We use this solution in our data center. We use a hybrid environment. It connects our on-premise system with the cloud.
Sr Network Solution Engineer at InterVision Systems Technologies
Provides HA, fault tolerance, and DR to our customers while saving on data center costs
Pros and Cons
- "The most valuable features are the Fabric Interconnect Manager and the UCS Manager."
- "There are too many drivers and software combined all together, and we need to have compatibility between all of them."
What is our primary use case?
How has it helped my organization?
We are a partner with Cisco, and we assist our customers based on their business requirements.
We have definitely seen an improvement in application performance. They have high availability, and this is what we are looking for. I would say that it is a ninety percent improvement.
Staff productivity has increased because they have more time. The solution provides centralized management, and less time is required for troubleshooting and research. The documentation is in the GUI, embedded within the software. I would say that there is a thirty percent improvement.
Datacenter costs are reduced by means of less power, cooling, and space. I would say it is a fifty percent reduction.
This solution helps our IT administrator to troubleshoot and understand problems.
What is most valuable?
The most valuable features are the Fabric Interconnect Manager and the UCS Manager. It connects the virtualization, the network, and the storage all in one cage.
Our data center costs have been reduced by means of less power, cooling, and space.
It is very helpful for our customers to have everything centralized. Most of our customers are moving to the cloud, and they need help to migrate their data. The majority of cases that I see are hybrid cloud and on-premise solutions.
What needs improvement?
There are too many drivers and software combined all together, and we need to have compatibility between all of them.
Buyer's Guide
FlexPod XCS
May 2025

Learn what your peers think about FlexPod XCS. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: May 2025.
851,823 professionals have used our research since 2012.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
At this beginning, the FlexPod solution had too many bugs. Today, however, it is more resilient. It has high availability, fault tolerance, and disaster recovery.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
This solution is very scalable. You can increase the number of parts horizontally without affecting the production environment.
How are customer service and support?
Cisco's support is very good, all the time. I love them. You have one number to call, and this call will cover the compute, storage, and networking.
How was the initial setup?
This solution is easy to deploy. This solution reduces application deployment time because we have integrated automation with it. The simple integration makes it easy. We have an eighty percent reduction in time.
What other advice do I have?
Using this product makes our life easy.
I have learned a lot from this solution. When you touch a new technology, there is another new technology coming in.
This resiliency of this solution helps. There is high availability, fault tolerance, disaster recovery, and it is easy to deploy.
One of the solutions that we implemented was the joining of two data centers together. We used EVPN-VXLAN, and this was a great solution for them.
I would rate this solution a ten out of ten.
Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.

Manager of IT Services at a comms service provider
It is very stable. We have had absolutely zero problems.
Pros and Cons
- "We have had great support, and this is when we have called for any problems, which have been very minimal to start with."
- "It is very stable. We have had absolutely zero problems."
- "There were several different management consoles that we had to deal with: UCS, VMware, and separate ESXi installations. Maybe one interface council where we could manage everything from might be a little easier."
What is our primary use case?
Primary use case is for a telecommunications company. We have used it for housing virtual servers for an internal corporate network, as well as for a service provider network.
How has it helped my organization?
We installed two FlexPods in two different geographical diverse locations to give full redundancy. This housed all of our virtual servers. It made everything easier to have in one place.
What is most valuable?
Support was the main feature for us. Having everything in one as far as combining NetApp and Cisco devices, yet also having one place where we could call and actually get support from very knowledgeable people.
What needs improvement?
There were several different management consoles that we had to deal with: UCS, VMware, and separate ESXi installations. Maybe one interface console where we could manage everything from might be a little easier.
For how long have I used the solution?
One to three years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
It is very stable. We have had absolutely zero problems.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
It is very scalable. We actually started with only two blades in one system and four blades in the other, and we had capabilities for eight blades. Thus, it has allowed us to be very scalable throughout the entire life of the product as we owned it.
How are customer service and technical support?
We have had great support, and this is when we have called for any problems, which have been very minimal to start with.
