VMware has long dominated the North American virtualization and hyper-converged infrastructure (HCI) markets, with over 40% market share. Its technologies underpin a vast number of enterprise environments, making it a central player in virtualization strategies. Since the Broadcom acquisition, many customers have been re-evaluating their long-term VMware strategies, considering how best to balance performance, flexibility, and cost efficiency.
For many organizations, the next few years will be pivotal in shaping their virtualization roadmaps. Changes in licensing, pricing, and platform direction—combined with evolving business needs—create an environment where proactive planning is more important than reactive decision-making.
The Pressure on IT Leaders
IT teams are under immense pressure to deliver performance, flexibility, and cost control—often across multiple environments. CIOs want clarity, vendors are updating terms, and IT teams must ensure infrastructure remains secure, scalable, and efficient.
“It’s important to get ahead of market changes as the software world continues shifting toward subscriptions and away from traditional licensing,” says Pat Engle, Director of Cloud, Infrastructure, and Modern Workplace, who shared insights on the current pressures facing IT leaders. “OpEx costs are rising, and organizations will need to plan their software stack more strategically, as those decisions will impact the next three to five years.”
Why Organizations Are Evaluating VMware Alternatives
Even as VMware maintains its dominant position, the Broadcom acquisition has led many organizations to reassess their long-term virtualization strategies, prompting consideration of alternative platforms and approaches:
- Rising costs and licensing complexity: Organizations are carefully assessing the total cost of ownership for VMware environments as pricing models and licensing terms evolve.
- Vendor lock-in: IT teams are seeking flexibility across hypervisors and storage platforms to better align with evolving business needs.
- Modernization goals: Leaders want cloud-aligned infrastructure that is easier to manage, scale, and secure.
Top VMware Alternatives
- Microsoft Hyper-V / Azure Stack HCI – Ideal for Microsoft-centric environments, offering tight integration with Azure and hybrid cloud strategies.
- Nutanix AHV – VMware-like functionality with simplicity, scalability, and lower total cost of ownership.
- Red Hat Virtualization (KVM) – Open-source flexibility aligned with hybrid cloud and containerization strategies.
“Most organizations have maintained the status quo and stayed with VMWare to this point due to the substantial investment made and effort required to migrate to a new solution. However, organizations should explore options based on the outcomes they are hoping to achieve. There is no ‘one size fits all’ solution,” says Engle.
Planning Strategically: Respond, Don’t React
Organizations that succeed in times of change are not rushing into replacements—they are assessing their environment, defining desired outcomes, and creating a roadmap for the future. Reacting impulsively—removing VMware without a migration strategy, delaying planning, or outsourcing decisions—can create unnecessary risk.
Strategic planning includes:
- Assessing dependencies to determine business-critical needs
- Auditing VMware usage to understand actual costs
- Exploring transitional licensing or cost containment strategies
- Considering short-term VMware retention while building long-term flexibility
- Upskilling IT teams to handle multi-hypervisor environments
Organizations will need to assess their existing skillset before making a decision on their future vision. Determining skill maturity is imperative to ensure whatever technology adopted is implemented and maintained properly. Once there is a plan, move to a design phase and determine what workloads can be migrated and what the timeline requirements are.
Modernizing Virtualization for the Future
Modern virtualization is agile, API-driven, and cloud-aware. Success begins by defining operational goals, not rushing into new technology. Once outcomes are clear, organizations can evaluate solutions such as Hyper-V, Nutanix AHV, Azure Stack HCI, or cloud-first approaches.
- On-premises solutions offer control and regulatory compliance but come with high costs and slower scalability.
- Colocation strategies provide scalable, streamlined IT operations while reducing physical infrastructure burdens.
- Cloud-first strategies enable modern, secure, and flexible infrastructures optimized for business transformation.
Leveraging Solutions Teams
Solutions and architecture teams can help assess current environments, define long-term strategies, and design a roadmap for modernization. This ensures a smoother transition while mitigating risk and operational disruption.
Evaluate, Don’t Panic
VMware remains a foundational platform for many enterprises, but the virtualization landscape is evolving. By stepping back, defining desired outcomes, and evaluating modern alternatives, IT teams can regain control, stabilize infrastructure, and future-proof virtualization strategies. Strategic planning—not panic—is the key to navigating this era successfully
Start planning proactively. Connect with our team to evaluate your environment and map the right path forward.