tfh
Volume 23, Number 8 -- February 25, 2013

Big Blue Jacks Software Maintenance Prices For IBM i

Published: February 25, 2013

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

I hate to tell you I told you so. No, really, I do. I didn't want to be right about this. And as is the case with all prognostication, I was only partially right, so really, I didn't want to cop to only being partly right. Back in January, in the lead story for the first issue of this year, it was reasonable to expect a maintenance price hike in 2013 on vintage System i and not-so-shiny Power Systems iron. There has indeed been a maintenance price hike, but it was on IBM i software, not IBM hardware.

See, so I got the vector, but it was pointed in a slightly different direction and, as it turns out, of a very different magnitude than I expected. On February 5, in announcement letter 313-006, IBM jacked up the price of its Software Maintenance (SWMA) technical support for the IBM i operating system. The price changes are rather dramatic and cover a large number of features. The price hike goes into effect on April 16, and as far as I can tell all current IBM i releases and the soon-to-be-retired i5/OS V5R4, which goes off regular support at the end of September this year, are having their SWMA prices increased. The base SWMA license price change ranges from a low of 23.1 percent to a high of 28.6 percent.

As you can see from the monster table I created from the announcement letter, the price changes not only affect the base SWMA charge for each software tier, P05 through P60, but also fees to convert from standard business to 24x7 support (an uplift in the IBM lingo) for both one year and three year contracts. Net-priced upgrades between tiers and used during hardware upgrades that involve machines with different numbers of processor cores and machines in different tiers, are also affected as shown in my monster table. It was not easy figuring all of this out, and IBM could make it a lot easier by just including the product description field, which is obviously in its master product and feature number database, along with the before and after prices. But, I guess this gives me something to do of value, figuring this all out.

I asked an IBM spokesperson for comment about the price hike for IBM i SWMA, hoping to get someone on the phone to explain the features and price change rational, which seemed pretty steep. People in the know about this pricing action were traveling, so I had to settle for this comment sent from said IBM software pricing experts to me through the spokesperson:

The industry standard for maintenance charges on software products runs at approximately 20 to 25 percent of the purchase price. The IBM i Group SWMA price has been significantly below that standard for many years. This price action for the Group SWMA brings the maintenance price more in alignment with the industry and IBM standards for software maintenance prices. The price of the IBM i Group SWMA is based solely on the purchase price of IBM i. While the Group SWMA includes 45 additional components, many of which carry an additional purchase price, the percentage is calculated using only IBM i purchase price.

I have no idea what they are talking about with the IBM i Group and its 45 additional components and am waiting for further clarification. But what seems clear is that IBM thinks it has not been charging enough money for SWMA on the IBM i operating system and its integrated database and middleware. So, for fun, I dug around for what I think are the current IBM i per core license charges, which are the same for IBM i 6.1, 6.1.1, and 7.1 as far as I know, and are as shown on the table below:



First of all, sometime in the past several years, SWMA fees went up and I didn't see it. And no one else did either, and some of the stories I have written saying it was from $1,200 to $6,000 per core were wrong (probably during the Power7 launch) and it has been $1,300 to $7,000 per core. Well, starting April 16, it will range from $1,600 to $9,000 per core, depending on the software tier.

Now, as to the suggestion that the industry charges 20 to 25 percent for software maintenance, which companies like Oracle and SAP can extract from customers, that presumes that the underlying software is priced correctly. As I explained back in August last year, the DB2 for i database is priced correctly and more or less in line with DB2 for Unix, Linux, and Windows on comparable machines, and the underlying Application Server (what is really OS/400 and IBM i) compares well, particularly on Power 720-class and 730-class machines. So it may be that I helped IBM make its case for a maintenance hike there.

To which I would say: When you are trying to knock out Oracle, you can't charge Oracle prices, you have to charge a lot less. And when you are trying to protect your base against Oracle, you similarly can't raise your prices, no matter how good your technology is. Like it or spike it, the Oracle database is the default in many companies, and when it isn't, Microsoft SQL Server usually is. Raising prices, whether on licenses or support, is exactly the wrong thing to do. The right thing to do was to show the competitive advantage that IBM i has against Oracle, not remove it. That's what I was doing. IBM is just trying to buy back shares, not win hearts and minds. And that is just plain short sighted.