The only time that we had to use support is when we installed the system. Part of the system from the UCS was damaged in shipping, which was no fault of the FlexPod, but we went through support to have it replaced. It was no problem at all.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
We came from physical servers installed on old operating systems. We had around 20 to 30 physical servers. Not only did FlexPod reduce the power requirements in the data centers that we were running, but it also decreased repair, decreased support, and allowed us to have everything in one system as opposed to all these individual different branded devices that we previous had functioning.
We originally switched to FlexPod because everything was going to virtualization. We started doing some investigation and research into why, and found out that it was an overall better solution. In the long run, it ended up saving you money, putting everything together into one solution, and allowing you to utilize all your resources for multiple machines. Therefore, if you needed a new server, you did not have to go out and buy a physical server, you just spun up a new virtual machine, and you're done.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup was very straightforward.
What about the implementation team?
We had a company come in and help us set everything up. After they turned it over to us, it was very straightforward and easy to use, as much as you can expect from a system that large.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
We purchased FlexPod though Datalink. Be sure you use a known company to be sure you get the correct licensing and products for your specific needs.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
For FlexPod, the whole package itself, including the support and the different vendors who worked together is great (even though it costs more than the other solution we were looking at). There are other things in there that you have to consider, such as the support, devices, how long it has been out on the market, and how well it lasts.
We went to other telecommunication providers and asked what they have and how well they were satisfied with it. We found some providers who were using FlexPod and some who were using other products. The ones who were using the FlexPod seemed to be a lot more satisfied with their product overall.
What other advice do I have?
Overall, as an entire package, it has everything that we need and support is very helpful when needed. It is still installed and working today problem free.
Look at your needs and what you are looking to do. See what fits your needs better. There is not one solution or company that will be a fit all.
The most important criteria when selecting a vendor: We look at everything as a whole package. As far as support, how long its been out on the market and what they offer. Support is probably the biggest, but for whatever product that we buy from a vendor, it needs to be solidified for a while and tested out on the market, aka tried-and-true.
Disclosure: PeerSpot contacted the reviewer to collect the review and to validate authenticity. The reviewer was referred by the vendor, but the review is not subject to editing or approval by the vendor.
Buyer's Guide
FlexPod XCS
May 2025

Learn what your peers think about FlexPod XCS. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: May 2025.
851,823 professionals have used our research since 2012.
Systems Manager at Marcum
Streamlines deployment - I can deploy a new UCS server within minutes
Pros and Cons
- "The most valuable feature is ease of deployment. Once I deploy the chassis and I have the back-end storage, configuring more UCS servers is very quick. I can deploy a new UCS server within minutes."
- "I would like to see them reduce the complexity, that would be my number one request because. Right now, doing simple things is pretty complex. You have so many options. It might be better if it were more wizard-driven, as opposed to going through five hundred dials. It's not very easy or intuitive."
What is our primary use case?
Our primary use case is virtualization. Most of our virtualized environment runs on FlexPod.
How has it helped my organization?
Once you set up the underlying infrastructure, it's very quick to add more capacity or add more compute or networking.
We have also definitely saved time for new service deployments, on the order of many weeks - two months, three months.
What is most valuable?
Ease of deployment. Once I deploy the chassis and I have the back-end storage, configuring more UCS servers is very quick. I can deploy a new UCS server within minutes.
What needs improvement?
I would like to see them reduce the complexity, that would be my number one request. Right now, doing simple things is pretty complex. You have so many options. It might be better if it was more wizard-driven, as opposed to going through five hundred dials. It's not very easy or intuitive.
For how long have I used the solution?
Three to five years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
It's stable. We haven't had any issues. We have it deployed for multiple customers and they have all been very stable.
We have found the solution to be resilient. We test it. Before we turned over the product to the customer we did a lot of testing. No single point of failure. VMware, UCS, NetApp, we pulled cables, we did failovers, everything was seamless. Very good.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
We have a customer that has five chassis and it scales very well. It is very easy to scale up and wide.
How are customer service and technical support?
