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A Veeam survey shows that virtualization uptake is slowed down by backup and recovery concerns

Many organizations are hitting a brick wall when it comes to fully deploying virtualization in their environments. According to a recent survey, businesses are still unsure about the ability to back up and recover their virtual machines, causing many organizations to avoid virtualizing their entire infrastructure and hitting the phenomenon which has become known as “VM stall.”

An organization reaches VM stall when it hits a point in its virtualization journey where it just can’t seem to get beyond a certain percentage virtualized. The average stall point seems to be somewhere around 40 percent, and this can be caused by a number of factors. However, one factor seems to be common across most organizations falling into this trap: VM stall will typically occur when a company no longer feels comfortable virtualizing. This wariness usually stifles a virtualization deployment before reaching mission- or enterprise-critical applications, leaving a virtual environment made up of more or less “low-hanging fruit” applications.

[ Also on InfoWorld: PCI DSS 2.0 addresses the use of server virtualization, clarifying the language dealing with virtualization technology | Use server virtualization to get highly reliable failover at a fraction of the usual cost. Find out how in InfoWorld's High Availability Virtualization Deep Dive PDF special report.]

Backup and recovery software provider Veeam recently finished up a survey of around 500 CIOs from organizations across the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, and France. The survey looked to identify the impact of virtualization on data protection strategies. What it found was that enterprise adoption of virtualization is actually being hampered due to fears around the ability to successfully back up and recover virtual machines.

The findings highlight how virtualization should move from being viewed as a risk to an enabler of improved data protection within the enterprise. But first, enterprises must consider changing or augmenting their current management and data protection processes to take full advantage of virtualization technology.

According to the survey, on average, approximately half of all servers are viewed by CIOs today as mission-critical, and with 42 percent penetration, virtualization is fast approaching the mission-critical application stage.