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Most VMware Users Continue Cutting Footprint

Image © Arstechnica
A CloudBolt report examines how VMware customers are trimming their dependence after Broadcom's takeover.

More than two years after Broadcom’s acquisition, VMware customers remain grappling with higher prices, uncertainty, and the challenges of reducing vendor lock-in, according to a new CloudBolt report.

The report, titled “The Mass Exodus That Never Was: The Squeeze Is Just Beginning,” is based on a January survey of 302 IT decision-makers (director level or higher) at North American companies with 1,000+ employees. CloudBolt, which provides hybrid cloud management software, says the study offers a snapshot of ongoing pain points.

According to the findings, the most cited disruption drivers were price increases (89%), followed by uncertainty about Broadcom’s plans (85%), concerns about support quality (78%), a shift from perpetual licenses to subscriptions (72%), changes to VMware’s partner program (68%), and bundled products (65%).

While some customers previously described quotes showing price hikes up to 1,000%, CloudBolt’s data suggests more moderate increases: 14% of respondents said VMware costs have at least doubled, 12% reported 50–99% increases, 33% saw 24–49% rises, and 31% experienced increases below 25%.

Despite the pricing pressures, 85% of respondents worry VMware could become even more expensive. CloudBolt notes a broader strategy: “Their strategy was never to keep every customer. It was to maximize value from those still on the platform while the market slowly diversifies.”

 

Arstechnica

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