I haven't had any issues, I've called Cisco, NetApp, VMware. It's been pretty good.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
We switched to FlexPod because of cost. The cost of our previous solution was too high. I couldn't scale out as easily as I wanted to.
How was the initial setup?
Setup is complex. They don't follow the norms. You expect certain things to be a certain way but once you start deploying you go, "Ah-ha." I found three or four "ah-ha" moments or "gotchas." It wasn't very straightforward. I had to do some digging to find out the right way to deploy it.
What was our ROI?
I'm not the one who would capture ROI figures, but I'm sure we have seen ROI.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Nutanix, SimpliVity, and Vblock. We went with FlexPod because I think NetApp is a better product for the back-end storage. The other two are the same.
What other advice do I have?
I would suggest doing a mini FlexPod PoC. That is probably the best way to kick the tires and find out what the product is all about.
I have seen an improvement in application performance but I can't attribute that to the UCS or the FlexPod environment because I'm running on an SSD. It doesn't matter if it's FlexPod or not, it'll still run fast.
I haven't really dealt with validated designs. I go to Cisco and grab the product line from there and just deploy according to that. I don't really deviate too much from the already-architected solutions.
In terms of private, hybrid, and multi-cloud environments, right now we're only doing private. Private is pretty much doing business as usual, nothing different about it. I haven't really looked into how we can take it to the cloud yet. We don't use FlexPod to manage private cloud.
As for the solution being innovative when it comes to compute, storage, and networking, when UCS came on first, that technology was innovative. I haven't seen much innovation from them recently.
I rate FlexPod at eight out of ten. They still have some room for improvement. As I said, the complexity is still pretty high. If they can get a handle on the complexity part I would give it a nine or ten.
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer: Partner.
Technical Operations Manager at Dyncorp
Video Review
We can deploy a product which is fully built and racked with minimal touch installation when it arrives onsite
Pros and Cons
- "FlexPod gives us the opportunity to deploy a product which is fully built and racked with minimal touch installation when it arrives onsite, so we can do all the configuration remotely."
What is most valuable?
The value in FlexPod is that we have to deploy a virtual suite to 280 locations around the world. FlexPod gives us the opportunity to deploy a product which is fully built and racked with minimal touch installation when it arrives onsite, so we can do all the configuration remotely.
What needs improvement?
It is hard to think of any additional features. It has everything that we need to reach it in some of the worst circumstances given the limitations on the size of the rack and the stack. The product is very well done.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
It is very stable. We deploy to a lot of countries where they have unstable infrastructure and we have had very few issues with the stack.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
It scales very well. If we need to add additional virtual host server capacity, we can throw in another C220 server or additional storage with a NetApp shelf. It is fantastic for that. Our sites range from quite small to up to 3000 users.
How is customer service and technical support?
The technical support is very good. Being unified under one single point of contact for all products in the stack is very good. We found that our time to open/close incidences is much better than when we were doing it on individual components with individual vendors.
What was our ROI?
We have absolutely seen ROI. We have saved between two to four million dollars on travel alone over the past 24 months. We have deployed this to 75 percent of the sites where we will be deploying it. We have a little over 200 units installed. The travel savings alone has been huge for the organization.
What other advice do I have?
I would give it a nine out of 10, simply because it has helped us change the way we do business: From being a receive, integrate, box up, ship out, unbox, and rerack. It has been fantastic and changed our business model.
Most important criteria when selecting a vendor: It is all of it.
- Support
- Reliability
- Flexibility to adapt on the fly when we need to modify and install, then support certain circumstances.
- Meet the needs which were not outlined in the original project.
FlexPod has been fantastic.
Disclosure: PeerSpot contacted the reviewer to collect the review and to validate authenticity. The reviewer was referred by the vendor, but the review is not subject to editing or approval by the vendor.
Solutions Architect Team Lead at CDW
The most valuable thing for me is the shorter time to market
Pros and Cons
- "It is extremely stable and well-supported because of the leadership and partnerships put in place."
