Equinix Eyes the Edge. And the Cloud. And the Enterprise

Jan. 30, 2019
In 2019 , Equinix is focusing on opportunities in hyperscale data centers and enterprise computing, while sizing up where it may want to play in edge computing.

Equinix has built a global data center empire, becoming a lynchpin of the Internet and digital business. With 200 data centers and 21 million square feet of space deployed across 52 markets, Equinix is a colocation colossus.

At the core of its business is interconnection: the process of managing the intersections of networks that enable global data traffic. Equinix data centers are where the networks meet, creating business ecosystems that exchange data and gain value with each new participant.

So what’s next for Equinix? As it enters 2019, the company is focusing on opportunities in hyperscale data centers and enterprise computing, while sizing up where it may want to play in edge computing.

Equinix is looking to press its advantage across all its markets. The company is coming off an eventful 2018, which began with the departure of CEO Steve Smith, who resigned suddenly after “exercising poor judgment with respect to an employee matter.” In September the company named Equinix veteran Charles Meyers as its new CEO, and Meyers has embraced the position with energy, spending his first 100 days visiting data centers, meeting staff and seeking to reinforce a culture of service – the “Magic of Equinix,” as Meyers calls it.

“While the world is changing at a faster pace today than ever before, Equinix continues to sit at the intersection of some of the most disruptive and critical technology trends of our time,” Meyers said in a 100-day message to the company. “We will continue to evolve, remaining laser-focused on building our global platform to help customers reach everywhere, interconnect everyone and integrate everything.”

Prior to becoming CEO, Meyers was responsible for charting the Equinix strategy for the future, defining opportunities for a “cloud-first” world for the next 20 years. So what are those opportunities for expansion and growth? They include ambitions at the edge, the cloud and the enterprise.

The Edge

Equinix has always focused on the core of the Internet, building clusters of data centers around major network intersections like Northern Virginia, Silicon Valley, Chicago and Dallas. Steve Madden, Senior Director of Global Solution Marketing at Equinix, notes that 12 global metros account for 90 percent of Internet traffic, and for Equinix, the prime directive is  extending on-ramps and off-ramps to bring more traffic through these major hubs.

“The Internet is an on-ramp and off-ramp to the interconnection fabric,” said Madden. “We find that the shift in business involves the transfer of data, and it starts and ends with interconnection first. The growth in data has become a real management problem.”

So how does the company think about edge, the buzz-driven new vision for distributed data centers to support new technologies – such as autonomous vehicles, the Internet of Things5G wireless and distributed AI applications – that require low latency and close proximity to users.

The Equinix SL1 International Business Exchange (IBX) in Seoul, South Korea. (Image: Equinix)

In recent years, Equinix has begun to build in new markets where it is seeing data growth. Recent examples include data centers in Oman, Bulgaria, South Korea and Hamburg, Germany.

“We’re spreading out to places we’ve not been,” said Madden. “We’re struggling to keep up with international demand.”

In some cases, this demand is driven by the evolution of subsea fiber routes. That was the case in Hamburg, where Equinix sees an opportunity connect with subsea routes from the North Sea.

The expansion into Seoul is timed to support emergent 5G networks in South Korea, which has one of the world’s most advanced high-speed Internet economies.

The initial impact of 5G will likely be felt in major cities, but an emerging ecosystem is targeting the opportunities 5G may create near the edge of the Internet, including second-tier markets and telecom towers.

“We think about the definition of the edge all the time,” said Madden. “We’ve talked about what happens with 5G and towers and cars. There’s probably something Equinix is going to do in response.

“We’ve looked at how much farther out the edge needs to be, but it’s just going to amplify the need for what we already do,” Madden added. “It’s still an ecosystem stack, especially in IoT. The edge is getting bigger, but the cloud is too far away.”

The Cloud

Equinix wants to bring the cloud closer, and that will include new hyperscale-optimized data centers on its campuses. In late 2017 Equinix created a Hyperscale Infrastructure Team (HIT), which is now headed by Jim Smith, an industry veteran who has built data centers for Microsoft and Digital Realty.

The company has moved deliberately thus far, placing hyperscale customers in several suburban London data centers (including one that was acquired from IO). The new Paris 8 facility will be the first Equinix data center to employ the company’s hyperscale design. But growth for the HIT initiative will likely accelerate later in 2019.

An Equinix staffer inside a data hall in one of the company’s colocation centers, known as an IBX. (Photo: Equinix)

“We probably have way more demand in the pipeline than we would be able to or want to satisfy,” Meyers said in the company’s most recent earnings call. “Our posture relative to the large footprint hyperscale demand is that, it is something that we want to participate in because we believe is accretive to our premium retail strategy. We’ll be selective about participating there.”

“The big cloud providers would like larger data centers,” said Madden. “The real estate is still highly valuable. You don’t want to choke the ecosystem growth, so we have to think of everybody.”

Meyers is clear that Equinix is looking to fund some of its hyperscale growth through joint ventures with investors. This approach capitalizes on strong investor interest in the sector, and allows Equinix more flexibility with its balance sheet. The company is taking time to find the right JV partner.

The Enterprise

As we noted in our 2019 forecast, we’ll continue to see a rational reallocation of enterprise IT resources across cloud platforms, colocation facilities and on-premises data centers. Equinix sees a huge opportunity in this transition, asserting that interconnected colocation can address enterprise pain points.

“Infrastructure is not dead, but there’s less and less reason to have a corporate data center,” said Madden. “Architecture is key.”

This transition has been a gradual process, and will continue for years. But Madden sees signs that leading enterprises will face pressure to move more quickly in 2019, as industries are disrupted by the success of early movers in the digital business transition.

An overview of the data-centric opportunities Equinix sees ahead for its interconnection platform. (Image: Equinix)

“The data center is now a revenue stream,” said Madden. “Ecosystem-based businesses will scale faster than traditional businesses. Competitive advantage will begin to make itself felt. Those who’ve done the work will begin to excel.”

One of Equinix’ strengths has been its ability build interconnection ecosystems around industry verticals. Its roadmpa currently targets several of these:

  • Helping financial services customers use interconnection to manage rising bandwidth costs.
  • Offering multi-cloud access for sophisticated players in media and information services.
  • Enabling distributed analytics that will create businss value from the Internet of Things.

One of the company’s most promising initiatives for 2019 is offering ways for customers to use NFV (Networks Functions Virtualization) to capture the benefits of software defined networking (SDN).

Network cabling fills fiber trays inside an Equinix data center. (Photo: Equinix)

SDN separates the programming of routers and switches from the underlying hardware, simplifying the management of networks so administrators can automate many network functions, and dynamically manage their network operations.

Equinix believe NFV and virtual network applications can unlock a $15 billion market for hardware, software and services by 2020. The company hasn’t yet rolled out public NFV offerings, but is working with early adopter customers.

That would mark the next step in Equinix goal to gradually infuse the company’s entire global platform with SDN capabilities, offering customers “one connection to the world.”

“In comparison to the installation of physical hardware, virtual network devices offer near-instantaneous provisioning,” said John Hanahan, Senior Director of Product Management at Equinix, in a recent blog post on the company’s NFV ambitions. “The benefits are all the more compelling when an enterprise needs to quickly provision virtual network devices in multiple remote locations.

“As the number of virtual network devices offered increases, enterprises will be able to further improve their ability to quickly respond to the dynamic demands of network management, provisioning network resources to optimize network performance.”

About the Author

Rich Miller

I write about the places where the Internet lives, telling the story of data centers and the people who build them. I founded Data Center Knowledge, the data center industry's leading news site. Now I'm exploring the future of cloud computing at Data Center Frontier.

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