change, with some progressive facilities finding more effective ways to interact with, and understand, established and emerging energy suppliers. Over time, the real-time power feed from the grid will become just one of many power sources, rather than the default option. III

Executive Summary INTRODUCTION FACING CLOUDY HEADWINDS, SUPPLIERS WILL CHANGE TACK Widespread change across the datacenter sector is disrupting suppliers of equipment, software and services on a number of levels. While executives and investors are buoyed by the secure knowledge that demand for datacenter capacity and datacenter services will continue to grow steadily and globally, their optimism is coupled with uncertainty. Cloud computing has yet to make its full impact, and the extent and the form of that impact on enterprise and commercial datacenters is still unclear. It will take several years to play out, but demand for on-premises capacity will certainly be offset by the ability to far more easily migrate workloads and place new workloads with cloud providers such as Amazon. This possibility is, in turn, beginning to create new competitive and efficiency pressures; operators looking do more of the same or more for less are now considering radical change. Our research shows that there will likely be fewer yet larger enterprise datacenters in 2016 and beyond, as many smaller and regional facilities are consolidated into centralized premium sites. While more capacity is being outsourced to public cloud datacenters, a growing number of enterprises are also turning to colocation and hosting providers. Within enterprise and colocation facilities, cost efficiency will be a goal, but not at the expense of availability or reliability. This means highredundancy facilities will continue to be built, using traditional power topologies and other incumbent equipment. Datacenter equipment suppliers will continue to develop more efficient versions of their products. Yet their R&D labs are almost unrecognizable from a few years ago, as they develop new technology and sales and support strategies to help cloud and other hyperscale datacenters exploit their economies of scale and drive down costs. This is a trend that will only continue in coming years. While hyperscales represent a very small number of sites today, they are the fastest-growing datacenter segment due to demand from cloud providers. They are driving new datacenter designs, technologies and operational approaches, including those proposed by the Open Compute Project (OCP). A small number of other types of datacenters, notably colocation, are also beginning to adopt these non-traditional technologies and designs as a way to differentiate. Over time, more are likely to follow. There is also significant interest and adoption in prefabricated, standardized datacenters by all sectors of the market, to better align capital expenditure with capacity requirements. Prefabricated modular (PFM) datacenter designs are still emergent yet evolving rapidly and meeting demand for additional capacity in various ways. Some large facilities are being built entirely from prefabbed components. In urban areas and elsewhere, we anticipate that numerous small prefabbed micro-modular datacenters will emerge. Edge-of-network requirements, driven by new Internet of Things (IoT) applications, will help fuel their growth. Regardless of their form, datacenters in the coming years will become increasingly automated and agile across hybrid on- and off-premises environments. Organizations embarking on hybrid datacenter strategies are beginning to realize the need for integrated management tools, driving up demand of datacenter infrastructure management (DCIM) and related software. While DCIM has appeared to be ahead of the market for many years, increasing recognition that well-run datacenters use integrated, fully functional software platforms means DCIM may at last enjoy widespread adoption. However, at this stage of its development, it will be a less distinct market blended with IT provisioning, orchestration and service management. Another area of change is the sourcing and management of energy. This is more of a long-term trend, although progressive datacenters are already finding more effective ways to interact with, and understand, established and emerging energy suppliers. This is leading to a greater variety of different power architectures and purchasing relationships. New approaches to sourcing and management of energy in the datacenter will manifest themselves in a number of ways, with varying impacts on suppliers of traditional power infrastructure and services, and also ancillary datacenter technology vendors. This report presents five trends we see shaping datacenter technologies in the coming year. IV

