G6g9.putty PDocsHardware
Related
How to Snag the Ultimate Lenovo Gaming PC Deal: RTX 5090, Intel Core Ultra 9, and $2,000 OffMemory Stocks Soar on AI Demand: Analyzing Micron and SanDisk for InvestmentThe Asian Supply Chain Revolution: How Nvidia's Production Costs Shifted to 90%Apple's Record-Breaking Quarter: iPhone Revenue Surges Despite Supply Chain ChallengesNavigating the PC Upgrade Dilemma: A Step-by-Step Guide to Cost-Effective Building in 2026Intel and Apple Reportedly Forge Preliminary Chip Manufacturing DealHuawei Poised to Dominate China's AI Chip Market by 2026 as Nvidia Faces HurdlesHow to Build AI Agents Locally with AMD GAIA: A Step-by-Step Guide

Broadcom's VMware Overhaul Sparks Mass Exodus: Nutanix CEO Reveals 'Thousands' of Migrations

Last updated: 2026-05-04 12:31:58 · Hardware

Breaking: Nutanix CEO Claims Thousands of VMware Customers Flee to Rival Platform

Nutanix CEO Rajiv Ramaswami announced Tuesday that his company has captured 'thousands' of former VMware customers, directly attributing the surge to widespread dissatisfaction with Broadcom's post-acquisition strategy. Speaking at Nutanix's .NEXT conference in Chicago, Ramaswami stated the rival hyperconverged infrastructure firm now serves approximately 30,000 customers, with a 'significant portion' migrating from VMware.

Broadcom's VMware Overhaul Sparks Mass Exodus: Nutanix CEO Reveals 'Thousands' of Migrations
Source: feeds.arstechnica.com

'We see a clear pattern of customers voting with their feet,' Ramaswami told reporters, according to SDxCentral. 'The negative sentiment around Broadcom's VMware approach is driving real, measurable migration activity.' A Nutanix spokesperson confirmed to Ars Technica that the company has onboarded 'thousands' of VMware refugees but declined to specify an exact figure.

Background: The Broadcom-VMware Fallout

Broadcom completed its $69 billion acquisition of VMware in November 2023. Since then, the chipmaker has faced intense backlash for abruptly ending perpetual licensing, forcing customers toward higher-cost subscription models, and eliminating key partner programs. Reports of massive price hikes—in some cases exceeding 500%—have fueled customer outrage.

VMware remains the dominant force in server virtualization, but its market share is eroding as enterprises explore alternatives. Nutanix, long a niche player, has positioned itself as the primary beneficiary. 'We're not just taking scraps,' Ramaswami said. 'These are large-scale, enterprise-wide migrations.'

Broadcom's VMware Overhaul Sparks Mass Exodus: Nutanix CEO Reveals 'Thousands' of Migrations
Source: feeds.arstechnica.com

What This Means: A Shifting Competitive Landscape

The exodus validates concerns that Broadcom's aggressive monetization could backfire, alienating the very customer base it sought to exploit. If even a fraction of VMware's 400,000+ customers defect, rivals like Nutanix, Microsoft Azure Stack HCI, and open-source solutions could gain serious traction.

Investors have taken note: Nutanix shares jumped 4% following the CEO's remarks. Analysts warn that Broadcom's strategy carries 'substantial execution risk' if migration rates accelerate. 'Loyalty in enterprise IT is earned over decades but can evaporate in quarters,' said Gartner analyst Raj Bala. 'Broadcom is testing that axiom.'

VMware declined to comment on the Nutanix claims. However, Broadcom CEO Hock Tan has previously defended the changes as necessary for 'long-term innovation and profitability.'