Hardware expansions, sovereign cloud and supply chain resiliency
The third announcement pillar includes Operational Resilience and Scale, so it covered the broadest area. A recurring theme here is the management of supply chain risks. By supporting a broader range of hardware, customers gain flexibility when certain server or storage platforms are limited due to availability or delivery time issues.
In the storage area, Nutanix is expanding compute-only node support to NetApp, Everpure FlashArray //C and Dell PowerStore in Early Access. This provides existing three-tier storage customers a path to the Nutanix operating model without having to replace their existing storage investments.
In addition, Cisco FlexPod, a jointly developed reference architecture from Nutanix, NetApp storage and Cisco network technology, is also supported for the first time. This creates a direct integration path to Nutanix for Cisco customers. NetApp and Cisco have had a close relationship for years, and Nutanix is now joining them. The compatibility list has also been expanded to include AMD GPU and Edge systems as well as Lenovo ThinkSystem memory.
On the cloud side, there is support for the AWS European Sovereign Cloud as well as Google Cloud C3 instances with Hyperdisk block storage. The interesting thing about it: Because Nutanix licenses are completely portable, they can be moved to the public cloud given the current acute hardware supply bottlenecks. And of course be pulled back into the on-premises environment when the hardware actually arrives. At the moment, this could take three to eight months because the huge demand for AI and the geopolitical environment make servers and other hardware in short supply.
As a further innovation in this context, the data security solution Nutanix Data Lens is now also available in an on-premises version without dependency on SaaS. This is critical for confident cloud deployments where external SaaS infrastructure is not permitted for regulatory reasons.
Competition with Broadcom
The announcements come at a favorable time window. Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware and the subsequent license restructuring and steep price increases have sparked a search for alternatives by a large number of enterprise customers. In addition to Red Hat, Verge OS and Proxmox, Nutanix in particular benefits from this situation. At the event in Chicago, several partners described the same pattern: First, some customers quickly switched from VMware to Nutanix, and now there is a larger second wave that is still being evaluated.
In this context, CEO Rajiv Ramaswami spoke of around 160,000 potential Broadcom displacement accounts – a number that pushes the company’s growth target into the mid to upper double-digit range. He countered the shattered trust of many disappointed VMware users with a Net Promoter Score (NPS) of over 90 – over a period of nine consecutive years.
Whether Nutanix’s unified platform strategy sustains a sustained market position depends on execution across a broad offering. AI services, Kubernetes, hardware integrations, sovereign cloud and service provider tools are each separate areas of competition.
The ecosystem with 105 sponsors and the 20 percent share of interested parties on .NEXT signal that this opportunity is real. They reflect how actively enterprise IT buyers are reevaluating their infrastructure stacks – a dynamic accelerated by Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware. However, conversion to real customer scenarios remains a long-term task. (mb)
