Iron Mountain Signals Retreat From Cloud Storage

In something of an unusual development in the face of growing data storage needs, a major player announced that it is shutting down some of its cloud storage services.

Iron Mountain Digital, which got into the cloud storage race late in 2009, told eWEEK 11 April that it is “retiring” its commodity-type public storage services, Virtual File Store and Archive Service Platform.

The company is planning to phase completely out of the basic online storage business by 2013, making IMD the first major player in cloud storage to pull out of the sector.

Specialised Focus

Iron Mountain Digital, however, is not closing down all its cloud storage services. Rather than compete in a tough race with companies such as Amazon S3, Google, EMC Mozy, Carbonite, CommVault and others to sell basic online storage space, the Boston-based company will be focusing instead on specialised services around storage, such as intellectual property management and e-discovery for legal purposes.

“Iron Mountain did recently notify customers of our Virtual File Store and Archive Service Platform that we are retiring these two commodity cloud-storage solutions,” an Iron Mountain spokewoman told eWEEK via email on 11 April.

“This decision only affects those using Virtual File Store, a low-cost cloud storage option for inactive files, and technology partners who use the Archive Service Platform as a general purpose cloud for storing their customers’ data.”

Brian Babineau, storage analyst and vice-president of research for Enterprise Strategy Group, told eWEEK that he wasn’t surprised at this development.

Tough Storage

“They (IM) have never been in the ‘commodity’ business,” Babineau said. “They are the first ones ‘out’ of the business, but there weren’t that many in the first place.

“It is also time for them to focus a bit more. They will be in the ‘application’ business delivered via the cloud, such as archiving and eDiscovery. I would much rather be in those than in the commodity capacity business, especially when the competition is Amazon, Google, etcetera.”

Yankee Group storage analyst Zeus Kerravala had a slightly different take.

“It’s a decision that IM will regret for a long time. It’s like Xerox giving up on Windows,” Kerravala told eWEEK.

“From everything I have seen, cloud storage holds a lot of promise, particularly for archival purposes. The market is wide open right now.”

Question Of Demand

Most companies are experimenting with storage so the demand isn’t there yet, Kerravala said.

“IMD exiting is no indicator of lack of demand or market potential,” Kerravala said. “This should have been a good growth opportunity for them. The exit says more about Iron Mountain Digital than it does about cloud storage.”

Fast-growing cloud storage provider Nirvanex, which knows an opportunity when it sees it, immediately announced that it will offer all current Iron Mountain customers free data migration services to its Nirvanix Cloud Storage Network — to go with free unlimited storage for 30 days.

“Nirvanix is also offering stranded Iron Mountain customers the option of implementing a hybrid, federated cloud or private cloud storage solution — all with the same usage-based pricing, global namespace and elastic flexibility of its public cloud,” Nirvanex said.

Chris Preimesberger

Editor of eWEEK and repository of knowledge on storage, amongst other things

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