REDMOND, Wash., and WALTHAM, Mass. -
December 12, 2006 -
A survey of technology decision-makers shows very strong customer support for
the recent agreement between Microsoft Corp. and Novell Inc. designed to improve
interoperability between Windows Server® and SUSE® Linux' Enterprise. Nearly all
respondents agree with improving interoperability, having products that work
well together, and having tools that make it easier to manage mixed Windows® and
Linux environments. The survey, jointly commissioned by Novell and Microsoft,
was conducted by Penn, Schoen & Berland Associates Inc., a respected
independent market research firm.
"Microsoft and Novell entered into
this agreement to make it easier for customers to deploy Windows Server and
Linux together," said Susan Heystee, vice president of Global Strategic
Alliances at Novell. "The results of this independent research show the majority
of approval numbers over 80 and 90 percent. These high numbers don't surprise me
because they match the very positive reception that we've gotten from customers.
This survey supports our belief when we entered the agreement with Microsoft:
Collaboration on behalf of the customer is a winning proposition for all parties
involved."
"This survey confirms for us what we've been hearing from
customers all along. They want technology vendors to work together to promote
interoperability and to stand behind the products they sell and service," said
Susan Hauser, general manager of customer advocacy at Microsoft. "Customers who
have mixed-source environments want their platform providers to work better
together to tackle the complexity and cost of integration. Through our work with
Novell, we're doing just that."
Penn, Schoen & Berland conducted 201
interviews Nov. 17-20 with IT executives, managers or staff whose primary job is
in a formalized IT department, or who perform IT functions in a non-IT
department but who have significant technology purchasing authority.
Organizations had to have at least 500 PCs to participate in the survey. The
survey did not intentionally target, but did break out, results for respondents
whose companies deploy both Microsoft® Windows and SUSE Linux from Novell, as
well as Red Hat Linux. Among the key findings were these:
- Ninety-five percent approve of the collaboration between Novell and
Microsoft. Microsoft, Novell and customers all benefit from
collaboration. More than 90 percent of respondents approve of the
Microsoft and Novell collaboration, believing it will benefit IT customers and
increase interoperability of IT systems.
- Eighty-seven percent said that customers benefit if leading Linux
distributors and Microsoft worked more closely with one another. Four
out of five believe their organization would consider doing more business with
Linux dealers if Linux providers establish an alliance with Microsoft.
- Sixty-seven percent said they're more likely to consider deploying
SUSE Linux from Novell. The Microsoft-Novell collaboration increased
customer consideration of SUSE Linux. More than two-thirds of all respondents,
and 79 percent of respondents who currently use Red Hat, said the agreement was
more likely to make them choose SUSE Linux for their data center.
- Ninety-seven percent said they wanted platform providers to improve
interoperability of their systems. Interoperability is the area where
respondents want the most focus. Customers want their platform providers to work
together to improve the interoperability of their systems and provide tools that
make it easier for the end user to navigate both Linux and Windows environments.
- Eighty-nine percent want technology companies to take responsibility
for the intellectual property in the products they ship. Also, more
than seven in 10 are more likely to deploy Linux with intellectual property
rights, which would limit their corporation's exposure to risk. These customers
see it as the responsibility of their vendors to work out intellectual property
issues before deploying services.
View the full survey results
(pdf).
About Penn, Schoen and BerlandFounded in
1975, Penn, Schoen and Berland Associates (PSB) has been a WPP (LSE: WPP;
NASDAQ: WPPGY) company since 2001. PSB is a strategic communications firm that
specializes in research-based recommendations for its clients. PSB has conducted
research studies for Microsoft over the past 8 years. PSB has offices in
Seattle, New York, Washington, Denver, Los Angeles and
London.
About the Microsoft and Novell
Agreement
On Nov. 2, 2006, Novell and Microsoft announced a
collaboration in which the companies agreed to jointly build, market and support
a series of new solutions to improve interoperability, deliver powerful new
virtualization capabilities, make Microsoft and Novell products work better
together, and provide their customers with patent coverage for their respective
products. More information on the agreement between Novell and Microsoft can be
found at
http://www.novell.com/linux/microsoft
and
http://www.microsoft.com/interop/msnovellcollab.
About
NovellNovell, Inc. (Nasdaq: NOVL) delivers infrastructure
software for the Open Enterprise. We are a leader in enterprise-wide operating
systems based on Linux and open source and the security and systems management
services required to operate mixed IT environments. We help our customers
minimize cost, complexity and risk, allowing them to focus on innovation and
growth. For more information, visit
http://www.novell.com.
About
Microsoft
Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) is the
worldwide leader in software, services and solutions that help people and
businesses realize their full potential.
Microsoft and Windows are trademarks
of the Microsoft group of companies. Novell and SUSE are registered trademarks
of Novell, Inc. in the United States and other countries. The names of actual
companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their
respective owners. * Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. All
other third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners.