Ask a midmarket IT leader why they refreshed their servers this year, and the honest answer increasingly has nothing to do with the servers. It has to do with an invoice. Across Techaisle's SMB and Midmarket Datacenter Solutions Adoption study of 2,857 SMBs and Midmarket firms, a pattern surfaces that should change how every infrastructure vendor writes its pitch: capital expenditure on silicon is being deployed as a deliberate instrument to shrink operating expenditure on software licenses, cloud egress, and power. The physical box has become the cheapest variable in the equation, and buyers are treating it accordingly.
This is the quiet inversion of 2026. For most of the past decade, hardware was the thing you bought, and software was the thing that ran on it. In the midmarket, that relationship has flipped. The licensing model now dictates the silicon.
Broadcom made the invoice visible
The forcing function was the VMware licensing transition. Under the shift to subscription and per-core models, 52% of the upper midmarket reports a significant impact, which, in the study's language, means substantial cost increases or outright forced architectural changes. This is what a real forcing function looks like. A software pricing decision made in one company's boardroom is now rewriting the compute architecture of thousands of others.
What makes the finding interesting is not the pain. It is the response. Midmarket IT leaders did not passively absorb the increase. Only 14% of the upper midmarket is accepting the new subscription cost as a cost of doing business. The rest are re-architecting to get out from under it, and the exits they are choosing reveal a level of financial sophistication that the "SMB" label badly undersells.
Density as a defense


