Small vendors, especially startups, often tend to follow baseball great Willie Keeler's advice of "hit 'em where they ain't" by targeting a market niche that has potential, but where larger vendors either don't play or have a very small footprint. NexGen, with its NexGen n5 Storage System, does just that but with a more direct twist. And that makes it very interesting.
First, NexGen is attacking the midrange SAN market. Now, since this market is a pool that is filled with piranhas (smaller players) as well as sharks (larger vendors), why would NexGen willingly swim there? Well, for one thing, the midrange SAN market is easier for a smaller vendor to attack than a larger enterprise market for a number of reasons, including longer sales cycles that tie up a greater proportion of resources than if they were targeted to multiple prospects. Secondly, the company believes that there is a huge unmet need for midrange SAN solutions that address an important CIO concern: The server virtualization CIOs would like to extend to business and mission-critical applications has greatly slowed because of lack of capabilities or high costs in existing midrange SAN offerings. Thus, while NexGen is going directly at the midrange SAN market, it is doing so by differentiating itself with a product that addresses what it feels is a large unmet need.
There is at least one transparent solid gel in which coins, or other similarly small but heavy items, can be suspended. When the container holding the gel is shaken with sheer force (preferably with a tightly closed cover!), the solid gel turns into a liquid and the coins fly around to different positions within the container. Then, when the shaking stops, the gel returns to a solid state, but the coins are in a new configuration. Consider this example as analogous to a transformational trend in the IT industry, and that the coins are vendors. The vendors’ positions shift during the transformation; when the trend is mature, this results in changed market positions for the vendors. Inevitably, every major vendor hopes that the change is favorable to them while every startup hopes that the transformational process will beneficially alter their position.
NexGen--and it is, of course, by no means alone in its belief--feels that server virtualization is a major transformational force and believes it can benefit from that transformation. The company’s basic premise is that, currently, storage is an impediment to the full implementation of server virtualization. For test and development in virtual machine environments, storage really hasn’t been an impediment, since neither high availability nor shared storage is required in those situations. Similarly, non-critical production workloads, such as Web servers and file servers, are not really a problem as shared storage with high availability is readily available.
However, as enterprises move to virtualize more important applications, typically called business-critical (such as email) and mission-critical (such as revenue-generating online transaction processing applications), the situation changes. Why is that the case? Well, the reason for cramming multiple virtualized applications, each with its own virtual machine operating system image, together in a single system is to utilize a higher percentage of the CPU and I/O resources of that physical server. This reduces or even eliminates the need for other physical servers (this is what consolidation is all about) and enables those other physical servers to be redeployed, retired or sold. The net economic result is better financials for an IT organization.