EMC Bundles Up For SMBs

Special pricing, partner rebates accompany new Insignia releases

CRN logo By Joseph F. Kovar, ChannelWeb

3:00 PM EDT Fri. Apr. 21, 2006
From the April 24, 2006 issue of CRN
Page 1 of 2
EMC continues to push into the small-business space with special pricing and a $500 rebate to solution providers that take the vendor’s e-mail and data-protection bundles to their smaller clients.

The move is the latest in a series of new product releases the vendor is using to show it is a force to be reckoned with in the SMB space. Until only a few years ago, EMC focused exclusively on the enterprise market.

The Hopkinton, Mass.-based vendor’s latest foray in this space is the release of two new bundles from its EMC Insignia small-business product lineup. The new bundles are based on EMC’s Clariion AX150 and AX150i entry-level storage arrays, which the vendor introduced early last week. The AX150 has a Fibre Channel interface, while the AX150i has an iSCSI interface.

The first bundle, EMC Insignia Solution for Exchange, includes an array with five 500-Gbyte SATA drives for a total capacity of 2.5 Tbytes, as well as the company’s EMC Storage Administrator for Exchange SMB Edition and EMC Retrospect for Windows backup and recovery software. It is aimed at automating the management of Microsoft Exchange data and migrating customers to Microsoft Exchange Server 2003.

The bundle is suitable for small businesses with four to six servers that have not made the move to a SAN, said Don Chouinard, director of product planning and messaging for the Insignia line. “VARs need to convince customers to stop buying JBOD [just a bunch of disks, or non-RAID] arrays and go for RAID,” he said. “Otherwise, if a disk fails, they can lose their data.”

The other bundle, EMC Insignia Solution for Data Protection, includes six 500-Gbyte SATA drives in the array, along with EMC Retrospect for Windows. It is aimed at automating the protection of data on a small business’s servers, desktops, notebook PCs and workstations. “Customers realize backups are not getting done,” Chouinard said. “Between 40 [percent] and 60 percent of desktops and notebooks are not getting backed up.”

The EMC Insignia Solution for Exchange is bundle-priced starting at $12,495, which Chouinard said is some $1,200 less than the cost of the different products when bought separately. The EMC Insignia Solution for Data Protection bundle starts at $11,995, at least $900 less than the individual component pricing. Both are currently available, and both qualify for a $500 rebate for solution providers selling them during the second quarter, he said.

 
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