- "The most valuable thing for me is the shorter time to market."
- "Both NetApp and Cisco need to do improvements in their day-to-day operations management upgrades."
- "A piece where FlexPod has come up short in the past and an area for them to improve upon: single pane of glass management and single pane of glass upgrade process."
How has it helped my organization?
It takes the time to market, then shrinks and shortens it.
What is most valuable?
The most valuable thing for me as a partner, as well as our customers, is the shorter time to market.
In addition, the most important pieces are:
- The partnership between NetApp and Cisco.
- The engineering effort and time.
- The resources that they put into writing the CBDs.
- Doing all the lab validations.
- Having this product supported as a converged infrastructure.
What needs improvement?
Both NetApp and Cisco need to do improvements in their day-to-day operations management upgrades, and they are working on it.
A piece where FlexPod has come up short in the past and an area for them to improve upon: single pane of glass management and single pane of glass upgrade process. It gets a tricky, because there are two different companies and two different partnerships. You do not buy it as a single product; you buy it all at once, and deploy it.
For how long have I used the solution?
More than five years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
It is extremely reliable. The length of time of this whole program has been reduced, greatly. FlexPod is very innovative on a month-to-month basis, but it is also extremely stable and well-supported because of the leadership and partnerships put in place.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
It does scale well. I do not want to infinite scalability, but it is no different than a traditional data center. Silos, network, and storage, and compute; it is all of those same components. It is just prevalidated and predesigned.
I used an analogy the other day. Someone learning how to cook and someone else figured out the entire recipe for you, you just have to cook it. When you go to scale, you can scale whichever pieces of the infrastructure that you need, either collectively, or you can leave it.
How is customer service and technical support?
Because of the length of time that FlexPod has been around, it has been proven. The support center, Level 1 all the way through to the specialists, understand how the program works. NetApp's support understands the partnership with Cisco, VMware, and Microsoft, and the entirety of the system.
At this time, they have become very good at understanding limits. They can have a management and/or partner issue during the deployment and still maintain the ticket. Our customers love it.
How was the initial setup?
It is very straightforward.
If we had never done it before, someone else has been the design guide, someone else has been the deployment guide, and it is step-by-step. If you have never deployed NetApp or Cisco before, you can follow these guides. If you have, they are just an augmentation of what you already know, and just a bunch of best practices, so you can get it up and running in a much quicker fashion.
What other advice do I have?
It has a lot of big partner resources, which are consistently behind it, such as thousands of engineering hours and new CBDs coming out every year. It has both proven infrastructure which has been running for the eight-plus years, as well as being innovative. Every time Cisco comes out with a new Blade, Fabric Interconnects, or new switches, or NetApp comes out with new arrays, they are being integrated into the product that year as well as being integrated into the rest of the data conference suite. From that perspective, you are not really inventing anything; you are taking proven things and implementing them in a particularly efficient manner.
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer: Partner.
TSE at Insight Enterprises, Inc.
Enables our customers to consolidate everything into a relatively small chassis
Pros and Cons
- "The advantage is being able to consolidate everything into a relatively small chassis."
- "I like the combination of the brands that they decided to include, in terms of its compatibility, e.g., they integrated UCS into this solution."
- "I have noticed a lot of customers, they will kick it over the fence. It is FlexPod; it is that mystery animal. The room for improvement is to better present it to those users, so they will not have to be afraid of it."
What is our primary use case?
Customers use it to consolidate their resources, rather than having a more extravagant and very high-cost center. FlexPod seems to be a simpler, more economical solution and, obviously, it is a lot easier to work on.
Our clients will use it for anything from healthcare (a lot of surgical) to major consumer distribution, universities or higher learning institutions. Large customers, like Digital Realty, who do business with smaller companies, all try to get the same type of solution.
How has it helped my organization?
I am from the old school. When FlexPod came out, everybody ran away from it, and went to GDC at Cisco. However, here it is, and it is huge and very convenient. The advantage is being able to consolidate everything into a relatively small chassis.
What is most valuable?