RELATED STORIES

What The Future Holds For IBM i Platforms In 2013

IBM i Wins Software Pricing Throwdown Versus AIX-DB2 Combo

IBM i And AIX Shops Pay A Hefty Premium Over PowerLinux Buyers

A Radical Idea For IBM i Software Pricing

Fun With IBM i Software Pricing

Bang For The Buck on Power7 Gen 2 Servers

Start Planning For New Systems Now

IBM i Dominates the CPW Capacity Budget

The Little Power7 Engines That Could--And Those That Won't

i/OS Gets Short Sheeted with Power7 Thread Counts

IBM Holds i 6.1 Prices Steady, Slashes Application Server Fees



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
HELP/SYSTEMS

IBM i Scheduling Survival Guide

Introducing scheduling automation into your operations environment
can have as many downsides as benefits, if not done right.

This guide walks you through the research and planning phases and provides
a helpful rollout checklist. With over 30 years of experience helping
customers automate their IBM i environments, Help/Systems
offers the insight you need to succeed.

Download the guide free.


Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Victor Rozek,
Jenny Thomas, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

System i Developer:  Upgrade your skills at the RPG & DB2 Summit in Atlanta, March 19-21.
COMMON:  Join us at the 2013 Conference & Expo, April 7 -10 in Austin, TX
looksoftware:  Free Live Webcast: HTML5 & IBM i - Connect, Discover, Create. March 12 & 13

 

 

More IT Jungle Resources:

System i PTF Guide: Weekly PTF Updates
IBM i Events Calendar: National Conferences, Local Events, and Webinars
Breaking News: News Hot Off The Press
TPM @ The Reg: More News From ITJ EIC Timothy Prickett Morgan


 
Four Hundred Stuff
PowerHA Installs Exceed 2,000 Globally, IBM Says

PowerTech Shines a Light on 'Black Hole' Commands

Vision Launches Cloud Initiative for RaaS

Cilasoft Monitors Additional Exit Points with IBM i Security Tool

ARCAD Updates IT Service Management Tool

Four Hundred Guru
Stored Procedure Parameter Defaults And Named Arguments In DB2 For i

New CL String-Handling Functions

Getting Short-Term Maintenance For Your Power i Machine

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

System i PTF Guide
February 16, 2013: Volume 15, Number 7

February 9, 2013: Volume 15, Number 6

February 2, 2013: Volume 15, Number 5

January 26, 2013: Volume 15, Number 4

January 19, 2013: Volume 15, Number 3

January 12, 2013: Volume 15, Number 2

TPM at The Register
Rackspace cuts network bandwidth prices on its cloud

Whitman: Absolutely not going to break up HP

Newvem fluffs up penny-pinching control freak for AWS cloud

Nvidia plans new 'reptile HQ' to match its IT aggressiveness

Red Hat nips, tucks RHEL 6.4 ahead of RHEL 7 later this year

VCE collective takes integrated systems battle down to the midrange

Chinese search engine giant Baidu forges ARM servers

Linaro Linux-on-ARM effort sets sights on network gear

Red Hat has BIG Big Data plans, but won't roll its own Hadoop

Dell's PC biz craters as servers and networking chug along

HP brings wired and wireless nets under single SDN umbrella

HP cranks up bandwidth on BladeSystem sheaths, adds pretty platinum stripe

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

Help/Systems
ProData Computer Services
ASNA
United Computer Group, Inc.
RJS Software Systems


Printer Friendly Version


TABLE OF CONTENTS
Big Blue Jacks Software Maintenance Prices For IBM i

Mobility Is The Motivator For Green-Screen Migrations

IBM Locks Down Licensed Internal Code On Power, Mainframe Systems

As I See It: The Man Who Would Be Kim

IBM Dives Head First Into Mobile

But Wait, There's More:

Cisco And EMC Chase Midrange Customers With Smaller Converged Systems . . . Sony Ditches Power For PlayStation 4, And This Matters To IBM i . . . Incentives For IBM's Missouri Facility Scrutinized . . . IBM Tech Conferences Feature Power, Hot Technologies . . . Manta Offers Free Student Reference Guides To Students . . .

The Four Hundred

BACK ISSUES




 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2013 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement