GAME CHANGER Mobility Is Driving Enterprise Cloud, Networking-as-a-Service Strategies OCT 2016 Jim Duffy, Senior Analyst, Networking Recent M&A activity in the enterprise networking infrastructure market indicates that mobility is driving vendor strategies and end-user implementation plans. Mobility and wireless have become the on-ramps to networking as a service and other cloud-based deployment models in enterprise networking. This report sizes up vendor mobile-first strategies, looks at how they align with enterprise cloud directions, and determines which ones lead and which ones follow. 2016 451 RESEARCH, LLC WWW.451RESEARCH.COM
ABOUT 451 RESEARCH 451 Research is a preeminent information technology research and advisory company. With a core focus on technology innovation and market disruption, we provide essential insight for leaders of the digital economy. More than 100 analysts and consultants deliver that insight via syndicated research, advisory services and live events to over 1,000 client organizations in North America, Europe and around the world. Founded in 2000 and headquartered in New York, 451 Research is a division of The 451 Group. 2016 451 Research, LLC and/or its Affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication, in whole or in part, in any form without prior written permission is forbidden. The terms of use regarding distribution, both internally and externally, shall be governed by the terms laid out in your Service Agreement with 451 Research and/or its Affiliates. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. 451 Research disclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Although 451 Research may discuss legal issues related to the information technology business, 451 Research does not provide legal advice or services and their research should not be construed or used as such. 451 Research shall have no liability for errors, omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibility for the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change without notice. NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO LONDON BOSTON 20 West 37th Street 3rd Floor New York, NY 10018 P 212-505-3030 F 212-505-2630 140 Geary Street 9th Floor San Francisco, CA 94108 P 415-989-1555 F 415-989-1558 37-41 Gower Street London, UK WC1E 6HH P +44 (0)20 7299 7765 F +44 (0)20 7299 7799 75-101 Federal Street 5th Floor Boston, MA 02110 P 617-261-0699 F 617-261-0688 ABOUT THE AUTHOR JIM DUFFY SENIOR ANALYST, NETWORKING Jim Duffy is Senior Analyst for the Networking Channel at 451 Research. He covers enterprise network infrastructure and associated software, and network performance management. Jim has been covering technology for over 30 years, including 25 at Network World. His coverage focused predominantly on enterprise networking infrastructure, including routers, switches and associated software. II
Key Findings Wireless and mobility are driving the enterprise network infrastructure market, especially as customers transition networking to the cloud as networking as a service (NaaS). Softening the edge of the network wireless LANs (WLANs) and access point aggregation switches through software-defined networking, virtualization and cloud management is instilling the same dynamic and ondemand characteristics at that level as cloud at the back end. Vendors now lead with their WLAN and bring-your-own-device (BYOD) management portfolios when bidding for enterprise network infrastructure projects. Indeed, the wireless assets from the acquired go much broader than WLANs. In addition to security, they address analytics, the Internet of Things and network management, all key attributes in evolving enterprise infrastructures toward the cloud. III
Executive Summary INTRODUCTION In the early and mid-2000s, the mobile enterprise was a convenient, nice to have adjunct to a wired campus infrastructure. Employees worked at desktops physically wired to switch ports while guests were accorded basic internet access through Wi-Fi without physically cabling their laptops to the corporate network. For workers, Wi-Fi was found in a few pockets of the enterprise as a convenience. That all changed as Wi-Fi became more robust and enterprise-grade and workers demanded more mobility. Enterprise mobility then took off in 2009 with the emergence of smartphones. Workers were now accessing their corporate data from smartphones and smartphone apps, creating challenges for back-end IT infrastructures and creating greater demand for enterprise mobility among workers. Mobility is now a strategic must-have in an enterprise. It is the predominant way workers and visitors access the corporate network and the internet. And because of this as enterprises move infrastructure to the cloud and offer IT and networking as a service (NaaS) mobile devices are the on-ramp to that private/public/hybrid cloud infrastructure. Cloud access via mobility is now a strategic imperative for enterprises and enterprise network infrastructure vendors. Vendors not only have to have a mobility portfolio or at the very least access to one from partners but have it front-andcenter, driving the entire network architecture and product line strategy. Hewlett Packard Enterprise s (HPE s) acquisition of Aruba Networks and Brocade s purchase of