The
server market is in the midst of a radical realignment, the likes of
which have not been seen since the shakeout of the 1980s that saw most
of the minicomputer makers, including Prime Computer, Data General and
Digital Equipment Corp., disappear, devastating the Boston high tech
corridor. And while the writing has been on the wall for some time, this
major industry shift promises to happen much faster than that one.
IBM System x General Manager Adalio Sanchez speaking at an IBM event in
Beijing on January 16, 2014 to debut the company’s latest x86-based
servers. Today IBM announced plans for Lenovo to acquire IBM’s x86
server business for $2.3 billion.
The first major shock came to the market last month, when IBM announced an agreement to sell its System x servers, x86 network switches and other x86-based products
to Lenovo, continuing IBM’s transition into a software and services
provider. While internal sources say that the sale, which includes the
transfer of up to 6,700 IBM employees to the commodity system maker,
will take several months to complete, this announcement definitely
points to the future of x86 hardware.
Actually the commodization of x86 has been ongoing for several years and is well under way. It started with the invention of hyperscale
by the big Web service companies including Yahoo, Google, Amazon, and
Facebook. These companies buy huge quantities of standardized white box
servers direct from Taiwan and China for their mega-data centers, run
them hard in highly automated environments and, when something breaks,
throw it away and replace it with a new box. But even before that the
seeds of commodization were sown by the major traditional players
themselves when they handed manufacturing of their servers over to the
Taiwanese. Essentially they created their own replacements.
That arrangement worked for them as long as the hardware
still required lots of attention, expensive built-in management
software, and constant optimization fine tuning to handle the compute
loads. But in the last decade three things have changed. First, Moore’s
Law has driven compute power and network speed to the point that
detailed optimization is no longer necessary for most compute loads.
Second, the management software has moved to the virtualization layer.
The result of these two trends is that increasingly the focus of IT
organization attention is moving up the stack to software, and hardware
is taken for granted. After 67 years, the techies are finally tiring of
fiddling constantly with the hardware.
Third, increasing amounts of the compute load is moving
steadily to the cloud. Companies that always had to buy extra compute to
support peak loads now can move those applications into a hybrid cloud,
size their hardware for the average load and burst the peaks to their
public cloud partner. As those companies gain a comfort level with their
public cloud service providers, they will start moving entire compute
loads, particularly new Web-based applications such as big data analysis
that have a strong affinity to the public cloud, entirely to those
providers, in many cases by subscribing to SaaS services.
Trend toward standardization
The result of this is that the underlying hardware is becoming highly standardized,
and the focus of computing is moving to software and services. Under
the onslaught of hyperscale and cloud computing, the market for the
traditional vendors is decreasing, a trend that will accelerate through
this decade. And the market is shifting from piece-parts to converged systems as customers seek to simplify their supply chains and save money. As Wikibon CTO David Floyer points out,
the more of the system that can be covered by a single SKU, the more
customers can save. The hardware growth for both IBM and HP is clearly
in their converged systems, and their differentiation increasingly comes
from what they provide above the virtualization layer in middleware and
applications. The expansion of virtualization from servers to the
software-led data center will only drive this trend faster.
Open source hardware
is beginning to appear in the market and can be expected to become
commonplace over the next five years as the big Asian white box makers
adopt them as the next step in driving cost out of the server
manufacturing process.
The clear message for x86 server vendors is either to drive
cost out of their hardware business and become commodity providers on
the level of the Taiwanese while developing differentiation through
higher level software running on top of those commoditized boxes or get
out of the x86 hardware business entirely and source their servers from a
commodity provider. IBM has clearly chosen the latter course with its sales of System x to Lenovo along with the creation of a close partnership with the Chinese commodity hardware manufacturer.
IBM’s strategy — partner with Lenovo
This is the right strategy for both companies. Since buying
IBM’s PC manufacturing business a decade ago, Lenovo has proven itself
as a quality commodity electronics maker, and in the process passing HP last year
to become the number one PC vendor in worldwide sales. IBM, meanwhile,
is a highly creative company with a huge R & D budget that is
betting its future on leading edge areas including big data processing
and analysis, business cloud services worldwide, and Watson.
The close partnership should leverage the very different
strengths of both companies to create products that benefit from both,
particularly in the IBM PureSystems line of integrated systems.
Meanwhile Lenovo is likely to enter the hyperscale market once it has
brought its manufacturing and marketing to bear on the IBM System x
line. It also will certainly continue to sell its rebranded System x
servers into the traditional business and governmental markets and can
be expected to field its own x86-based converged system line probably in
partnership with IBM. Since both companies will be profiting from the
relationship, regardless of whose brand is on the box, they both will
have strong business reasons to maintain a close partnership into the
future.
IBM is in the market position it is in today in large part
because of the visionary leadership of CEO Louis V. Gerstner Jr., IBM’s
head for a decade through much of the 1990s and early 2000s. He foresaw
the industry changes we are experiencing today, at least in their
general form, and espoused the strategy of transforming IBM from a
hardware giant to a software and services company. In retrospect this
was prophetic, and while obviously nobody in 1993 could have anticipated
the impact of cloud computing and in Gerstner’s time “services” mostly
meant consulting, he moved IBM in a direction that puts it in a strong
position today to capitalize on the burgeoning cloud services market.
And his successors, Samuel J. Palmisano and Virginia M. Rometty, have
continued to move IBM forward and make the hard decisions sometimes
necessary for IBM’s transformation.
HP at the crossroads
But what about the other big x86 server vendors, who did
not have the good fortune to have a visionary at their helm in the
1990s? HP in particular seems to have been searching for a path forward
in recent years with its parade of short-lived CIOs. Carley Fiorina
certainly had a strong vision, but unfortunately it proved to be the
wrong one for the company.
After she left, HP suffered from a revolving door at the top.
Michael Hurd was the only CEO to last long enough to create a vision
for the company’s future, but he seemed mainly to see “more of the
same”. Meg Whitman has been in charge for nearly two-and-half-years now
and seems to have stabilized the company, but it is also suffering from
market shrinkage. Its answer so far has been to bring forward some
innovative hardware, but large parts of the company outside converged
systems, Moonshot and storage seem to be going forward blindly,
producing more of the same with no regard for the reefs ahead, and HPs
financial results in recent quarters have shown the result.
HP needs to make up its mind, and fast. In its first two
decades it was a highly creative, if sometimes chaotic, company
producing leading edge products including some of the first servers and
desktop printers. It really was the Apple Computer of its day. But it
seems to have lost much of that, and today it buys more innovation than
it produces in house, Moonshot not withstanding.
The problem is that while it has some very innovative
products, they are all one-offs, and large parts of the company appear
to be drifting. Decisions seem to be tactical rather than strategic. The
PC group, for instance, is obviously floundering. At one time HP was
almost as much a consumer company, with its desktop printers and PCs, as
it was a business-to-business vendor. It has neglected that part of its
business, which is a mistake.
HP seems to be moving in the direction of becoming a
U.S.-based commodity hardware supplier. If that is what its leadership
wants, then it should embrace that completely and start competing on
price in all its markets while driving cost out its processes at all
levels. If it wants to return to its roots as a highly creative company
then it should start building on products like Moonshot and revitalize
its consumer and business market mindshare with new, creative electronic
products that can create new markets. It cannot do both — no company
can.
By: Bert Latamore
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