Public schools flocked to VMware during the COVID-19 shutdowns, using vSAN and vSphere to support remote learning and emergency contingencies. But after Broadcom acquired VMware, districts report higher prices and a sales approach that favors larger customers, complicating budgets and vendor diversification.
In one Indiana district of five schools with about 3,000 students, a quote for the VMware stack tied to Dell’s VxRail hardware came in at three to six times what was expected. The district had relied on the software-defined storage and virtualization tools since 2019, wrapped in a VxRail package.
As costs rose, the district redirected IT resources away from curriculum improvements to manage the transition. It had planned a summer program for upperclassmen to learn to use real-world IT products, but such opportunities were curtailed by budget pressures and the VMware migration timeline. The district had used VMware-based virtual machines to create test environments for students, which are now harder to reproduce.
Industry observers say the effect extends beyond a single district. Mohammad Haque, CTO at Propeller, notes that schools often redirect IT funds from cybersecurity and AI initiatives to migrations away from VMware. Idaho Falls School District 91, for example, migrated to Scale Computing after finding VMware pricing untenable, with a renewal quote that exceeded alternatives.
Administrators report additional challenges, including compatibility issues with non-VMware hardware and limited vendor support. Dell Technologies has defended VxRail, saying it remains committed to customers with active support agreements, while acknowledging that districts need flexible options to align with long-term IT goals.