Home > AS/400 Tips > > All eyes on SMBs for PC and server market
iSeries 400 Tips:
EMAIL THIS
 TIPS & NEWSLETTERS TOPICS 


All eyes on SMBs for PC and server market


Megan Santosus
06.21.2005
Rating: --- (out of 5)


Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us   


In the SMB server and PC marketplace, CIOs now have something their much larger cohorts in enterprise IT have taken for granted: choices.

IT professionals at small and midsized businesses (SMBs) often find themselves in a bind of sorts when it comes to PCs and servers. While most SMB CIOs have many of the same needs in terms of reliability and support as their brethren at larger companies, it's no secret that few enjoy big-company levels of personnel or financial resources.

Vendors don't feel our pain. Just because we're not big doesn't mean we're not important.


Neil O'Brien


CTO,

L & J.G. Stickley Inc.

Neil O'Brien, chief technology officer at Manlius, N.Y.-based furniture maker L. & J.G. Stickley Inc., succinctly summed up the predicament typical of SMBs. "We need to minimize staffing and resources, so we don't want to proliferate servers," he said. "We're looking to run on fewer boxes rather than more," a notion, O'Brien acknowledged, that runs counter to vendors' marketing plans. Yet he bristled at the idea that vendors take the SMB market for granted. "Vendors don't feel our pain," he said. "Just because we're not big doesn't mean we're not important."

Specifically, O'Brien is particularly concerned about mission-critical support for his company's server-based production systems. As he sees it, mission-critical for Stickley means nothing less than 24/7 support. Having spent much of his career at larger companies, O'Brien said server vendors in particular have been remiss in terms of the SMB market. "They just don't understand that mission-critical applies equally as well to SMBs as it does to enterprises," he said.

SMBs get noticed

However, the tendency among PC and server vendors to write off SMBs appears to be changing.

"HP and IBM among other big vendors are making a concerted effort in the SMB space," said Gordon Haff, a senior analyst at market researcher Illuminata Inc. in Nashua, N.H. In general terms, SMBs are looking to vendors to simplify their IT environments, according to Vince Gayman, director of HP's worldwide SMB program. "Our customers are telling us that technology is too complicated; they just want to plug and play," Gayman said.

As for the newfound attention, both Haff and Gayman said SMBs can thank the recent technology bust. "Back during the crash, spending didn't drop off as much in the SMB space as it did in the enterprise space," Haff said. Vendors, therefore, viewed the SMB market as a way to grow market share.

More choices

More attention from vendors means more choices. For SMBs, there are more options available, both in terms of PC and server technology as well as pricing. "Servers are getting a lot easier to manage and have been moving that way for the past few years," said Mark Margevicius, research director of client platforms at Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc. "What you get for what you pay is pretty good," he said.

More on this topic

TechTalk: Replace or upgrade PCs?

Choosing a server upgrade for your SMB

That's certainly Mark Wachtmann's take on the market as well. Wachtmann is vice president of IT at GoDaddy.com Inc., a Scottsdale, Ariz.-based provider of e-commerce and Web hosting services. "The marketing is broadening to make technology more available to SMBs," Wachtmann says. In Wachtmann's assessment, price points for higher- and lower-end servers, as well as PCs, have come down, making them more accessible to the typical SMB. A case in point: Dell has teamed up with Oracle to offer a database server-based system to SMBs that has the same source code as Oracle's database for enterprises. Scaled down to the specific needs of SMBs, the system costs $2,000, compared with a price tag of $1 million for the enterprise version.

Analysts say such a migration -- technologies formerly the exclusive domain of enterprises are increasingly accessible to SMBs -- is typical of the SMB marketplace. Technologies such as blade servers, network-attached storage and partitioned servers now are viable options for SMBs with limited resources and budgets. "There are new computer architectures out there, like blades for example, that SMBs may not have thought of before," Haff said. And the financial barriers aren't the only impediments that are disappearing. According to Gartner's Margevicius, tools for managing servers are much easier to use than ever before, enabling SMBs to handle all aspects of administration without the need for a dedicated IT staff.

For O'Brien, the changes in the SMB marketplace are welcome news, if only because he now has more options to shop around for a vendor that offers the kind of support worthy of a small, yet bustling manufacturing company. At the moment, O'Brien is evaluating the Power 5 server from IBM, with the idea of consolidating applications on a partitioned box. Currently, Stickley relies on a pair of clustered servers on a storage area network, an environment that has built-in redundancy, but without the level of support Stickley requires. So O'Brien is shopping around for a better deal.


Megan Santosus is a contributing writer based in Needham, Mass.


Rate this Tip
To rate tips, you must be a member of Search400.com.
Register now to start rating these tips. Log in if you are already a member.




Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us   



RELATED CONTENT
Server Consolidation
Watch those iSeries system values
Server consolidation, virtualization give U.S. Open the advantage
Server management costs soar, says IDC
Top admin tips of 2005
Cool Blue: How IBM beats the heat
Look before you leap into consolidation
Look before you leap into consolidation
iSeries fights server sprawl
Life after migration
Contemplating consolidation?

iSeries hardware management
VMware expounds on ESX support for IBM System i
IBM System i gets VoIP via Nortel
Top System i admin tips for 2006
The power of Power.org
ISCSI integration available on System i, plus new Lotus discount
Server management costs soar, says IDC
IBM purchases IT usage tracking specialist
Eliminate the hassle of recreating configuration objects
Big storage in small packages
Cool Blue: How IBM beats the heat

RELATED RESOURCES
2020software.com, trial software downloads for accounting software, ERP software, CRM software and business software systems
Search Bitpipe.com for the latest white papers and business webcasts
Whatis.com, the online computer dictionary

DISCLAIMER: Our Tips Exchange is a forum for you to share technical advice and expertise with your peers and to learn from other enterprise IT professionals. TechTarget provides the infrastructure to facilitate this sharing of information. However, we cannot guarantee the accuracy or validity of the material submitted. You agree that your use of the Ask The Expert services and your reliance on any questions, answers, information or other materials received through this Web site is at your own risk.



iSeries Security - Security Tools, Physical Security and System Security
HomeNewsTopicsITKnowledge ExchangeTipsBlogsAsk the ExpertsMultimediaWhite PapersProducts
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  For Advertisers  |  For Business Partners  |  Site Index  |  RSS
SEARCH 
TechTarget provides technology professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective purchase decisions and managing their organizations' technology projects - with its network of technology-specific websites, events and online magazines.

TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Site Map




All Rights Reserved, Copyright 1999 - 2009, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
  TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts