Unification vs. Best of Breed

Most vendors can do one product category really well, two categories pretty well and then fall apart after that.

George Crump

May 6, 2009

3 Min Read
Network Computing logo

The last couple of months vendors like HP, Dell, IBM and Cisco have been talking about unification. I've been sitting on the sidelines trying to figure out why anyone would really do this. The most typical response I get from the vendor community is that the users are asking for it. As I talk to users I get the sense that the request has been misinterpreted.

The users I talk to want their data centers simplified -- but they still want best of breed. They are once again being asked to do more with less and they are looking to the vendors to help. But I don't think most of them want that to mean that all of the technology has to come from one vendor in a single box that does everything. Most users still want the ability to pick the best of breed for their unique situation, they just want the products to work together better.

There are times where getting several of the components from a single vendor make sense. Brocade, for example, has a case to make with the common HBA and switch strategy. CommVault has a case to make with backup and archive being integrated.

There are times when complimentary components may be more compelling. Symantec, for example, has an equally interesting play with their Open Storage Option (OST) and dedupe vendors like Sepaton and Data Domain are taking advantage of the option to provide better performance and integration into NetBackup.

I can't think of a single instance where getting the entire system stack from a vendor is going to leave you with an unquestioned best of breed solution or even a stack made up of second bests. Most vendors don't offer the complete stack yet and those that do begin to show weakness in their stack the further they get away from their core competency. Most vendors can do one product category really well, two categories pretty well and then fall apart after that.

Where this unification falls apart is at the storage system level and more of these unified systems will begin to bundle the server manufacturer's storage. I know this is not going to make me popular with the server vendors, but with the exception of Dell's iSCSI EqualLogic solution, none of the storage systems by server manufacturers can be classified as market leaders. If this is not the case, why do most of them also OEM, including Dell, something other than their own storage to compete? I think it goes back to my earlier statement, you can only do so many things well.

Users have repeatedly voted with their dollars to buy storage from someone else other than their server manufacturer, despite the fact that in almost every case the server manufacturer has a distinct advantage of being there first when a new project starts.

The more of the stack that is OEMed, the more unification really becomes a series of best of breed decisions made for you. The server component is whatever server they build, at the network it is still going to be the Brocade vs. Cisco choice and the storage system is either a system from a server vendor that is not a market leader, an OEM of a market leader or they let you make this choice on your own, which really is not unification at all and certainly does not make your day to day job any easier or more productive.

About the Author(s)

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER
Stay informed! Sign up to get expert advice and insight delivered direct to your inbox
More Insights