Email this article   Print article 


IBM Signs Tech Data, Ingram Micro For Power-Based Servers

By Joseph F. Kovar
January 16, 2013    11:06 AM ET

Page 1 of 2

IBM signed distribution deals with Tech Data and Ingram Micro in a bid to expand the potential market for its Power processor-based servers and enterprise-class storage to midmarket solution providers.

Tech Data and Ingram Micro, which already partner with IBM on its System x x86 processor-based servers and midrange storage, will help recruit those midrange solution providers looking to develop enterprise server and storage expertise, according to IBM.

Avnet and Arrow have been IBM's primary distributors in North America for its Power-based Unix servers and enterprise-class storage.

[Related: Dell, Cisco Winners In Otherwise Dreary 3Q Server Market]

IBM's goal with the new distribution deals is to expand its enterprise business reach to both traditional IT solution providers and to global ISVs, said Bill Donohue, vice president of IBM's North America business partner and midmarket sales.

"We believe the new relationships will help us expand into the midrange business segments," Donohue said.

The addition of Ingram Micro and Tech Data to IBM's Power processor-based server distribution list should not be seen as diluting the value of IBM's existing relationships with Arrow and Avnet, Donohue said.

"Arrow and Avnet both remain very strategic to our strategy," he said. "This is about expanding our market. We're looking for lift, not shift, in our market."

When asked about his comments that IBM's Unix market is growing despite research reports that show Unix to be a shrinking market, Donohue said there are untapped opportunities for the servers in customers currently served by midrange solution providers.

"We have a growing market in Unix, but it's not growing like we want," he said. "Solution providers and distributors will not have a complete package of solutions to sell. There will be opportunities to grow the existing Unix market."

Heidi Dethloff, vice president of IBM's North America business partner and midmarket marketing, said IBM's Power-based servers are not only for Unix. "Don't forget Linux on Power," Dethloff said. "It's an important part of the business."

Gartner, however, wrote in its third-quarter 2012 server report that third-quarter shipments of Itanium and other RISC-based processor servers, which include IBM's Power family, fell 31.1 percent compared to the same period the year before. Total revenue fell 16.4 percent, Gartner said.

NEXT: Looking To Midmarket To Boost Power Server Sales



1 | 2 | Next >>

To continue reading this article, please download the free CRN Tech News app for your iPad or Windows 8 device.
Related: Videos | Slide Shows | Comments

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

More Data Center

Recent Articles

Dell Dozen: Who Are The Icahn/Southeastern Dell Board Nominees?

Icahn Enterprises and Southeastern Asset Management nominate 12 people to sit on Dell's board of directors, should their alternative offer to the Silver Lake buyout deal be accepted by the current board. So who are the Dell dozen?

Software-Defined Deluge: Promises, Pitfalls And Players

The software-defined environment is developing at breakneck speed as the industry looks at how -- and how much of -- the functionality of traditional data center hardware can be addressed via software.

Q1 Server Vendor Winners And Losers

The eagerly anticipated server unit share for the first quarter from market researchers Gartner and IDC is causing a stir among industry watchers looking for signs of strength and weakness. Here's a look at some of the preliminary data. Both market researchers caution that it is only preliminary, with the final data to be released at the end of May.

  More Slide Shows




Related Videos
Loading...