Telecom Provider Reduces Risk by Avoiding VMware Cloud Foundation Migration
A U.S. telecommunications provider faced an active Broadcom audit, a disputed VMware support renewal, and pressure to move into a costly VMware Cloud Foundation subscription. Anglepoint delivered a defensible VMware Effective License Position (ELP), supported version remediation across the clientās vSphere estate, and helped the organization preserve commercial flexibility while moving to third-party support.Ā
Challenge
Following Broadcomās acquisition of VMware, this large telecommunications client faced a significant shift in vendor strategy. Broadcom refused to honor an optional perpetual support renewal under the clientās existing VMware Enterprise Order and instead proposed a VMware Cloud Foundation subscription model at a materially higher cost.Ā
Anglepoint helped the client neutralize audit risk, validate compliance, and avoid a forced VMware Cloud Foundation migration.
At the same time, Broadcom initiated an audit and argued that much of the clientās vSphere estate was running unsupported versions. This created overlapping commercial, operational, and compliance pressure across a large production environment supporting critical telecommunications infrastructure.Ā
Three deadlines increased the urgency: the VMware Enterprise Order expiration, the vSphere 7 End of General Support date, and the active audit timeline. Any delay could have reduced the clientās negotiating position and increased the risk of being forced into Broadcomās preferred subscription model.Ā
Solution
Anglepoint established a dedicated audit response workstream supported by its existing SAM Managed Services relationship. Because of this long-standing partnership, Anglepoint already understood the clientās VMware estate, entitlement history, and consumption baseline, allowing the team to move quickly into execution rather than spend time building context from scratch.Ā Ā
A defensible ELP and near-complete version remediation gave the client the confidence to walk away from Broadcomās subscription proposal.Ā
The Anglepoint team refreshed the clientās VMware Effective License Position across the full in-scope estate, validating consumption, reviewing entitlements, and reallocating existing vCloud Suite licenses to demonstrate full vSphere compliance. This analysis gave the client a strong position to use in audit communications and commercial discussions with Broadcom.Ā
At the same time, Anglepoint supported version remediation tracking to address Broadcomās unsupported-version argument. The client moved nearly the entire in-scope estate to vSphere 8, reducing the number of legacy-version hosts to a small remaining population and materially weakening Broadcomās ability to use version currency as leverage.Ā
Anglepoint also helped draft and refine formal audit communications to Broadcom, ensuring the clientās position was clear, evidence-based, and aligned to the license analysis. Together, the compliance validation, remediation tracking, and audit response support helped the client preserve negotiating flexibility and evaluate alternatives to Broadcomās proposed subscription model.Ā
Results
- Full vSphere compliance demonstrated: Anglepointās ELP showed the clientās vSphere consumption was covered through reallocation of existing entitlements.Ā Ā
- Tens of millions in potential cost avoided: The client avoided Broadcomās proposed VCF subscription path, which was estimated at $60Mā$75M depending on term length.Ā Ā
- Version risk substantially reduced: Approximately 5,500 hosts were upgraded to vSphere 8, leaving only 28 hosts on legacy versions.Ā Ā
- Strategic flexibility preserved: The client exited the VMware/Broadcom commercial relationship and moved to third-party support instead of accepting the forced subscription model.Ā