Sun banks on downloads for growth

But some analysts fret over new growth strategy.

Sun Microsystems described a growth strategy this week that depends in large part on giving away software - in the hope that customers will like it enough to sign up for support contracts, and perhaps buy Sun hardware on which to run it.

It's a strategy Sun started several years ago with a free version of its application server, and which it has accelerated with products such as StarOffice, OpenSolaris, its Open xVM virtualisation software, and most recently its acquisition of the open-source database vendor MySQL.

The free software allows Sun to build communities of developers who will do pilot projects with its software, and may eventually buy licences for commercial deployment, or buy professional services to support critical applications, CEO and president Jonathan Schwartz said at the company's press day. He called Sun's software a "media asset" for building communities.

"These are no longer simply software products, these are media properties - networks around which communities are being built, [and] this is a means for Sun to talk to a very large developer community," he said.

He put up a slide that showed a map of the world covered in pink dots. Each dot represented a download of Solaris, he said, and hence an opportunity for Sun to start a dialogue with IT people that could lead to a sale of its services and hardware.

"Not all customers will pay for these products before they use them - very few will, actually," he admitted. But they all buy servers and storage on which to run the software, and the download gives Sun a foot in the door to try to capture that sale.

"The reason MySQL was interesting to us is, it puts 50,000 new dots on that map every day, and from the community, market opportunities will emerge," Schwartz said.

Sun's growth is important to customers. Its revenue funds its research and development efforts, and customers want to know there is a big community of specialists in Sun products to support their businesses.

Analysts are divided about the strategy. At Sun's financial analyst conference last week, Sanford Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi said he found it hard to see a link between software downloads and Sun's revenue growth.

"If you were to plot a chart showing revenue growth over the last 12 quarters and Solaris downloads, there would really be no correlation at all," Sacconaghi said.

"Oh, I think there would be an exceptional correlation," Schwartz replied. "If you had shut those downloads off three years ago, our revenue would have been declining double-digit."

He reiterated the point. Sun's strongest growth period came in the late 1990s and was preceded by wide use of its software in universities, he said. Today, the growth of Sun's Niagara servers has been driven by making Solaris open source, Schwartz said.

Illuminata analyst Gordon Haff said there probably is a connection between Sun's free and open-source software strategy and its revenue growth, but even if there is not, the strategy is helping the company, he said.

"Even if you can't say that each pink dot equals $372, I think the things Sun has been doing with open source and OpenSolaris and Java and so forth have translated into improved relevancy and an improved perception of Sun, and at some level, logic suggests that this played a role in their improved financial picture."


What are your views on this subject? Use the form below to post a comment on this article up to 500 characters.


Characters remaining: 500

Related Applications news

Microsoft Office 2010 beta available for download

Developers can get hands on software preview

Microsoft reveals Silverlight update plans

Version 4 to beef up out of browser application support

Microsoft beta to shake up directory services

Developers to bake access control into applications

Salesforce launches own social networking app

Chatter could be 'Facebook for the enterprise'.



Email this article to a friend or colleague:


PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.

Techworld White Papers

Database security: Preventing enterprise data leaks at the source

IDC discusses the growing internal threats to business information, the impact of government regulations on the protection of data, and how enterprises must adopt database security best practices...

Download Whitepaper

Service-oriented security

SOA has become an integral part of enterprise software by providing a framework to efficiently develop software as services that is easily sharable, reusable, and integrated. No where is the need more apparent than in the Identity Management space. Welcome to the age of Service-Oriented Security (SOS).

Download Whitepaper

Data protection prospective vendor checklist

Organisations need a way to map business needs against all these challenges in procuring a technical solution. To help, SANS has developed the following Prospective Vendor Checklist.

Download Whitepaper

Unlock the power of the mainframe

This whitepaper presents the notion of CICS as an integration hub based on a component-based, service-oriented architecture supporting Web services. Highlights will review the challenges and contrasted support for Web services natively in CICS.

Download Whitepaper

Techworld UK - Technology - Business

COLT White Paper

Are all VoIP services the same?

Questions to ask your service provider to ensure you get the VoIP service you need
With careful choice of partner, your business can have all the advantages of VoIP access - reduced costs, flexibility and simplicity - without the drawbacks.
This white paper is your guide to ensure you get right the VoIP service and details the pitfalls which businesses would do well to avoid.

Download white paper
BMC

Ride the express lane in the journey to speed ITIL adoption

Explore the challenges in making the journey to ITIL and the criteria for selecting consulting services
By following ITIL practices, your IT organisation will become more closely integrated with the business. We recommend making the journey to ITIL in a sequence of six incremental steps, the phases of which are driven through execution of a strategic transformational roadmap.

Download white paper

Webcast: IT Financial Management: Cost Optimisation for Efficiency and Agility.
On Demand Webcast
Join this webcast to learn about the techniques and technologies that can help you prove the value of IT to the business by understanding the true cost of today's IT services and those that will be necessary to deliver future success.

Register Today

Site Map

IDG Network

* *