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Demand
for Enterprise Storage to Grow at 90% Through 2004
With the demand for data storage showing no signs of abating, IT
organizations are turning to new approaches for managing storage
volumes, according to META Group's Enterprise Storage: Technology
Adoption and Deployment Trends.
The study — based on a recent META Group survey of IT professionals
— indicates that 60% of IT organizations will turn to enterprise
storage consolidation solutions to improve utilization, lower cost
of ownership, and increase return on storage investments. Respondents
also anticipate a 90% growth rate through 2004.
"Storage volumes are growing at phenomenal rates, yet IT organizations
cannot justify ballooning storage budgets," said Sean Derrington,
a META Group analyst who co-authored the study. "Storage consolidation
solutions are now being adopted within mainstream IT organizations,
because they realize a flexible, consolidated infrastructure can
help manage the increased demands for data availability and evolving
application requirements without breaking the budget."
IT organizations expect budget allocations for overall storage
services, storage hardware, and software infrastructure to be constant
year over year — a percentage of total IT budgets. "If
not tightly controlled, costs tend to increase because business
requirements have become more complex," said Derrington.
"Another important factor of complexity is the storage technology
itself, which offers various solutions — from offline storage
devices, to network-attached storage (NAS) and storage-area networks
(SANs). It is critical that users first understand which problems
they are trying to solve."
Key findings:
• Backup and recovery, including disaster recovery capabilities,
remains the number-one spending priority.
• ROI represents the main challenge for storage consolidation
initiatives.
• Significant drop-off exists for the adoption of individual
tape and dedicated storage for servers; there is also a strong propensity
toward the use of SANs. The percentage of respondents looking at
NAS implementations is expected to remain flat through 2004.
• Enforced storage policies and centralized storage administration
are needed.
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