May 022012
 

Original article by Joseph Kovar at CRN

Dell (NSDQ:Dell) has made changes in how solution providers procure Compellent storage products for their customers which make it possible for partners to get ordering and discount information quicker and in many cases offer lower prices.

The changes to the Compellent ordering and configuration process stem from Dell’s move to standardize many of the processes and channel programs of its recent acquisitions.

Dell in February closed its $800 million-plus acquisition of storage virtualization vendor Compellent.

Since then, Dell has moved to integrate the technology and channel programs of its different storage technologies, including those of its EqualLogic, Compellent, Exanet, and Ocarina acquisitions.

Dell has simplified the process by which solution providers order Compellent products, get their discounts, and apply for special pricing, according to both Dell and its solution providers.

However, the actual impact of the changes in terms of pricing to customers is hard to quantify as various observers of the company and its channels look at it from different angles.

Financial analyst Raymond James wrote in a research report about a variety of major IT vendors that Dell has lowered the price of Compellent products to its channel partners by 30 percent due to improved supply chain efficiencies and volume purchases of hard drives compared to what the much smaller pre-acquisition Compellent was able to do.

As a result, solution providers are keeping larger margins for themselves compared to what they could keep before the acquisition, and are offering 10 percent or higher discounts to customers, Raymond James wrote.

One solution provider, who asked to remain anonymous due to the sensitivity of discussing prices, said he has seen a downward price adjustment of about 30 percent to channel partners which will be reflected in prices to customers.

The adjustment is likely a result of price competition between Dell and EMC, former partners who last year parted ways as the two started pursuing independent storage strategies, the solution provider said.

“I expect it has a lot to do with the war between Dell and EMC at the SMB level,” the solution provider said. “EMC and Dell are at war.”

As a result of falling Compellent prices, the solution provider said, it is now possible to take Compellent technology into areas where lower-cost Dell EqualLogic products were previously more likely to be sold.

“Our Dell rep recently told us that for deals of up to $80,000, EqualLogic is better,” the solution provider said. “But with the new prices, I can get a bare bones Compellent down to $15,000. I could never do that before. In the past, with really small deals, there was not much Compellent discounting.”

Another solution provider who also preferred to remain unnamed because of the sensitivity of talking about Dell storage prices said that there could be a misconception about pricing discounts which are likely less than what others have noted.

That solution provider, who was a long-time Compellent partner, said that under the pre-acquisition Compellent system, partners would get a very specific price through the partner portal based on the configuration, and then have to negotiate further discounts.

“That was not a sustainable model,” the solution provider said. “Now we get our discounted price when we configure the system. So Dell is not really lowering the price. It is lowering the initial discounts so we don’t have to negotiate.”

As a result, the solution provider said, prices haven’t changed much.

“Instead, it’s the process to get our pricing which has changed,” the solution provider said. “On most deals for me, there’s no difference in price. With our experience with Compellent, we figured out over time where our discounts would be.”

A Compellent spokesperson said that the company, after it was acquired, standardized its pricing methodology to be closer to that of Dell (NSDQ:Dell)’s methodology, which may have resulted in simplified pricing and quicker configuration of the Compellent products.

Compellent also allowed for negotiations in the procurement process before the acquisition by Dell, but things have since been simplified to allow partners to focus more on the actual configuration of their customers’ storage, the spokesperson said.

Pre-acquisition Compellent partners had ultimate control of the configurations, which was a good thing but which also took a lot of time to handle, the spokesperson. Since the acquisition, Dell has simplified the process while maintaining the customization capabilities of partners. Dell has also simplified the pricing process while taking into consideration the level of the partner in the company’s partner program, the spokesperson said.

As a result, there may be some small changes in the prices to the customer, but not necessarily across the board, the spokesperson said.

Our take

The simplification of Compellent configuration and pricing has been a long time coming. The king of “complexity creates more money” is of course EMC, which has perfected the art of configuration confusion. Keeping the customer off balance and unsure about what is needed for a specific configuration always means there is room for “extras” that the unknowing customer ends up paying for.

Dell’s move to more standardized pricing is a welcome move toward transparency that should increase end user’s trust and decrease their costs.

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CEO Phil Soran, co-founder and CEO of storage company Compellent, said in a keynote during the London-based Dell Storage Forum that he will be stepping down from his position on March 31. Soran founded Compellent in his basement with Larry Aszmann and John Guider.

“The announcement was made at Dell’s Storage Forum in London today. Soran stayed on for a year after the acquisition by Dell to bed the acquisition down, and he feels things are now in good shape. Co-founders Larry Aszmann and John Guider left quite quickly after the acquisition.”

