An In-Stat report provides survey results and coverage of the SMB NAS market, including data relating to the use of NAS and cloud services.
More
than seven in 10 SMBs that use cloud-based storage solutions also use
networked-attached storage, according to a recent In-Stat survey. While SMB NAS
represents a smaller portion of the total NAS market, it is expected to grow at
a much faster rate over the forecast period, with revenues reaching $2 billion
in 2015, said In-Stat.
Network-attached
storage is a specialized server connected to a network that provides file-based
data storage services to other devices on the network. NAS systems typically
have the capability to support one or more hard disk drives (HDDs), and often
include features such as RAID (redundant array of independent disks) and backup/replication
services for all the devices attached to the network.
"As
the market has matured, the definition of NAS has taken on additional
aspects," said Norm Bogen, vice president of research for In-Stat.
"In particular, system management software has evolved into the most
important feature of NAS adoption for several reasons, but primarily because it
simplifies the user experience to set up and manage NAS products."
The
research found 57.3 percent of SMB survey respondents use NAS technology
products, and North America and Europe will represent 84.6 percent of the
revenue opportunity for the SMB NAS market. Survey respondents that "don't
use NAS" tend to have less than 50 employees.
The
report, "Worldwide SMB Network-Attached Storage: Technology and Service
Innovation Drive High Growth," provides survey results and coverage of the SMB
NAS market, including survey data relating to the use of NAS and cloud
services, as well as an in-depth overview of the market and technology trends.
Another
In-Stat report on NAS storage found the number of portable consumer electronics
and computing devices in the home has grown over the last couple of years, and
it will explode in the coming years. The report concluded that the need and use
for NAS centralized storage will become more practical for one reason-content
access.
In
a network with multiple computing devices, sharing common storage, content
access and media sharing becomes a key component of driving consumer value.
In-Stat said it believes that this would push worldwide consumer NAS unit shipments
past 11 million in 2015. The estimated household penetration of consumer NAS in
North America will be 4.4 percent at year-end 2015.
"The
concept of centralized storage was originally developed for businesses where
access to corporate information through a network connected to multiple devices
provided a number of competitive advantages," Bogen said. "This context, where
benefits are gained connecting multiple devices to a centralized network or
storage system, never materialized in the home until recently. Now, with so
many different devices in the home, the value of centralized storage is
becoming more apparent. The difference, however, is that the need for home
network storage is driven by practicality, while in business the driver is
efficiency."
Nathan Eddy is Associate Editor, Midmarket, at eWEEK.com. Before joining eWEEK.com, Nate was a writer with ChannelWeb and he served as an editor at FierceMarkets. He is a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.