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WW Converged Systems Market Down 4.5% Y/Y in 2Q20 at $3.9 Billion, Stable Q/Q

Dell -3%, Nutanix -2%, HPE +53.5% (!)

According to the International Data Corporation‘s Worldwide Quarterly Converged Systems Tracker, WW converged systems market revenue decreased 4.5% Y/Y to $3.9 billion during 2Q20.

The overall converged systems market showed a decline during a difficult second quarter as broader weakness in enterprise buying across server and storage also impacted HCI,” said Paul Maguranis, senior research analyst, infrastructure platforms and technologies. “The certified reference systems and integrated infrastructure and integrated platforms segments both declined this quarter while the hyperconverged systems segment was able to witness modest growth despite headwinds in the market. This growth was mostly due to strong HCI performance in AsiaPac, especially in China and Japan.”

Converged Systems Segments
IDC’s converged systems market view offers 3 segments: certified reference systems and integrated infrastructure, integrated platforms, and hyperconverged systems.

The certified reference systems and integrated infrastructure market generated just over $1.5 billion in revenue during 2Q20, which represents a yearly decline of 7.6% and accounts for 39.1% of all converged systems revenue.

Integrated platforms revenues declined 13.1% year over year to $544 million in 2Q20. This amounted to 13.8% of the total converged systems market revenue.

Revenue from hyperconverged systems sales grew 1.1% Y/Y during 2Q20, totaling nearly $1.9 billion. This amounted to 47.1% of the total converged systems market.

Idc Converged Systems 2q20 F1

IDC offers 2 ways to rank technology suppliers within the hyperconverged systems market: by the brand of the hyperconverged solution or by the owner of the software providing the core hyperconverged capabilities.

Rankings based on a branded view of the market can be found in the first table of this press release and rankings based on the owner of the hyperconverged software can be found in the second table within this press release. Both tables include all the same software and hardware, summing to the same market size.

As it relates to the branded view of the hyperconverged systems market, Dell Technologies was the largest supplier with $519.6 million in revenue and a 27.9% share. Nutanix generated $253.5 million in branded hardware revenue, representing 13.6% of the total HCI market during the quarter. In third was Hewlett Packard Enterprise with $130.0 million in revenue, which represents a 7.0% share of the market.

Top 3 Companies, WW Hyperconverged Systems as Branded, 2Q20
(revenue in $million)

Idc Converged Systems 2q20 F2

Table note:
a Dell Technologies represents the combined revenues for Dell and EMC sales for all quarters shown.

In terms of the HCI systems’ software brand, new systems running VMware hyperconverged software delivered revenue of $722.9 million in 2Q20, or 38.9% of the total market. Systems running Nutanix hyperconverged software had $554.1 million in 2Q20 vendor revenue or 29.8% of the total market. Both amounts represent the value of all HCI hardware, HCI software, and system infrastructure software sold, regardless of how it was branded at the hardware level. As hardware sales are a major factor in these data, the chart should not be assumed to solely reflect, or completely align with, the respective companies’ overall software performance.

Top 3 Companies, WW Hyperconverged Systems Revenue
Attributed to Owner of HCI Software, 2Q20

(revenue in $million)
Idc Converged Systems 2q20 F3

Table note
* IDC declares a statistical tie in the worldwide converged systems market when there is a difference of one% or less in the share of revenues or unit shipments among two or more vendors.

Taxonomy notes
Beginning with the release of 2019 results, IDC has expanded its definition of the hyperconverged systems market segment to include a new breed of systems called Disaggregated HCI. Such systems are designed from the ground up to only support distinct/separate compute and storage nodes. An example of such a system in the market today is NetApp’s HCI solution. They offer non-linear scaling of the hyperconverged cluster to make it easier to scale compute and storage resources independent of each other while offering crucial functions such as QoS. For these disaggregated HCI solutions, the storage nodes may not have a hypervisor at all, since they don’t have to run VMs or applications.

IDC defines converged systems as pre-integrated, vendor-certified systems containing server hardware, disk storage systems, networking equipment, and basic element/systems management software. Systems not sold with all four of these components are not counted within this tracker. Specific to management software, IDC includes embedded or integrated management and control software optimized for the auto discovery, provisioning and pooling of physical and virtual compute, storage and networking resources shipped as part of the core, standard integrated system. Numbers in this press release may not sum due to rounding.

Certified reference systems and integrated infrastructure are pre-integrated, vendor-certified systems containing server hardware, disk storage systems, networking equipment, and basic element/systems management software. Integrated platforms are integrated systems that are sold with additional pre-integrated packaged software and customized system engineering optimized to enable such functions as application development software, databases, testing, and integration tools. Hyperconverged systems collapse core storage and compute functionality into a single, highly virtualized solution. A key characteristic of hyperconverged systems that differentiate these solutions from other integrated systems is their scale-out architecture and their ability to provide all compute and storage functions through the same x86 server-based resources. Market values for all 3 segments includes hardware and software but excludes services and support.

IDC considers a unit to be a full system including server, storage, and networking. Individual server, storage, or networking “nodes” are not counted as units. Hyperconverged system units are counted at the appliance (aka chassis) level. Many hyperconverged appliances are deployed on multinode servers. IDC will count each appliance, not each node, as a single system.

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