How Mature Organizations are Right-Sizing IT Virtualization
By Todd Braunschweig, Infrastructure Solutions Architect, Paragon Micro
Virtualization is foundational, not optional. For many organizations, however, it gradually faded into the background. This is not because it failed, but because it worked. Stable virtualization became assumed infrastructure, reliably supporting daily operations without calling attention to itself.
Recent pricing changes pulled the curtain back on that assumption. As costs climbed, decision makers have been forced to reexamine a platform they have relied on for years without question. This IT virtualization underpins nearly every business process.
IT virtualization itself didn’t become riskier or less effective overnight. It simply became more visible. That visibility now demands accountability. When pricing changed enough to hurt, leaders could no longer ignore how central virtualization is to their IT environments.
Platforms such as VMware, which have supported modern IT for decades, promote resilience, operational consistency, and the ability to scale across the organization. The changes that occurred after the Broadcom acquisition exposed this, highlighting a damaging pattern: foundational virtualization platforms are being passively renewed instead of intentionally managed.
We are experiencing a moment of clarity, and that clarity brings a choice. Mature organizations will not allow legacy IT infrastructure to set the pace for future strategy and business outcomes. They will use this turning point to align virtualization strategies with business needs and long-term direction.
What the Cost Increases Forced Organizations to Admit
A decade ago, the current virtualization cost increases would have been difficult to imagine. Virtualization was priced and perceived in proportion to the business impact it delivered. As a dependable facilitator of daily operations, its value was well understood and its costs largely predictable. VMware, in particular, was long viewed by analysts as undervalued because virtualization was quietly doing the heavy lifting, steadily driving productivity across the organization.
Rising virtualization costs compelled IT leaders to consider price alongside value, rather than treating virtualization as an assumed expense. The cost increase didn’t elevate the importance of virtualization; it clarified it. Rising costs have revealed just how much productivity, continuity, and resilience depends on virtualization. While disruptive, these pricing changes demonstrated to organizational leaders that virtualization is not merely an operational expense.
Until recently, virtualization demanded little scrutiny. Its long-term stability allowed it to be treated as a constant rather than a strategic asset. Rising costs revealed how automatic that dependency had become. The organizations most unsettled by recent changes were not those heavily reliant on virtualization, as nearly all are. Companies that had never been required to actively account for the role of virtualization in the business environment have been the most impacted.
The Pattern We’re Seeing: Virtualization Is Being Right-Sized
For years, organizations defaulted to the largest, most load-bearing virtualization platforms simply because they had always worked. Today, more organizations are deliberately aligning their virtualization platforms with actual business needs rather than established patterns.
This shift looks different depending on scale and complexity. Large enterprises often reinvest in VMware to support advanced requirements such as automation, multitenancy, and resilience at scale. Small and mid-sized organizations typically require only core virtualization capabilities, including high availability, portability, and ease of management. Many organizations select platforms designed to deliver those outcomes without added complexity and expense.
This right-sizing of IT virtualization infrastructure is a sign of maturity, not a downgrade. The goal is not to adopt the most sophisticated virtualization infrastructure available, but to choose the level the business can justify and sustain.
There is no single correct depth of virtualization. The right depth is the one that aligns with the organization’s operational needs and business goals.
Where Organizations Get Stuck: Cost vs. Risk
Organizations navigating the current transition face a core tension, one better understood as a risk decision than a technology decision. Pricing changes, licensing complexity, and ongoing uncertainty create hesitation, especially for organizations without the benefit of enterprise-scale agreements. While discomfort is unavoidable, paralysis is a choice with consequences. Indecision is often framed as caution, but organizations that acknowledge uncertainty without allowing it to delay progress and growth will gain momentum.
The most challenging aspect of this transition is deciding which risk the organization is prepared to own. Remaining with VMware requires absorbing higher costs in exchange for continuity and familiarity. Exploring alternatives introduces operational risk in pursuit of flexibility and alignment. The right choice is the one the organization can fully commit to and take accountability for.
What Struggling Organizations Have in Common
Many organizations are struggling today, but not for the reasons they assume. The challenge is often ascribed to a changing landscape (shifting licensing models, evolving vendor strategies, market uncertainty, etc.). But instability itself is not what causes leaders to hesitate. The risk lies in making stability a prerequisite for action.
The stability of the past may never fully return. Licensing structures will continue to evolve, vendor strategies will shift, and market dynamics will remain volatile. Struggling organizations aren’t stalled because they lack capability, but because they’ve delayed intent in hopes that conditions will one day stabilize.
Competitive organizations take a different approach. Instead of waiting for certainty, they design with change in mind. By engaging with uncertainty, they establish clarity about priorities and the risks they can afford to take. This gives them a form of internal stability that allows them to move forward with confidence, no matter the external conditions.
This perspective aligns with what Paragon is already discussing with customers as they plan beyond the current disruption, including how virtualization strategies are evolving in 2026.
What a More Mature Virtualization Strategy Looks Like
A mature virtualization strategy starts with the recognition that foundational virtualization infrastructure should not be assumed to be permanent. True IT virtualization infrastructure requires intentional design, ongoing evaluation, and alignment with business priorities.
In this context, intentionality and alignment matter more than permanence and loyalty to legacy platforms. And flexibility outperforms default decisions carried forward simply because they once worked.
This is where experienced guidance makes the difference. Navigating today’s virtualization landscape is about making clear, informed decisions that promote growth despite uncertainty. Paragon’s role is to help organizations navigate complexity, understand their options, and design mature virtualization strategies that align with how the business actually operates.
True IT virtualization maturity isn’t about what platform an organization chooses. It is about making virtualization infrastructure choices deliberately, based on real business needs rather than the status quo, and ensuring they continue to serve the organization over time.
Let’s talk about what right sizing your IT virtualization would look like for your organization.
Reach out to connect with a network infrastructure advisor.