I like the combination of the brands that they decided to include, in terms of its compatibility, e.g., they integrated UCS into this solution. That is the real advantage: its partnerships.
What needs improvement?
I look forward to seeing some of the innovations that they come out with for the FlexPod solution. It has been one of those products that I do not criticize it too much. I just look forward to seeing what else is there and the new thing that they are going to come out with. So far, I have been happy with what I have beem seeing.
However, for a lot of our customers, the complexity of FlexPod can be a little overwhelming. When I talk to the customers and they stop speaking technically, they start speaking emotionally, that is when I realize, "We need to get back to talking to them about what FlexPod is." It is a term and a partnership.
If there is something wrong on the NetApp side. Let us focus on that. I have noticed a lot of customers, they will kick it over the fence. It is FlexPod; it is that mystery animal. The room for improvement is to better present it to those users, so they will not have to be afraid of it. Once they realize, "This is actually a good product." They will turn around on it and stop trying to run away.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
It is pretty stable. There are a few tweaks needed. There are a few things that they can always improve on. Altogether, when you are looking at that many different flavors being mixed into the same bowl, it works well. I am happy with that.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
It is definitely scalable. This is a great platform that you can build from. If you need to think about scalability in the future, this is the solution because you can stay small and build it out as you go, as you grow, and stay ahead of the market.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
In terms of selecting a vendor to work with, collaboration is important because the product is the product. It will sell itself. What supports that? Collaboration. This means being able to work with technical support and engineers to deliver a solution for the customer, who does not care about the challenges that we have to face.
The customer just wants the product and that is our goal: To be able to deliver something from behind the "green curtain." If they love it, they buy it, then they want to buy more of it. We have to plan for it and integrate it with our future endeavors. That is what we are all here for.
What was our ROI?
I have not paid attention to ROI.
As far as the real value, it is a simplistic consolidation where I can actually talk to somebody on the phone, and say, "You should not have to leave the room or go to another floor. This should be laid out like this."
It is very convenient, and that is a good value right there.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Usually, I will find some type of "phoned-in designs". Something they want to call their "FlexPod." There are a lot of imitators out there. There are a lot of guys who will buy some NetApp and Cisco products, etc. Then, they will say, "Let us put this all together." However, FlexPod has something good here. That is why it caught my eye.
What other advice do I have?
Do not be afraid of it. Roll your sleeves up, and get into it, as it is not that hard. Speak the language, and if you don't, call somebody.
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer: Partner.
Engagement Architect at a computer software company with 501-1,000 employees
Validated solution we can deploy repeatably and that gives customers confidence it's going to work
Pros and Cons
- "FlexPod’s prevalidated architectures are very important to our organization... Especially in healthcare, it is absolutely critical that we have a validated performance platform. It has to work every time."
- "I'd like to see better integrations with some of the third-party tools, like Terraform. That would be good. We use Ansible to deploy and that's good, but it's slower than it needs to be."
What is our primary use case?
We're using it for general purpose virtualization or converged, as well as in specific cases like electronic medical records. That is the big one.
How has it helped my organization?
In the partner space, it gives us a validated solution that we can deploy and it's very repeatable for us. It helps our customers in that they can have confidence that it's going to work exactly as it's supposed to.
It has also helped reduce troubleshooting time—easily hours per week—on architecture configs.
What is most valuable?
FlexPod’s prevalidated architectures are very important to our organization. It has to do with predictability for applications that are always up and that sometimes are life-safety or life-critical applications. Especially in healthcare, it is absolutely critical that we have a validated performance platform. It has to work every time.
What needs improvement?
A lot of small things could be improved. I'd like to see better integrations with some of the third-party tools, like Terraform. That would be good. We use Ansible to deploy and that's good, but it's slower than it needs to be.
For how long have I used the solution?
I've been using FlexPod for more than five years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The stability is a 10 out of 10.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
We haven't done much scaling yet on this most recent one, but in general, the scalability is very good. It's a 10 out of 10. It's very easy to grow very big.
How are customer service and support?
