You built your environment on VMware because it felt safe. Now, changes in Broadcom’s pricing, bundles, and contract terms make avoiding vendor lock-in a board-level topic rather than an architectural detail. Renewal numbers climb, and your options narrow at the exact moment your CFO demands cuts.
That pressure creates real risk. If you treat VMware renewal as a line item, you may lock in five more years of cost and technical debt. You keep hardware you do not need and delay modernization.
There is a better path. By rethinking your hypervisor strategy around openness, supported alternatives, and a multi-hypervisor model, you can turn this disruption into a chance to reduce spend, improve resilience, and modernize on your own terms. This is where a clear strategy for avoiding vendor lock-in becomes your advantage.
For most mid-market and enterprise teams, VMware still sits at the center of on-premises and hosted infrastructure. That is exactly why Broadcom’s changes hurt. VMware has eliminated perpetual licenses, pushed higher minimum core counts, and bundled features into large, expensive suites that many teams do not fully need.
In practice, that means:
“Do nothing” no longer feels neutral. It becomes an active decision to stay locked into a proprietary stack that controls both your technology roadmap and your cost curve.
A modern hypervisor strategy does not mean a reckless VMware exit. It means designing your environment so that any one vendor – including VMware – cannot dictate every move you make. That is the essence of avoiding vendor lock-in.
For a deeper breakdown of what changed with VMware, see The Big Changes to VMware in 2025: What you need to know.
| Step-by-Step VMWare Migration Playbook | |
| Step 1: Baseline & Prioritize | Inventory VMs, dependencies, and data, tier workloads (Tier-1/2/3), set RPO/RTO, and flag legacy or tricky items that may not port cleanly. |
| Step 2: Readiness | Stand up the new hypervisor, validate core services, then run a small “golden” test VM to prove I/O, networking, snapshots, and backup/restore end to end. |
| Step 3: Protect & Ensure Safety | Confirm backup and recovery on both platforms, create immutable copies, and test restores so any VM can roll back to a known good state. |
| Step 4: Run Pilot Migrations | Migrate low-risk workloads first using V2V tools or clean restores, then validate app behavior, performance, security, and day-two operations on the new stack. |
| Step 5: Prove DR & Compliance | Execute tabletop and full failover/failback tests on the target platform, capturing evidence that RPO/RTO, security, and compliance requirements are met. |
| Step 6: Phased Cutover with Rollback | Migrate in waves grouped by environment or application, with a defined rollback plan and a live runbook to capture issues and lessons learned. |
| Step 7: Decommission & Optimize | After a stability window, decommission the old platform, right-size resources, tune backup policies, and tighten cost controls to lock in long-term gains. |
Here’s a checklist version to help you keep your migration on track:
Before you move a single workload, you need hard numbers. Most teams underestimate the true all-in cost of staying on the current VMware model, as well as the realistic cost and risk of moving selected workloads elsewhere.
Start with a structured assessment:
Our VMware Impact Assessment is designed to answer these questions with data, not guesses.
This gives you a baseline that supports real decisions about avoiding vendor lock-in, not just reacting at renewal time.

Once you understand your baseline, the next move is to diversify your hypervisor strategy with supported alternatives. Avoid the urge to crown a new overlord or a “one-size-fits-all” platform. Your goal is really to design a portfolio of options that are tuned to your different workloads, risk profiles, and budgets.
Currently, three patterns stand out in the market today.
Managed Proxmox offerings from service providers and colocation partners give you open hypervisor economics without forcing your team to become Proxmox experts on day one.
What it is
Where it fits
How it avoids vendor lock-in
This option lets you cut VMware cores and costs by moving non-critical workloads to Proxmox while keeping production on VMware or Nutanix, use Hardware as a Service to avoid a VMware-driven hardware refresh, and build team skills in a lower-risk part of the environment first.
However, you do accept more operational complexity with multiple stacks, so provider quality, SLAs, and roadmap alignment matter a lot.
Platform9 provides a SaaS managed control plane for KVM and Kubernetes that feels like a cloud platform while still running on your hardware or in Colo.
What it is
Where it fits
How it avoids vendor lock-in
Teams tend to choose this option for its savings over managed VMware or Nutanix environments. We often see more than 30% monthly cost reductions. This option also possesses a repeatable migration process instead of hand-built conversions, and enterprise-grade support that makes open source feel safe for production use.
In this case, though, you do need to plan for a different operating model and make sure your SaaS control plane has resilient connectivity and a clear exit plan. That is a key discussion for your architects, security team, and finance leaders.
Apache CloudStack powers many private and hosted private cloud platforms. You consume it as a service, not as a DIY control plane.
What it is
Where it fits
How it avoids vendor lock-in
This strategy supports cloud-style experiences such as quotas, RBAC, and chargeback for VM usage, and it has built-in governance to control VM sprawl and align infrastructure consumption with cost centers. However, as with managed Proxmox, outcomes depend heavily on provider design and operations, so vendor selection and contract structure are critical parts of your hypervisor strategy.
If you only swap VMware for another hypervisor, you move the problem instead of solving it.
The current disruption creates a chance to modernize your broader infrastructure:
This mindset keeps avoiding vendor lock-in at the center of your decisions. You treat VMware changes as a chance to design for long-term flexibility, not only short-term savings.

Bluewave sits on the buyer’s side of the table. Our role is to help you see the full picture, evaluate your real options, and build the right roadmap for your business, not push a prepackaged answer.
Using our Assess | Advise | Advocate framework, we:
The outcome is more than a path to avoiding vendor lock-in. It is a practical, business-aligned strategy and an ongoing advisory partnership designed to support long-term digital and technology transformation.
Ready to see what this looks like for your environment? Schedule a VMware Impact Assessment with us to get a clear, data-driven roadmap.
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