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DellEMC lets the transformation begin

I attended the DellEMC Forum 2016 in Toronto on Nov. 15 (along with more than 500 other people). It was a fact-filled day showcasing and discussing technologies from the newly combined Dell and EMC. ITWC’s Brian Jackson also provided an overview of the merger and executive perspective.

In case you haven’t heard, Dell Technologies completed the acquisition of EMC Corporation on Sept. 7. The press release says: “This combination creates a $74 billion market leader with an expansive technology portfolio that solves complex problems for customers in the industry’s fast-growing areas of hybrid cloud, software-defined data center, converged infrastructure, platform-as-a-service, data analytics, mobility and cybersecurity.” The press release goes on to say that “Dell Technologies blends Dell’s go-to-market strength with small business and mid-market customers and EMC’s strength with large enterprises and stands as a market leader in many of the most important and high-growth areas of the $2 trillion information technology market, including positions as a “Leader” in 20 Gartner Magic Quadrants and a portfolio of more than 20,000 patents and applications.”

Dell, when combined with EMC, is certainly a major player in the ICT industry; this was demonstrated by the variety of products that were discussed in the presentations. The Dell family also includes such companies as Pivotal, RSA, Virtustream and VMWare. Other vendors, such as Brocade, softchoice, Bell, and Cisco, were also sponsors of the event. I will refer to the new company and all its related organizations as DellEMC, just for convenience.

There were five session streams – modern infrastructure, converged systems, workforce transformation, cloud landscape, and big data analytics. I would say these are all key areas of focus for the digital transformation. However, IoT and blockchain should also be in the mix somewhere.

A few observations from the sessions

The closing keynote was by Bruce Coxon (ex-Dragon’s Den) who discussed digital innovation and the type of skills needed for success. He also provided some anecdotes of his time as a founder of Lavalife.

Overall, I enjoyed the event. It was a good mix of future thinking, products and general advice, all of which are essential to understanding the transformation to IT as a Service.

This is what I am thinking. If you were at the event too, you may have had a completely different experience!

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