Ruckus Wireless are evidence of that as Aruba now assumes control of HPE s entire wired enterprise portfolio, as well as wireless. Ruckus is much more than wireless LANs (WLANs) to Brocade as the wireless company is looked upon to expand Brocade s cloud, analytics, security and Internet of Things (IoT) offerings as well. Wireless and mobility are so important to Extreme Networks that it acquired two companies with WLAN product lines. And security pure-play Fortinet views wireless as so strategic to its security and cloud as-a-service initiatives, it acquired Meru in 2015. In addition to satiating customer appetites for mobility, wireless assets are important for many enterprise initiatives, including IoT, analytics, security and cloud, especially NaaS. The stakes are huge as the number of wirelessly connected devices explodes, enterprise IoT initiatives bloom and cloud permeates the enterprise. The revenue and broader total addressable market opportunities prove too hard to pass up. METHODOLOGY This report ranks the leaders and followers in mobile-first enterprise networking and synergies with NaaS strategies. It assesses their initiatives to date, quantifies their WLAN business now and five years down the road, and evaluates opportunities to meld wireless and mobility initiatives with broader cloud strategies. The players were selected based on their current or emerging presence in enterprise networking infrastructure and their ability to meet or address demands for mobile enterprise networking as on-ramps to the cloud. 451 Research conducted interviews with these vendors among them, Cisco, HPE, Brocade, Extreme Networks, Juniper Networks, Fortinet, Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise (ALE) and Aerohive Networks. Our analysis attempts to quantify the current and projected WLAN revenue and revenue growth rate of the listed vendors but a few of them declined to disclose numbers, citing confidentiality or a policy not to separate WLAN figures from overall enterprise networking revenue. IV
MOBILITY IS DRIVING ENTERPRISE CLOUD, NETWORKING-AS-A-SERVICE STRATEGIES Reports such as this one represent a holistic perspective on key emerging markets in the enterprise IT space. These markets evolve quickly, though, so 451 Research offers additional services that provide critical marketplace updates. These updated reports and perspectives are presented on a daily basis via the company s core intelligence service, 451 Research Market Insight. Forward-looking M&A analysis and perspectives on strategic acquisitions and the liquidity environment for technology companies are also updated regularly via Market Insight, which is backed by the industry-leading 451 Research M&A KnowledgeBase. Emerging technologies and markets are covered in 451 Research channels including Business Applications; Cloud Transformation; Data Platforms and Analytics; Datacenter Technologies; Development, DevOps and IT Ops; Enterprise Mobility; European Services; Information Security; Internet of Things; Mobile Telecom; Multi-Tenant Datacenters; Networking; Service Providers; Storage; and Systems and Software Infrastructure. Beyond that, 451 Research has a robust set of quantitative insights covered in products such as Voice of the Enterprise, Voice of the Connected User Landscape, Cloud Price Index, Market Monitor, the M&A KnowledgeBase and the Datacenter KnowledgeBase. All of these 451 Research services, which are accessible via the web, provide critical and timely analysis specifically focused on the business of enterprise IT innovation. For more information about 451 Research, please go to: www.451research.com. V
Table of Contents 1. TO CONNECT TO THE CLOUD, CUT THE WIRES 1 MOBILIZING A MATURE MARKET..................................... 1 WI-FI: IT S NOT JUST FOR WLANS ANYMORE............................... 1 Figure 1: IoT Projects in Use vs. Planned by Endpoint...............................2 Figure 2: Network Connectivity Technologies for IoT Connections.........................3 VENDORS ARE SPENDING BILLIONS ON WLAN, MOBILITY......................... 4 Figure 3: Let s Deal for Disconnect: Recent WLAN Purchases by Leading Enterprise Network Infrastructure Vendors........................................................4 2. LEADERS HAVE THE CLOUD IN THEIR HAND(HELD) 5 AEROHIVE................................................ 5 ALCATEL-LUCENT ENTERPRISE...................................... 5 BROCADE................................................ 6 CISCO.................................................. 6 EXTREME................................................. 8 FORTINET................................................ 8 HEWLETT PACKARD ENTERPRISE..................................... 9 JUNIPER NETWORKS........................................... 10 MIST................................................... 10 XIRRUS.................................................. 11 3. WHICH WIRELESS VENDORS ARE BEST CONNECTED TO A NAAS-CENT MARKET? 12 Figure 4: Forecast for the WLAN Market, 2016-2020............................... 13 4. CONCLUSIONS 14 Figure 5: Existence of a Mobility Strategy and Area............................... 14 VI
MOBILITY IS DRIVING ENTERPRISE CLOUD, NETWORKING-AS-A-SERVICE STRATEGIES 5. FURTHER READING 15 6. INDEX OF COMPANIES 16 VII