List of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Customers
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Since 2010, our global team of researchers has been studying SUSE Linux Enterprise Server customers around the world, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions and perhaps the rise and fall of certain vendors and their products on a quarterly basis.
Each quarter our research team identifies companies that have purchased SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Operating System (OS) from public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources, including the customer size, industry, location, implementation status, partner involvement, LOB Key Stakeholders and related IT decision-makers contact details.
Companies using SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for Operating System (OS) include: Colgate-Palmolive, a United States based Consumer Packaged Goods organisation with 34000 employees and revenues of $20.10 billion, Ford Motor Company, a United States based Automotive organisation with 175000 employees and revenues of $18.73 billion, Sempra Energy, a United States based Utilities organisation with 16835 employees and revenues of $16.72 billion, dm-drogerie markt, a Germany based Retail organisation with 79745 employees and revenues of $14.79 billion, Hertz, a United States based Automotive organisation with 26000 employees and revenues of $9.05 billion and many others.
Contact us if you need a completed and verified list of companies using SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, including the breakdown by industry (21 Verticals), Geography (Region, Country, State, City), Company Size (Revenue, Employees, Asset) and related IT Decision Makers, Key Stakeholders, business and technology executives responsible for the software purchases.
The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server customer wins are being incorporated in our Enterprise Applications Buyer Insight and Technographics Customer Database which has over 100 data fields that detail company usage of software systems and their digital transformation initiatives. Apps Run The World wants to become your No. 1 technographic data source!
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| Logo | Customer | Industry | Empl. | Revenue | Country | Vendor | Application | Category | When | SI | Insight |
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Boston University | Education | 15000 | $4.0B | United States | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2012 | n/a |
In 2012, Boston University deployed SUSE Linux Enterprise Server as its Operating System (OS) for select campus server infrastructure. The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server implementation aligned with concurrent infrastructure projects including a central IBM zOS 1.11 mainframe upgrade that served Student Link, Business Link, and Galaxy systems, and the university's SAP ERP go live in 2011 which centralized Financial, HR Payroll, and Procurement functions. The deployment targeted server-class workloads and was positioned to support enterprise hosting, system services, and administrative tooling across BU's IT estate. Configuration work emphasized core Operating System (OS) components such as kernel tuning, package management, security hardening, and virtualization enablement consistent with SUSE Linux Enterprise Server capabilities.
Operational scope focused on Support and Infrastructure teams and the campus server estate rather than the IBM mainframe environment, reflecting a split architecture between zOS hosts and Linux server platforms. Governance was coordinated through IS&T project management to align platform configuration with application owners, including changes required by the ALFA adjustments tied to the SAP ERP rollout, and the zOS upgrade noted in project records was completed on time without incident. Integrations were executed at the platform level to host middleware and application stacks, with automated configuration and standardized system services used to maintain consistency across servers. The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server installation emphasized enterprise OS operational controls, patching cadence, and role based administration under Boston University infrastructure governance.
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Colgate-Palmolive | Consumer Packaged Goods | 34000 | $20.1B | United States | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2016 | n/a |
In 2016, Colgate-Palmolive deployed SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, an Operating System (OS), to support a refreshed SAP ERP landscape running on SAP HANA and SAP Business Warehouse. The SUSE Linux Enterprise Server deployment was explicitly used as the operating platform for SAP ERP, consistent with the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications configuration that supports SAP Enhancement Package 8 and HANA database workloads.
SAP ERP, SAP HANA and SAP Business Warehouse components were placed on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications on an IBM Power Systems E850 server to host production transaction processing and analytics workloads. Backup, test, development and quality assurance instances were provisioned on IBM Power Systems S824L and S822L servers, with those systems also absorbing business intelligence and analytics workloads that had previously run on separate hardware, consolidating application tiers onto the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server operating environment.
Storage and infrastructure integration included two IBM Storwize V7000 systems with IBM Spectrum Control for centralized management, automatic data tiering via IBM Easy Tier and asynchronous replication using Global Mirror with Change Volume for disaster recovery. Procurement and platform selection were guided by Selling Business Systems, and the production architecture combined SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, IBM Power Systems E850 S824L and S822L servers, and Storwize V7000 storage to deliver a certified SAP HANA Tailored Datacenter Integration deployment.
Governance and rollout followed a structured procurement and cutover plan, the hardware install window was estimated at 15 to 20 hours but completed in 10 hours, and application and database migrations finished ahead of schedule with minimal downtime. Reported outcomes include up to 85% time savings on some reporting tasks, a 50% reduction in storage capacity requirements, a 25% reduction in data-center physical footprint, monthly financial close times reduced from roughly 12 to 14 hours to about 6 hours, and long-range report times reduced from 20 minutes to 3 minutes.
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dm-drogerie markt | Retail | 79745 | $14.8B | Germany | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2015 | n/a |
In 2015, dm-drogerie markt implemented SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, replacing IBM AIX, as its Operating System (OS) platform to host SAP workloads and central systems. The decision was driven by overall cost reduction, avoidance of vendor lock-in, SAP support roadmaps including the DB6 to DB2 trajectory, and a planned move to SAP HANA to improve agility and standardization across environments.
The implementation used SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for SAP Applications together with SUSE Manager for lifecycle and configuration management. Architecture planning specified a two data center high availability layout, initial sizing for SAPS memory and storage, and separate Prod, Dev and Test placements. Technical build work focused on golden image definition, base patch line governance, AutoYaST for bare metal provisioning, and scripted configuration management to enable Infrastructure as Code patterns.
Integrations and technical scope included SAP application instance migration with a database transition path from DB6 to DB2 using SAP Software Update Manager with Database Migration Option, and a later in place replacement to SAP HANA 1.0. The stack ran on new hardware with VMware virtualization and SAN and NFS storage, and incorporated LDAP and Active Directory for authentication, sftp shares for file transfers, RPC interfaces, and DNS-based virtual hostname switching to minimize cutover impact.
Project governance and rollout planning were supported by SUSE Consulting, which led architectural design sessions, migration road mapping, high availability and disaster recovery options using ReaR, and sizing across a two site topology. Operational governance included defined work breakdown structures, procurement and wiring plans, a management approval process for patch lines, user acceptance testing cycles, and on the job Linux training for dmTECH staff responsible for online shop, store IT, distribution centers and central systems.
Cutover execution followed a greenfield 1:1 migration approach for initial SAP instances preserving SIDs, instance numbers and user IDs, with final database syncs and DNS switches coordinated with business owners. Test and DR concepts were validated prior to production moves, production cutovers were scheduled after hours or on weekends with reported downtime windows of approximately one to six hours, and ongoing operations continued with OS, SAP and third party software maintenance and tuning after the migration.
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Automotive | 10600 | $6.4B | Germany | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2003 | n/a |
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Transportation | 1800 | $397M | Germany | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2015 | n/a |
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Automotive | 175000 | $18.7B | United States | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2019 | n/a |
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Distribution | 30000 | $7.5B | Germany | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2019 | n/a |
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Manufacturing | 10000 | $2.5B | Germany | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2013 | n/a |
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Automotive | 26000 | $9.0B | United States | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2018 | n/a |
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Manufacturing | 6500 | $2.2B | Germany | SUSE Group | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server | Operating System (OS) | 2022 | n/a |
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Buyer Intent: Companies Evaluating SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
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