IDC provisionally defines converged systems as preintegrated vendor-certified systems containing, at a minimum, server hardware, together with load balancing and hardware management software - with additional components, including storage hardware and software, networking gear, operating system, virtualization, middleware, and application software, also part of converged solutions.
Converged systems are a step up compared with reference architectures as they are typically sold as special SKUs (stock keeping units). They can be divided into converged infrastructure systems (workload-agnostic, virtualization-centric blocks comprising network-level resource control, automation software, and datacenter hardware) and converged platform systems (workload-specific hardware stacks in which the application or middleware elements are preintegrated and dictate the whole engineering effort).
The survey was carried out in June 2012 with a larger sample of organizations and a wider range of questions than in the past. Among the main findings related to private cloud and converged system trends, the survey found that:
- There was a sharp rise in private cloud deployments among European organizations. 20% of respondents reported that they have implemented private clouds in 2012, compared with 6% in the previous European storage survey conducted in 2011.
- More than a third of respondents reported having deployed some type of converged infrastructure.
- The reported perceived benefits of converged systems are centered around application performance, application availability, time to deployment, and ease of management.
- 50% of respondents are primarily drawn to infrastructure-oriented converged systems for the deployment of infrastructure as a service (IaaS). 20% of respondents expressed a stronger interest in application/middleware optimized converged platform systems. 30% of respondents reported having no interest at all in converged systems.
Commenting on the results, Donna Taylor, research director with IDC's European Storage Group, said, "Many European organizations recognize that converged systems have the potential to offer a cost-effective solution that can improve agility and business alignment by unlocking faster time to value and faster time to market. Faced with a future in which organizations need to deploy and effectively use hundreds, thousands, or even tens of thousands of server, and/or desktop, applications in a virtual environment, companies are also considering how they can deploy optimally configured converged IT infrastructure solutions that are managed as unified IT assets in order to support private cloud environments."
Nathaniel Martinez, program director, European Enterprise Server Group, IDC EMEA, said, "European organizations are seeing private cloud and converged infrastructure as key to their datacenter strategy. However, we are only starting to see wider adoption. An increasing number of European organizations are reaching the end of their consolidation programs as suggested by the latest results from IDC's Virtualization Server Tracker, which reported a server virtualization rate approaching 25.7% of all servers shipped in Western Europe in 1Q12. Those enterprises are entering the last mile of virtualization and are focusing on application portfolio management, resource pooling, elasticity, and modularity. European organizations, whose investments in private cloud deployments are expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 23.2% for the next five years to $7.9 billion in 2016, increasingly require systems that are optimized for performance and efficiency. In that context, European organizations deem converged infrastructure systems as a good fit for advanced virtualization usage and private cloud deployments as these systems provide the flexibility of general-purpose machines, the elasticity of cloud computing, and the ease of deployment and use of integrated systems."
Giorgio Nebuloni, senior research analyst, European Enterprise Server Group, IDC EMEA, said, "While European organizations are not yet fully clear on how converged systems are different from reference architectures, awareness and interest are growing, pushed by the fundamental need to deliver applications to end users in a faster, more stable, and flexible way. IDC believes that in order to make converged systems a success, suppliers will have to tangibly prove these technology improvements to IT managers, while at the same time convincing C-level executives of concrete operating expense reductions."
Related Research
IDC is launching a new Customer Information Service (CIS) which focuses on converged system deployment adoption trends in Western Europe. This CIS will build on existing and forthcoming research streams to investigate the impact of converged systems on individual ICT industry sectors, and will report in what context converged system deployments are used and how to address the associated opportunities in Europe. Current and planned research for the new service includes:
- IDC 2012 European Storage Survey (forthcoming)
- Western European Dedicated Private Cloud, 2011-2016: Hardware, Software, Networking, and Services (IDC #SR03U, July 2012)
- IDC's Worldwide Converged Systems Taxonomy, 2012 (IDC #235293, June 2012)
- Converged System Players in EMEA: Oracle's Engineered Systems Approach (IDC #GE07U, July 2012)
- Converged System Players in EMEA: HP (forthcoming)
- European Converged System Survey (forthcoming)
- Storage Challenges and Preferences for Western European Customers (forthcoming)
- Western European Storage Customer Perceptions of Converged Systems (forthcoming)
- VCE Increases Its EMEA Efforts (IDC #GE56U, February 2012)