The rapid increase in the amount of digital data that needs to be stored
is pressuring organizations to increase capital expenditures associated
with the acquisition of storage capacity and operating expenses
associated with management of this capacity. At the same time, economic
issues are hindering these organizations' ability to increase budgets to
meet the growing demand for storage. The resulting deadlock has paved
the way for the adoption of various technologies that help increase
utilization of existing storage resources and optimize the amount of
data that needs to be stored.
The new International Data Corporation (IDC)
Special Study, The
Economic Benefit of Storage Efficiency Technologies (IDC
#236221), analyzes the results of a United States–based survey of 500
storage end users that currently deploy or plan to deploy storage and/or
data efficiency technologies in their datacenters as well as the
benefits these users were able to gain as a result of implementing these
technologies. Technologies covered by this study include thin
provisioning, storage virtualization, storage tiering, data compression,
data deduplication, and thin replication.
Key findings in the study include:
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Adoption of storage and data efficiency technologies typically comes
in stages, starting with data compression and deduplication, followed
by storage virtualization and tiering, and then by thin provisioning
and replication.
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It is typical that end users' savings expectations in storage spending
and storage capacity as a result of implementing storage and data
efficiency technologies are lower than what current users were able to
recognize in the past 12 months, which suggests that future benefits
might be underestimated.
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Data compression and storage virtualization were identified as the two
most adopted storage efficiency technologies while data deduplication
was named as the most desirable storage efficiency technology for
implementation in the near future.
IT organizations will continue to face pressures influencing the ongoing
adoption of storage efficiency technologies. This pressure comes from an
increased share of storage spending in the overall IT budget as well as
an annual growth in data ranging from 40-60%.
"Technologies that help increase utilization of existing and new storage
assets are widely welcomed by end users," said Natalya
Yezhkova, research director, Storage
Systems at IDC. "IDC's research shows that the increased use of
storage efficiency technologies is one of the major contributing factors
in the slowdown of storage capacity shipments over the past 12 months.
As awareness of these technologies increases, storage vendors should be
ready to deliver a variety of technologies to the whole spectrum of
customers, from large businesses all the way down to small companies."
About IDC
International Data Corporation (IDC) is the premier global provider of
market intelligence, advisory services, and events for the information
technology, telecommunications, and consumer technology markets. IDC
helps IT professionals, business executives, and the investment
community to make fact-based decisions on technology purchases and
business strategy. More than 1,000 IDC analysts provide global,
regional, and local expertise on technology and industry opportunities
and trends in over 110 countries. For more than 48 years, IDC has
provided strategic insights to help our clients achieve their key
business objectives. IDC is a subsidiary of IDG, the world's leading
technology media, research, and events company. You can learn more about
IDC by visiting www.idc.com.
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