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What data storage customers can learn from my experience

Many of our customers, in South Africa and around the globe, choose to stay on older software because it feels safer, even if it quietly limits their capabilities.

Key takeaways: When customers realise they’re not alone in that tension between innovation and stability, the conversations become real, productive and energising.

Over the past several years, I’ve had countless conversations with our South African customers navigating the fast‑changing enterprise storage market. One recent moment that stuck with me was with a large, long-time partner needing to review roadmaps.

They had a question that I hear often: “There’s a ton of stuff coming. How are you accelerating all of this?” That question gets to the core of many customers’ struggle to balance velocity and quality while modernising their environments.

The conversation that sparked a bigger realisation

During that meeting, the partner shared a familiar frustration. Despite multiple efforts, they couldn’t seem to get real traction with transformation. “How did you guys do it?” they asked.

So, we walked them through our own journey, our struggles, our missteps and ultimately, how we got it right. And honestly, that transparency resonated. When customers realise they’re not alone in that tension between innovation and stability, the conversations become real, productive and energising.

They loved hearing how we moved faster without compromising quality, because that’s their biggest fear. They don’t want to take on a bunch of new software just for the sake of doing so.

That fear has ripple effects. Many customers choose to stay on older software because it feels safer, even if it quietly limits their capabilities. They perceive this as safer, but the reality is that newer versions also have enhanced security and capabilities they’re missing out on.

The hidden cost of staying on old software

Another long‑term customer was convinced they needed new tools to tier data to cheaper cloud storage. Turns out they already had that functionality. They just weren’t aware of it. They literally could unlock the value they’d been asking for without spending a cent.

But because of one bad upgrade years ago, they didn’t trust the process. That’s where we as an industry, and certainly as vendors, have to own our part. Every build can’t just add new features; it must deliver higher quality than the last. Customers shouldn’t have to choose between innovation and reliability.

Why many customers flee to the cloud

This is also why so many organisations veer toward cloud solutions. They think, “The features come, and I’m not responsible for the quality”. They want predictable updates. They’re tired of the rocky road of maintaining on‑prem systems.

So, when we say you can stay on‑prem and get a better, private cloud experience, it hits home because it solves both the technical challenge and the emotional one. Customers want modern ways of working, not just modern technology.

If you’re on your own modernisation journey, you’re not alone. The challenges you’re facing – software quality, team skills, upgrade friction, cloud pull – are the same ones we’ve navigated ourselves. Modernisation is a trust‑building exercise. And trust comes from consistency in quality, communication and outcomes.

Recommended Dell reads on storage modernisation

Here are a few recent Dell blogs that reinforce these ideas and offer deeper technical context:

  • “Small Objects, Big Impact: How ObjectScale Enhances Efficiency in Data Storage” (Mar 5, 2026)
    A great look at how object storage is evolving for modern workloads.
    Read on Dell.com
  • “The Future of IT Runs on Smarter Storage” (Apr 8, 2025)
    A deep dive into why modern, software‑defined storage architectures matter now more than ever.
    Read on Dell.com
  • “PowerStore’s Latest Release: Smarter, Denser and More Secure” (Jan 13, 2026)
    A look at how next‑gen storage systems improve performance and data services.
    Read on Dell.com
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