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The elephant dance of IBM's tape business
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Last Update: Mar 25, 2008 | 01:29
Viewed 1368 times | Community Rating: n/a
Originating Author: David Vellante

Originating Author: David Vellante

Recently, key members of IBM's tape line of business, including Cindy Grossman who runs the tape P&L, visited Wikibon's offices in Marlborough, MA. The visit was part of IBM's annual outreach to the analyst community and Wikibon was pleased to host the team and learn more about IBM's tape business operations, it's tier 3 strategy, areas of investment, future direction and opportunities for growth.

We have several initial observations about tape in general and IBM's business in particular:

  • Tape has been relegated to the data center and the very high end of the SMB market;
  • Nonetheless, according to figures from IDC, Freeman and Horison, worldwide tape spending is still large at approximately $4.0 - $4.5B annually. The market is flat to slightly up and IBM is the leader with about one third share of the market. STK appears to have dropped to third spot in this market behind HP;
  • IBM's tape line of business P&L also includes IBM products sold through OEM channels (which are excluded in the above numbers) and a partial rollup of IBM's archive business which also reports to Grossman; putting this business well over $1B and closer to $1.5B by our estimates.
  • IBM is growing through share gains of the last several years. In the most recent quarter ending June of 2007, IBM's tape revenue grew 19% annually. While not sustainable, this growth rate underscores IBM's strategy to re-capture lost customer footprint and grow the business;
  • IBM appears to be aggressively investing in tape and in our view is taking a strong (and much needed) leadership position in the business. Key areas of investment are encryption, increased capacities, virtualization, de-duplication, software/microcode function and archiving. As well, IBM is demonstrating time-to-market leadership in critical areas such as LTO-4;
  • Tape gets lost in IBM's large and diversified business. While IBM's services-led approach has its benefits to the tape division, of far greater concern right now is the aggessive marketing of savvy and vocal disk players including EMC and NetApp which espouse a tape is dead scenario with customers. The question remains, can tape industry marketing respond?

In our view, IBM is executing on many of the critical success factors needed for tape to compete effectively. These involve the development of compelling marketing messages and associated actions, which include:

  • Tape is green - indeed 95% of all data on tape consumes no power and tape is the greenest of IT technologies (see chart);
  • For a variety of reasons (e.g. removability, media life, etc.) tape's strengths are its applicability and cost-effectiveness in many areas including archiving, compliance and disaster recovery-- especially for all but the largest shops which can afford 3-Node Disaster Recovery;
  • A response to data de-duplication from disk vendors with the virtualization of tape. Tape companies need to promote the notion that virtual tape without tape is an empty message-- IBM promises such a response before the summer of 2008.

IBM's tape business can point to many firsts and dozens of innovations dating back to the 1950's. IBM's 8TB tape demonstration, focus on encryption and archiving, excellent execution in drives, breadth in automation and experience in virtualization are key examples of its leadership in tape. However we'd like to see even more aggressive leadership from IBM to include a stronger vision of where and how it sees T2/T3 coming together, innovation in products like MAID, use of lower cost SATA devices and faster time-to-market in automation and VTL.

In our view, the old cliche applies to IBM's tape business...its biggest challenge is IBM itself. In the mid 1990's when Lou Gerstner, IBM's then CEO decided to drastically change the company's direction and become a services leader, he made a decision that, while by all accounts was the right one, hurt product-centric businesses within IBM like tape. Specifically, at IBM, it's services first products second. In a time when the tape industry has lost its last pure play innovator in the data center (STK) and needs clear R&D and marketing leadership, this structural edict is an impediment to market domination and will remain IBM's Achilles heel.

Action Item: The economics of tape for many applications are compelling. At the same time, the future of tape includes disk providing performance for more active data and the economy of tape for larger amounts of archival information. This enables data movement directly from disk to tape without taxing server or appliance resources. Tape users and vendors must develop strategies to bring together tier 2 and tier 3 storage capabilities, borrowing HSM concepts, software capabilities and processes from the mainframe world and aggressively applying them where appropriate to open systems.

Footnotes:

Backup_and_restore,Green_storage,IBM,Storage_disaster_recovery,Storage_planning,Storage_professional_alerts,Storage_vendor_management,Dvellante

categories
Backup and restore, Green storage, IBM, Storage disaster recovery, Storage planning, Storage professional alerts, Storage vendor management
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Dab4168

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Revision ID Author Timestamp Comment
14949 Dab4168 08 Mar 25 13:29:40 misc
14948 Dab4168 08 Mar 25 13:28:53 removed category companies
14317 Dab4168 08 Feb 25 10:16:16 Added category: Companies
13968 Dab4168 08 Feb 16 20:31:04 Removed category Author dvellante
10223 Dvellante 07 Aug 29 13:16:43
10174 Dvellante 07 Aug 28 15:46:57
9943 66.202.41.205 07 Aug 15 10:14:58
9942 66.202.41.205 07 Aug 15 10:05:39 updated leadership section
9919 Dvellante 07 Aug 14 11:53:23
9916 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 08:28:25
9915 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 08:27:47
9914 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 08:26:25
9913 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 08:11:01
9912 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 08:10:32
9911 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 08:08:29
9910 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 08:06:42 categorize piece
9909 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 08:01:20
9908 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:59:54
9907 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:54:32
9906 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:49:33
9905 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:31:26
9904 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:30:26
9903 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:28:34
9902 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:27:18
9901 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:18:51
9900 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:17:21
9899 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:16:46
9892 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 07:05:47 save
9890 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 06:49:55
9889 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 06:49:11
9888 Dvellante 07 Aug 10 06:37:25

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