Broadcom’s per-core licensing pushed VMware exit budgets through approval in record time — but the execution math is broken. Organizations that cleared the license and backup hurdles are now hitting the hardware ambush: server nodes that quoted at $20K in 2024 now quote at $40K when available, DDR5 is up 2–4×, and enterprise SSD pricing increased 257% year over year. This campaign maps all three cost layers and documents the only architecture — VergeOS — that eliminates them simultaneously on hardware organizations already own.
Solution Content
Mike Matchett and George Crump unpack the hardware ambush, the flash supply squeeze, and the exit math that actually works in 2026. Watch the full 45-minute recording and Q&A on demand.
The New Economics of the VMware Exit
TCO model, three-compounding-savings framework, and the four-step business case for CFOs and infrastructure architects. Maps the hardware ambush, backup gap, and license delta in full — with customer proof points from Topgolf and Alinsco.
VergeIO Blogs
Now Is the Worst Time to Buy VMware Servers
Broadcom’s per-core subscriptions drove VMware costs up 300–500%. Now server hardware has compounded the problem — DDR5 up 2×, enterprise SSD up 257%, lead times running 3–6 months. Renewing and buying servers simultaneously means paying peak prices on both.
The All-Flash Array Is Becoming a Budget Liability
Enterprise SSD pricing up 472%. Closed-media AFA platforms leave no sourcing alternatives. Here is how VergeOS delivers all-flash performance with commodity NVMe, always-on deduplication, and software-layer data protection — without the closed-media premium.
External Articles
The Memory Crisis is Broadcom’s Best Retention Tool
DDR5 up 6–7x, enterprise SSD pricing up 472%, server nodes doubling in cost — the exit math breaks when new hardware costs more than a year of Broadcom licensing.
The Increasing Cost of Virtualization Overhead
With DDR5 modules running $2,100+, the difference between 15% hypervisor overhead and 2–3% is now a budget line item, not a performance footnote.
Hypervisor Deduplication: The Hidden Storage Tax in Legacy Platforms
Most HCI vendors recommend turning deduplication off the moment you enable serious data protection. Per-volume dedupe means the same block exists twice on disk and twice in cache. At $100/TB for enterprise SSDs, that gap finally has a dollar figure.
Exiting VMware in 2026 Costs More Than You Think — But Less Than Staying
Three cost layers most budgets miss: the licensing delta, the hardware ambush at current DDR5 and SSD pricing, and the overhead tax. Why the exit still wins — and which architecture makes the math work.
What Are You Really Paying to Stay with VMware?
Mike Matchett breaks down the true cost of staying on VMware in 2026 — compounding subscription increases, hardware price inflation, and the overhead tax that compounds every server you run. Independent analyst take on why the economics of staying have quietly become worse than leaving.
Social Media
The “renew and buy servers” plan worked in 2024. It doesn’t in 2026.
George Crump on the compounding cost trap — peak VMware pricing, peak hardware pricing, and the loop that keeps extending the renewal cycle.
Broadcom didn’t create the memory crisis. But it may be its biggest beneficiary.
George Crump on why the hardware shortage is trapping VMware exit candidates — and what the viable path out looks like in 2026.
And you thought all you had to do this year was exit VMware!
George Crump on why the AFA cost problem is the same trap as VMware — closed-media platforms, no sourcing alternatives, and a price letter you didn’t see coming.
Is per-volume dedupe, dedupe?
George Crump on why your deduplication is probably off — and why per-volume architectures mean the same block exists twice on disk and twice in cache even when it runs.
More to Come