Tag: pure storage

Pure Storage gives channel partners a rebate

Pure Storage is giving channel partners a five percent rebate on any eligible as-a-service deal as it brings a raft of new changes to its partner programme.

Elite-level Pure Storage partners will now be able to earn back five percent of the total contract value of Pure as-a-service deals of up to $100,000 per deal.

In a statement, the company said the rebate is available until 31 October 2021 and applies for the first Pure as-a-service opportunity for both new and existing customers.

The idea of the rebate is to create more differentiation between its Elite-level and Preferred-level partners. Pure claims that the number of partners selling Pure as-a-service has doubled this year versus last year.

Pure Storage buys up Portworx

Pure Storage has snapped up Portworx, a Kubernetes data services platform for approximately $370 million.

The deal is Pure’s largest acquisition to date and the company’s deeper expansion into the fast-growing market for multi-cloud data services to support Kubernetes and containers.

Charles Giancarlo, Chairman and CEO, Pure Storage said enterprises adopt cloud native strategies to advance their business and the acquisition marks a significant milestone in expanding our Modern Data Experience to cover traditional and cloud native applications.

Pure Storage calls for more partner commitment

do-commitments-scare-you-1Flash vendor Pure Storage has announced a series of changes to its go-to-market strategy which show how much it would like to see more commitment from its channel partners.

Speaking at an outfit shin-dig in San Francisco, the firm’s VP of global channel chief, Michael Sotnick, announced a new partner programme that rewards their investment in building a Pure technology practice.

The vendor is switching from a three-tier programme structure to just two, replacing its Silver, Gold and Platinum partner tiers with two new categories: entry level Preferred, and Elite.

Talking about the reasons behind dropping the third tier, Sotnick said the middle tier often “gets fatigued” with their position in the programme.

He said that distribution across two tiers is more modern, simpler, and more brand-aligned with Pure Storage.

If partners were unhappy, he would be happy to have “data-driven and fact-based conversations” with them about their placement when the new structure is introduced on August 1.

Pure is weeding out partners entirely that don’t display the level of commitment it requires. It already binned 60 North American partners in Q4, 2017 and says it may consider a similar purge in EMEA.

Sotnick said that making money is a key economic ingredient of what all partnerships are ultimately tethered to. Having that RoI and return on that invested dollar was to be the yardstick to measure partnerships from now on.

 

Pure Storage says that Flash space is now mature

flash_gordon (1)Flash space outfit Pure Storage says it has growth plans thanks to a new product set that it says reflects that the market is mature.

The vendor used its second customer and partner event, Pure Accelerate 2017, to highlight concepts like deep learning, data analytics and Artificial Intelligence (AI), and how they are driving customers’ data requirements.

VP EMEA, Pure Storage James Petter said that the message has changed and matured, particularly around his outfit’s data platform.

“We don’t want to be a storage company; we’re a data company, we’re an innovation company.”

The vendor has released a new NVMe array, FlashArray//X, its FlashBlade storage platform, plus 25 new software features during Accelerate.

Other announcements included a new AI engine offering predictive intelligence, Meta, as well as enhancements to its flash array FlashBlade – now with 75-blades so it is faster to process big data and “unlock iterative real-time analytics, advanced AI and machine learning (ML), and rich simulation for data of any size”.

This will be good news to its UK partners who have been finding it difficult to position FlashBlade because it has been flogged as an object storage platform, even if it is costlier.

It is not clear yet if customer demand for AI, ML and other areas that demand high-performance storage is there yet.