• On TV.com: New TV sex symbol: Vintage black PORSCHE
June 8, 2009 7:07 AM PDT

Storage software industry takes a revenue hit

by Lance Whitney
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 1 comment

The storage software industry has seen its first quarterly sales decline after more than five years of solid growth, according to a report from market researcher IDC.

First-quarter 2009 revenue for the industry sank 5.2 percent to $2.8 billion from the previous year. The slump has impacted several key vendors, including Hewlett-Packard, EMC, and IBM, all of which sell storage software to enterprise clients.

"The combination of the normally slow first quarter for most companies with the continued economic climate was displayed in this quarter's results," Michael Margossian, research analyst for storage software at IDC, said in a statement. "A majority of companies displayed either negative or very low year-over-year growth."

The software storage industry includes areas, or submarkets, such as data protection and recovery, archiving, data replication, and storage device management. Most of those segments were battered by the weak business climate.

"On a yearly basis, a majority of the sub-markets declined from the previous year's first quarter," Laura DuBois, IDC's research director for storage software, said in a statement. "Predominantly affected were the Device Management, Replication, and Infrastructure markets, all segments closely aligned with the storage systems themselves."

Among the top five players, HP was hit the worst with quarterly sales of $97 million, a 21.5 percent drop from $123 million the previous year. EMC watched its revenue fall 14.5 percent to $612 million, from $716 million a year earlier. Only Symantec eked out a small gain, with sales of $531 million, 2.5 percent higher than the year-ago quarter's $518 million.

The sales decline for the major companies has rippled through the entire software storage industry. But IDC expects the market to bounce back once the top five recuperate.

"The overall Storage Software market was pulled down by the underperforming large companies that make up a bulk of the submarkets," said DuBois. "Once they start to recover, they will bring the entire market up with them."

The software report follows IDC's accounting late last week on the first quarter's poor performance in the disk storage business.

Lance Whitney wears a few different technology hats--journalist, Web developer, and software trainer. He's a contributing editor for Microsoft TechNet Magazine and writes for other computer publications and Web sites. You can follow Lance on Twitter at @lancewhit. Lance is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and he is not an employee of CNET.
Recent posts from Business Tech
Intel unveils supercomputer chip, NEC partnership
Upping the ante in the supercomputer stakes
Five competitive differentiators for cloud services
AT&T expands its cloud service
IBM launches private business analytics cloud
Jaguar supercomputer races past Roadrunner in Top500
Netbook vs. iPhone: A better comparison
Nvidia calls Intel's graphics chip tactics 'aggressive'
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by dennisl59 June 8, 2009 1:20 PM PDT
IT Professionals are FINALLY realizing that this SW is way way overpriced, then having to pay for support for the products on top of it year after year after year.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

A CNET Conversation with Eric Schmidt

CNET's Tom Krazit and Molly Wood sit down with Google CEO Eric Schmidt to discuss the future of Android, the Chrome OS, the problem of real-time search indexing, and more.

Verizon tests sending RIAA copyright notices

The No. 2 phone company, known for its reluctance to intervene in antipiracy cases, strikes an agreement to forward copyright notices on behalf of the music industry.

advertisement

About Business Tech

Your destination for the latest news on enterprise-level information technology, from chip research and server design to software issues including programming, open source and patents.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Business Tech topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right