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August 31, 2007

Comments

Interesting article, thanks!

I was actually a part of the SSP revolution in a few different ways. Originally at Level 3 we looked into hosting customer application data, but in the end we found that managed services, rather then strictly managed storage was a much better option for most businesses. Secondly we looked at this model during my tenure at STK. Both originally with inception of Managed Storage International, which is now MSI and a part of Incentra. Then as a second try with STK we launched a BCDR (business continuity disaster recovery) service portfolio, which even included the ability to utilize SAM FS for doing storage tiering, but was aimed specifically at online disk-disk-tape backup options. In the end all of these failed badly because no matter how cheap the network segment got, the network was still too expensive for companies to host storage externally. We tried to overcome this by hosting storage within Qwest Cyber Centers, and offering the services to co-located applications.

Another large objection we had at STK, was the issue of owning the storage media. Our general counsel had major liability concerns with leasing/renting the storage media, because in the end STK could be held responsible if there was corruption or data loss.

There have been a few companies that are still looking into this model again. FalconStor has the ability to host customer's data and has launched a service for doing that. MSI has moved more into a managed services approach similar to what Storability tried to with the SOC (of course this was prior to STK's destruction of that business).

Even with some of my customers today, those who don't want the hassle of managing the IT or Storage environment move into managed locations offered by ViaWest or other co-location facilities.

Dave,

After spending almost 7 years at NetApp I joined an SSP last year - Arsenal Digital. We have been around since 1998, and our business model has never been more solid. One of the reasons I think we are successful today, and that we survived the dot com blast is b/c of our focus. Arsenal's business is providing backup and DR services, like e-Vault and LiveVault/Iron Mountain do.

We've had financial success to the tune of 6 consecutive years of double digit revenue growth, resulting in almost 25 petabytes of storage (tape and disk) under management. We're able to take on new partners and customers every day because they understand we'll protect them and save them from dealing with a historically non-strategic IT function. I like to call this solving the "Your Mess for Less" dilemma with shared goals and good management.

That amount of storage we manage doesn't compare to the amount of storage NetApp sells in a typical quarter - but when you think of it in terms of just backup data (and more of it coming from SMBs than ever), it is pretty relevant and puts us in rare air with much bigger companies.

The fact is our profitable business model is coming back into vogue with partners and customers; and SaaS, or storage-as-a-service, is becoming more accepted and trusted.

Keep up the good blogs!

Adam

The Wall Street Journal recently ran an interesting article, “The Online Storage Wars” (http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB117132942506806612-AFbBCIbeoOSA2_HtbG4fBCYa57A_20070219.html?mod=mktw), about the high growth being seen in what is effectively Consumer SSPs (personal files). Perhaps Corporate America will follow?

What about Amazon S3?

I think SSP's will see/start to see/very soon another resurgence. Mostly due to the changing environments, abuse and misuse of email and other content, mostly unstructured in form. The US and now non-US governments are positioning themselves, in some cases rightly so - due to the fiasco's such as Enron, to essentially run Americaan corporations. The level of work that the normal IT operations has to do to manage against the "potential" litigation, is amazing, and they basically have one thing to do- store and manage a lot more data, especially email. This phenomenon is causing organizations to sock away 100's of GB's of data, many cases 300-400GB daily, do that math its not that difficult, and keep if on spinning disk, due to search and extract requirements. The average corporation, even above average corporation eventually looks at their floor space, power, cooling, etc. to keep peta-bytes of data, and the decision becomes clear, where is the SSP?

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