The technical support is good. It's not perfect, things never are, but we've had very few issues. It's also relatively new. We'll see in a year. Maybe my opinion of it will go down, but it's been good so far.
How would you rate customer service and support?
Positive
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I have experience with Vblock, Vxblock, and FlashStack.
With FlexPod, we have a lot of validation around performance. Especially in the medical world, it's a very well-known entity, so we don't have to struggle a lot with finger-pointing. Those are all good reasons why we picked it.
How was the initial setup?
It is a complex deployment, but we have done it a lot of times so it's not that hard. We have it all scripted. We have a ton of automation in the deployment process.
For healthcare, it is almost always on private cloud. That is still very much the standard. It's mostly Azure and some AWS, a little bit of GCP, and some others. One of the big EMR providers has its own hybrid cloud that is purpose-built.
The most recent one I did was a big EMR. It's a moderately sized NetApp AF series and a bunch of Cisco UCS with NDS storage. It is a reference flash tag straight out of the CBD with 150 nodes.
What was our ROI?
Our customers definitely see ROI. We generally model the TCO for them over time and we're generally pretty accurate. They usually get their payback on the product-based converged solution in two years or less. They usually avoid having to add headcount.
The solution's flexible consumption has definitely reduced our customers' TCO. It allows them to do more without their having to add staff to support it. The flexible consumption is a good option for some customers and not for others. We have some who love it and some that don't.
They're going to spend the money on the solution one way or the other, and flexible consumption lets them spread it out over time and pay as they grow. That's great for some, while others just want to do the CapEx because of tax reasons or the like. Neither one is better. They're just different and they're both fine.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Overall, the solution works pretty well. The biggest complaint I have from customers is the cost.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
The flexibility, operational efficiency, and scalability of FlexPod are very good. We also use other products too, like FlashStack, and these solutions are equally good or similar in most ways. I have a very good opinion of FlexPod, and we've been using it for a long time.
What other advice do I have?
In terms of comparing converged infrastructure solutions and picking the most cost-effective one, you have to pick what works for you. Think about who's going to support it. If you're hiring a vendor, like me, you want to make sure that you trust me and that I'm going to be around. If you're doing it in-house, make sure that you're picking the one that your people can run.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
Private Cloud
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer: Integrator.
Systems Administrator at a healthcare company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Decreased unplanned downtime and increased application performance
Pros and Cons
- "We have significantly less latency now with our imagery."
- "The solution has not reduced our data center costs."
What is our primary use case?
The primary use case is storage for medical imagery.
How has it helped my organization?
We have significantly less latency now with our imagery.
It certainly has increased the speed of operations.
The solution has made our staff more efficient because it is easier to manage. This has enabled them to spend time on tasks that drive our business forward. From a management perspective, the interface is much easier to use.
What is most valuable?
Reliability and convenience are its most valuable features.
The solution’s validated designs for major enterprise apps in our organization are fairly important. Speed-wise, we are not having any latency issues.
What needs improvement?
The solution has not reduced our data center costs.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
I have no issues with the stability at all. It's a very stable platform.
The solution has decreased unplanned downtime incidents in our organization by 15 percent.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
I'm very impressed with the scalability of the solution. It can be expanded almost infinitely.
How are customer service and technical support?
The technical support is very good.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
Our old solution was horrible and slow. We were using Dell EMC. We switched due to perceived latency.
How was the initial setup?
It was very simple and straightforward. I had it racked within half a day and connected.
What about the implementation team?
For deployment, we used NetApp personnel and a reseller. The experiences with them were good.
What was our ROI?
The solution has improved application performance in our organization by 30 percent.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Our licensing costs are about $50,000 per year.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Dynamics was on our vendor shortlist.
We chose FlexPod after consulting with the vendor and NetApp.
What other advice do I have?
Definitely consider NetApp. I would rate the product as a 10 out of 10 because it is fantastic.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
On-premises
Disclosure: I am a real user, and this review is based on my own experience and opinions.

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Updated: May 2025
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