The deal can be considered a success. Dell already managed to adopt the Fluid Data migration technology in its storage unit. The latest testimony of that is Site Recovery Manager v6, the latest version of Dell’s storage software announced today that runs on Compellent’s concept. Soran agreed with that, and noted in an interview that if he had the choice he would not take the company he helped build in a different direction.

Compellent was founded in March 2002, two years after Xiotech– the three partners’ first storage venture, also conceived in Soran’s basement – was acquired by Seagate.

Compellent has helped shape Dell’s storage business in a very profound way, contributing a great deal to the company’s decision to start focusing on its own products. One key indicator of this decision is a statement that the hardware maker does not plan on renewing its partnership with EMC, which as a part of the agreement provided Dell with its storage solutions to resell.

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Dell has introduced the DR4000, its de-duplication appliance based on its Ocarina technology and upgraded the software for its enterprise-class Compellent storage line with 64-bit technology.

Dell Compellent DR4000 PricingThere’s no way around it – we’re in the midst of a data explosion – an explosion many small businesses are struggling to keep up with, without ever-increasing budgets. By eliminating redundancies, organizations can maximize their storage capacity and see immediate results.. However, such technology has previously been out of reach for growing businesses. We’re pleased to announce the wait is over – today we announced the new Dell DR4000 Storage Platform which combines the performance and reliability of disk-based backup with innovative deduplication and compression capabilities from Dell’s Ocarina Networks acquisition.

So, how does it work? Data deduplication inspects chunks of data. A fingerprint of that chunk is taken and looked up in the system’s data index. If the fingerprint is in the index then the chunk does not need to be stored again. Instead the object map is updated and a shortcut is put in place of the duplicate data.

By keeping data online for weeks or even months before moving it to archive storage, customers can more easily locate and restore important data, creating new efficiencies and reducing the total cost of ownership for their storage infrastructure. These capabilities eliminate multiple copies of the same data and enable customers to keep more data online longer and readily available in the event of a disaster or data loss event.

Here are the DR4000 highlights:

* Eliminate redundant copies of data by decreasing disk capacity requirements up to 15 times.
* Reduce dependence on tape backup
* Reduce bandwidth requirements for data transfer by up to 15 times
* Reduce backup storage costs to as low as $0.25/GB
* Reduce the footprint of backup delivering power and cooling savings in the datacenter

In addition to excellent data reduction capabilities, the DR4000 reduces storage costs over time through an all-inclusive software licensing model that allows customers to leverage all of the DR4000 current and future product capabilities without incurring additional licensing costs.

Data deduplication helps optimize storage and more intelligently manage growing data – with less. As Dell continues to evolve its Fluid Data architecture for storage, customers will be able to apply deduplication technology on data in primary storage, backup storage, cloud storage or data in flight for replication, LAN and WAN transfers. So, what are some real-life examples that create duplicate data in a network? Email blasts that include attachments, saving multiple versions of file or the same file in different place and server/desktop virtualization containing redundant images of the same operating system. These activities are becoming more and more common, increasing the importance of deduplication technology for organizations of all sizes.

Implementing deduplication into your backup strategy is a critical part of moving into a next generation data center. What plans do you have in store for deduplication? Is the DR4000 in your future?

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You’re probably already familiar with Compellent’s modular architecture so I won’t bore you with pieces and parts of hardware. Suffice it to say you can build limitless Compellent configurations, but we’ve bundled a few basic ones here combining the SC040 controllers, disk enclosures and disk options. What’s key is the introduction of a super fast SAS back plane at the core of Storage Center 5.4.

Here’s The Storage Center 5.4 Highlights:

  • 6 Gb SAS drives provide twice the performance and use nearly half the power of 3 Gb SAS drives
  • 2.5″ SAS drives are two-thirds smaller than 3.5″ drives, resulting in a significant performance boost with a smaller footprint
  • 6 Gb SAS enclosures provide 24 bays to accommodate twice the number of spindles in the same amount of rackspace
  • Series 40 controller features more memory, six PCI-e slots and a battery-less cache, and provides 25% higher I/O performance
  • 10 Gb iSCSI and FCoE I/O cards and HBAs provide the latest industry-standard interconnect performance
  • Live Volume acts as a storage hypervisor, actively mapping one storage volume to two Dell Compellent arrays at the same time

I’d be curious to hear from Legacy customers that are running the new gear in parallel, or, if you’ve replaced older gear, how was the transition?

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