2016 TRENDS IN DATACENTER TECHNOLOGIES 451 Research s 2016 Datacenter Technologies Trends Source: 451 Research, 2015 DCIM Will Move Further Up the IT Stack Prefabricated Datacenters Will Come of Age Hyperscales and the Open Compute Project Will Disrupt Cloud Will Drive Technical and Business Change Datacenters Will Evolve from Consumers to Active Energy Players Winners Suppliers that can combine and analyze DCIM data with numerous IT and financial management tools Suppliers with messaging clarity and the right balance of design optimization and deployment flexibility Well-resourced suppliers that have global reach and that can create strategic relationships with hyperscales and rival suppliers Colos, hosting and cloud companies that operate efficiently and flexibly; suppliers of most classes of datacenter management software; suppliers that develop a strategy to work with larger commercial operators Suppliers capable of combining utility, datacenter construction resources and/ or dynamic energy management software to support energy-smart infrastructures Losers Suppliers of DCIM platforms that do not at least promise to meet future DCSO requirements Suppliers that do not (or cannot) develop product enhancements and invest in effective marketing Suppliers that lack the scale, global presence and resources to rapidly innovate Suppliers wedded to the enterprise datacenter market, and whose growth is predicated on physical infrastructure redundancy and overprovisioning for availability; software suppliers that don t participate in the cloud ecosystem Suppliers of legacy energy storage, such as diesel generators, as well as traditional AC power gear and traditional power generation METHODOLOGY Reports such as this one represent a holistic perspective on key emerging markets in the enterprise IT space. These markets evolve quickly, though, so 451 Research offers additional services that provide critical marketplace updates. These updated reports and perspectives are presented on a daily basis via the company s core intelligence service, 451 Research Market Insight. Forward-looking M&A analysis and perspectives on strategic acquisitions and the liquidity environment for technology companies are also updated regularly via Market Insight, which is backed by the industry-leading 451 Research M&A KnowledgeBase. Emerging technologies and markets are also covered in additional 451 Research channels, including Business Applications; Cloud and IT Services Markets; Data Platforms and Analytics; Datacenter Technologies; Enterprise Mobility; European Services; Information Security; Mobile Telecom; Multi-Tenant Datacenters; Networking; Service Providers; Storage; and Systems and Software Infrastructure. Beyond that, 451 Research has a robust set of quantitative insights covered in products such as ChangeWave, Voice of the Enterprise, Market Monitor, the M&A KnowledgeBase and the Datacenter KnowledgeBase. All of these 451 Research services, which are accessible via the Web, provide critical and timely analysis specifically focused on the business of enterprise IT innovation. For more information about 451 Research, please go to: www.451research.com. V

Table of Contents TRENDS 1 Trend 1: DCIM Will Move Further Up the IT Stack 1 Figure 1: Global Datacenter Management Software Market Forecast............................. 2 RECOMMENDATIONS................................................ 2 WINNERS...................................................... 2 LOSERS....................................................... 2 Trend 2: Prefabricated Datacenters Will Come of Age 3 Figure 2: Aggregate PFM Revenue Forecast 2013-18 ($M)................................... 4 RECOMMENDATIONS................................................ 4 WINNERS....................................................... 5 LOSERS....................................................... 5 Trend 3: Hyperscales and the Open Compute Project Will Disrupt Suppliers Status Quo 6 RECOMMENDATIONS................................................ 7 WINNERS....................................................... 7 LOSERS....................................................... 7 Trend 4: Cloud Will Drive Technical and Business Change 8 Figure 3: Datacenter Space Is Being Distributed........................................ 9 Figure 4: Companies Evaluating Disaster Recovery Strategies Anticipated Site or Service Type.............. 10 RECOMMENDATIONS................................................ 11 WINNERS..................................................... 11 LOSERS...................................................... 11 Trend 5: Datacenters Will Evolve from Consumers to Active Energy Players 12 Figure 5: Different Forms of Renewable Energy Supply for Datacenters........................... 13 RECOMMENDATIONS................................................ 13 WINNERS...................................................... 14 LOSERS...................................................... 14 VI

2016 TRENDS IN DATACENTER TECHNOLOGIES THE LONG VIEW 15 Figure 6: The Worldwide Datacenter Installed Base......................................15 FURTHER READING 16 INDEX OF COMPANIES 17 VII