

Microsoft DPM and IBM Spectrum Protect Plus are products competing in the data protection solutions category. Microsoft DPM seems to have an upper hand in integration with other Microsoft products and competitive pricing, while IBM Spectrum Protect Plus stands out due to its comprehensive feature set and data management capabilities.
Features: Microsoft DPM integrates seamlessly with Microsoft environments, offers native cloud service compatibility particularly with Azure, and supports a variety of backup options for Windows systems, applications, and virtual machines. IBM Spectrum Protect Plus provides broad data availability and enhanced recovery capabilities across multiple platforms, including virtual and cloud infrastructures, with advanced data management and reporting functions.
Room for Improvement: Microsoft DPM could benefit from improved scalability support and enhanced usability for non-Microsoft environments. It may also expand its advanced data management capabilities. IBM Spectrum Protect Plus might enhance its integration capabilities with non-IBM systems, improve initial setup efficiency, and offer more cost-effective pricing alternatives.
Ease of Deployment and Customer Service: Microsoft DPM is designed for easy integration into Microsoft-centric infrastructures, with robust onboarding support tailored to these environments. Its initial setup is straightforward for organizations already using Microsoft services. IBM Spectrum Protect Plus offers a streamlined deployment model, allowing for rapid setup across various platforms. It provides comprehensive support to meet the needs of diverse infrastructures.
Pricing and ROI: Microsoft DPM is often seen as a cost-effective solution with moderate initial setup costs, particularly appealing to those within a Microsoft ecosystem, providing quicker ROI due to lower licensing fees. IBM Spectrum Protect Plus, while more expensive initially, can deliver significant ROI through its extensive features and functionalities. Its premium price might be justified for organizations needing more robust data protection solutions.
We do not have a good experience with this product.
Their documentation, runbooks, troubleshooting articles, and support people are good.
They provide professional services that are quite good and can meet your needs.
IBM Data Protect is the scalable solution, not IBM Spectrum Protect Plus.
The solution does not provide horizontal and vertical scaling.
I cannot determine what benefit IBM Spectrum Protect Plus brings to the organization because we deployed this solution with one customer, and that customer changed the product after one or two years because the product is not stable and it changes with every version.
The product is very stable, rating between eight and nine out of ten.
It does not offer horizontal and vertical scaling.
I used IBM Spectrum Protect Plus, but IBM is now replacing it with IBM Data Protect, which is a giant product now in common development with a well-known company in backup solutions.
IBM Spectrum Protect Plus could be made more lightweight and user-friendly in terms of GUI features to make it closer to a perfect score.
The backup should have compression, deduplication, and DR replication.
Microsoft DPM could improve by adding S3 backup to S3 storage capabilities.
They are fairly expensive.
Pricing is good; it is reasonable and more reasonable than any other vendors.
Microsoft licensing is complex, especially for enterprise or data center solutions.
The pricing of Microsoft solutions rates in the middle range at five out of ten.
The biggest benefit of IBM Spectrum Protect Plus is that it's an agentless backup product which is very easy to configure and use.
IBM Spectrum Protect Plus is the software we work with, and the new name is IBM Storage Protect.
Microsoft DPM impacted my organization positively, and that was definitely possible.
The two-layer backup system is a particularly valuable feature in Microsoft DPM.
One of the most effective features of Microsoft DPM is its integration with the entire Microsoft ecosystem.
| Product | Market Share (%) |
|---|---|
| Microsoft DPM | 0.9% |
| IBM Spectrum Protect Plus | 1.0% |
| Other | 98.1% |

| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 14 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 3 |
| Large Enterprise | 17 |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 9 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 7 |
| Large Enterprise | 7 |
IBM Spectrum Protect Plus is a data protection and availability solution for virtual environments that can be deployed in minutes and protect your environment within an hour. It simplifies data protection, whether data is hosted in physical, virtual, software-defined or cloud environments. It can be implemented as a stand-alone solution or integrate with your IBM Spectrum Protect environment to off-load copies for long term storage and data governance with scale and efficiency.
Microsoft Data Protection Manager (DPM) is an enterprise backup system that can be used to back up data from a source location to a target secondary location. Microsoft DPM allows you to back up application data from Microsoft servers and workloads, and file data from servers and client computers. You can create full backups, incremental backups, differential backups, and bare-metal backups to completely restore a system. Microsoft DPM can store backup data to disks for short-term storage, to Azure Cloud for both for short-term and long-term storage off-premises, and to tapes for long-term storage, which can then be stored offsite. Backed up files are indexed, which allows you to easily search your recovered data.
Microsoft DPM contributes to your business continuity and disaster recovery strategy by facilitating the backup and recovery of enterprise data, ensuring resources are available and recoverable during planned and unplanned outages. When outages occur and source data is unavailable, you can use DPM to easily restore data to the original source or to an alternate location.
Key Features of Microsoft DPM:
Reviews from Real Users
Microsoft DPM stands out among its competitors for a number of reasons. Two major ones are its robust and flexible backup capabilities and its being easy to manage with one central dashboard.
William M., the head of ICT infrastructure & security at a tech services company, notes, "The automated procedure is quite good for us, as it is able to capture all of the information that we require. The compatibility is very good. We have an IBM AS/400 machine in our office that we're using, and we're able to back it up fine. This is the same for other systems, as well. I think that overall, it is really adaptable, compatible, and scalable."
Mohammed I., a managing director at Adalites, notes, "I would definitely recommend data protection DPM. It has an application backup, a file backup, a system backup and a hypervisor. It works flawlessly, never a problem."
Rodney C. a system analyst at a financial services firm, writes, "The most valuable feature is that DPM has an index so individual files can be searched. This is our primary tool for recovering deleted files or folders. Once we implement a System Center Operations Manager, all of our DPM servers can then be seen on one dashboard."
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