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Telecom (Compute and Storage) Infrastructure Market to Reach $16 Billion in 2022 – IDC

5-year CAGR of 6%

The shift to software-defined infrastructure – wherein workloads run virtualized (or containerized) on industry-standard hardware platforms – is happening at an unprecedented pace.

Nowhere is this shift more visible than in the telecommunications industry where entire datacenters are being converted from vertically integrated stacks to software-defined infrastructure.

IDC expects this trend to continue unabated as telecoms (also known as telecommunications providers, communications service providers, carriers, or telcos) seek to expand their sphere of influence on initiatives such as mobile media delivery, edge computing and the Internet of Things, and connected devices, to name a few.

In an industry where legacy business models and regulations can no longer guarantee revenue growth, telecoms must stay ahead of the competition by upping their ante on innovation and, like most enterprises, driving costs down. Initiatives such as 5G or rich media delivery via mobile platforms cannot be delivered via legacy platforms that are rigid, have scaling challenges, and require months of planning to scale efficiently.

A new forecast, Worldwide Telecom (Compute and Storage) Infrastructure Forecast, 2018-2023 (IDC #US44234018) ($4,500) from International Data Corporation sizes the market for compute and storage infrastructure for telecoms at nearly $10.81 billion in 2017.

However, as telecoms aggressively build out their infrastructure, IDC projects this market to see a healthy 5-year CAGR of 6.2% with purchases totaling $16.35 billion in 2022.

Communications service providers worldwide have borrowed a page out of the public cloud services provider/hyperscaler operations model. They have focused maniacally on bolstering their in-house software development efforts using open source stacks, partnering with integrators to convert their datacenters to be software defined, sponsoring and participating in industry wide infrastructure consortiums, and making a concerted effort to move not just applications, but also network function workloads onto a virtualized (containerized) infrastructure. They are shifting to a single infrastructure platform that supports current and new generation telecom-specific as well as business applications that can run interchangeably in VMs, containers, and bare metal. Telecoms have ushered in a model for flexible and scalable consumption of compute, storage, and networking resources.

Telecoms are the forefront of the innovation curve,” said Ashish Nadkarni, group VP for infrastructure systems, platforms and technology, IDC, which covers compute and storage infrastructure. “The shift to a software-defined infrastructure enables them to focus on innovation, drive operations costs down, and continue to differentiate based on the uniqueness of their products and services.”

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