In this week's column, I offer a third set of results from the recent Storage UPDATE survey, including the figures for Network Attached Storage (NAS) deployments, Storage-over-IP (SoIP), and use of Storage Service Providers (SSPs). (Click on Part 1 or Part 2 to see the earlier reports of the Storage UPDATE survey results.)
NAS Plans
I'm still looking for the question that will indicate that NAS is catching on with the general Windows enterprise audience. Last year, only 21 percent of respondents had NAS plans (63 percent didn't). The few others who answered the question didn't know. This year, I asked "What percentage of your shared network enterprise storage capacity is deployed on NAS devices?" The results make NAS's market penetration look paltry.
Less than 10 percent80.6 percent
10 percent to 25 percent9.6 percent
25 percent to 50 percent3.2 percent
50 percent to 75 percent3.2 percent
75 percent to 90 percent3.2 percent
More than 90 percent0.0 percent
NAS on Windows-based networks looks like a virgin market to me. NAS market demographics show that users employ NAS largely because it's easy to use, cheap, and provides multi-OS support. To the question "What features are prompting you to use NAS? (Check all that apply)," you answered as follows:
Ease of use100.0 percent
Don't know78.8 percent
Attractive price/performance76.9 percent
Multi-OS support76.9 percent
Reliability46.2 percent
Ease of storage consolidation30.6 percent
Complexity required to implement SANs21.2 percent
Other19.2 percent
Multivendor support17.3 percent
Use NAS as a front end to SANs17.3 percent
To the question, "What issues are barriers to your deploying NAS? (Check all that apply)," you answered as follows:
Management software not sufficient100.0 percent
No issues67.3 percent
Integrators difficult to find43.6 percent
High cost of deployment38.2 percent
Concerns about its fault tolerance21.8 percent
Other16.4 percent
Lack of security or virus protection14.5 percent
Technology not quite ready12.7 percent
Lack of standards9.1 percent
Need not determined9.1 percent
Required IT staff7.2 percent
Don't know5.4 percent
Interoperability concerns0.0 percent
For the following question, "What applications do you use NAS for? (Check all that apply)," I'm not surprised that file services come first, but I am a little surprised that backup and databases precede Internet applications.
File services100.0 percent
Don't know67.3 percent
Backup and recovery43.6 percent
Database/data warehouse38.2 percent
Internet applications21.8 percent
Messaging14.5 percent
Customer relationship management (CRM)12.7 percent
Electronic commerce9.1 percent
Streaming media9.1 percent
Enterprise resource planning (ERP)7.3 percent
Other5.5 percent
Supply chain0.0 percent
Storage-over-IP and Using SSPs
Space precludes me from fully analyzing many of the survey questions. But I'll leave you with two interesting results. To the question, "How likely are you to deploy significant enterprise storage assets using Storage-over-IP (SoIP) when that technology becomes available?" the scattered responses might be translated as "Show me some products and I'll think about it."
Certain5.8 percent
Very likely17.9 percent
Somewhat likely30.8 percent
Somewhat unlikely5.1 percent
Not likely14.1 percent
Don't know26.3 percent
To the question related to the Storage Service Provider (SSP) market, "What enterprise storage service(s) would you consider using or do you outsource? (Check all that apply)," you replied as follows:
Do not outsource storage100.0 percent
Backup, recovery, and disaster management37.2 percent
Service and support37.2 percent
Architecture and design24.4 percent
Don't know24.4 percent
Turnkey brought inhouse3.5 percent
Other2.3
Storage needs outsourced to a vendor0.0 percent
Your answers indicate that only 50 percent of you participate in this market, with perhaps 30 percent of you using SSP services and about 20 percent using SSP utilities. Some SSPs to whom I've shown the survey results were surprised at how many of you answered this question. I think it's a measure of your technological prowess. You areapparentlya unique group.
Several of these questions have been plotted. Click each topic of interest in the left column.
End of Article