Virtualization software vendor Citrix bets partnerships with rivals will help it capture a larger share of the enterprise. The Company Citrix Headquarters: Fort Lauderdale Employees: 4,000 SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe 2008 Revenue: $1.58 billion CEO: Mark Templeton What They Do: Citrix is best known for XenApp, its application virtualization software. The company also offers popular load balancing, online meeting and remote support tools. In 2007, Citrix bought XenSource and its commercial version of the open-source server virtualization software Xen (now XenServer). The Catch Started by ex-IBM staffers in 1989, when companies were moving from mainframes to personal computers, Citrix made its coin with software that would deliver applications to end users over the network. Today, “on the application virtualization front, it remains Citrix’s market to lose,” says James Staten, a principal analyst at Forrester Research. However, when most CIOs talk virtualization, they’re still talking about servers, not applications. Despite the maturity of its XenServer product, analysts say Citrix is playing catch-up. VMware has a lock on the market since it supplies more than 75 percent of today’s deployments, according to IT research firm Info Pro. XenServer “has minimal share today,” Staten says. Microsoft is gearing up its virtualization efforts with Hyper-Vfor which Citrix itself offers advanced management toolsand open-source vendor Red Hat plans to offer a server virtualization product this year. “It is VMware and Microsoft that will battle this out,” Staten says. While the market is anything but saturated, he adds, other enterprise software vendors already see XenServer as running in third place and thus plan to commit fewer resources to qualifying their solutions for it. The Score This is not to say XenServer doesn’t have benefits. Citrix reps tout the platform’s range of features and say its open-source roots make it easy to integrate with other technologies. Its low deployment cost may appeal to small and mid-size businesses, Forrester’s Staten says, which are now the next frontier for server virtualization. And servers are only one aspect of the virtualization value proposition. The next project for many CIOs may be virtualizing desktops. “There are between 500 and 620 million Windows desktops, and they’re all less efficient than the servers we just spent four years replacing with virtual machines,” says Rachel Chalmers, an analyst for The 451 Group. Thanks to its experience in this arena, Citrix has some advantages over VMware, Chalmers says. For CIOs, a chat with Citrix can be worthwhile, especially for companies making investments in application or desktop virtualization. For server virtualization, many IT shops could find VMware to be the better bet, analysts believe. But if XenServer’s capabilities fit, the lower cost may well tip the scales in its favor. The Pitch Everyone now knows that by unlocking applications from specific servers or desktops, virtualization enables them to be grouped together to save hardware costs. Citrix aims to extend these benefits across the enterprise with products that unhitch the software from the underlying hardware platform. “We think of our business as virtual computing, from the desktop to the data center,” says Wes Wasson, Citrix’s chief marketing officer and senior vice president for product strategy. To execute this mission, the company recently released tools to help managers back up their systems for disaster recovery using Microsoft’s Hyper-V virtualization software. Although Citrix has its own server virtualization platform, XenServer, it plans to offer more management tools that work with products from other vendors. It is working with Open Kernel Labs on a virtualization platform for running enterprise applications on mobile phones and with Fujitsu on virtual desktops. Joab Jackson is a U.S. correspondent with IDG News Service. Related content news CIO Announces the CIO 100 UK and shares Industry Recognition Awards in flagship evening celebrations By Romy Tuin Sep 28, 2023 4 mins CIO 100 IDG Events Events feature 12 ‘best practices’ IT should avoid at all costs From telling everyone they’re your customer to establishing SLAs, to stamping out ‘shadow IT,’ these ‘industry best practices’ are sure to sink your chances of IT success. By Bob Lewis Sep 28, 2023 9 mins CIO IT Strategy Careers interview Qualcomm’s Cisco Sanchez on structuring IT for business growth The SVP and CIO takes a business model first approach to establishing an IT strategy capable of fueling Qualcomm’s ambitious growth agenda. By Dan Roberts Sep 28, 2023 13 mins IT Strategy IT Leadership feature Gen AI success starts with an effective pilot strategy To harness the promise of generative AI, IT leaders must develop processes for identifying use cases, educate employees, and get the tech (safely) into their hands. By Bob Violino Sep 27, 2023 10 mins Generative AI Innovation Emerging Technology Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe