시장보고서
상품코드
2006332

네트워크 스위치 시장 : 유형별, 기술별, 스위칭 포트별, 용도별, 판매 채널별, 고객 규모별, 최종 사용자별 - 시장 예측(2026-2032년)

Network Switches Market by Type, Technology, Switching Port, Application, Distribution Channel, Customer Size, End-user - Global Forecast 2026-2032

발행일: | 리서치사: 구분자 360iResearch | 페이지 정보: 영문 188 Pages | 배송안내 : 1-2일 (영업일 기준)

    
    
    




■ 보고서에 따라 최신 정보로 업데이트하여 보내드립니다. 배송일정은 문의해 주시기 바랍니다.

네트워크 스위치 시장은 2025년에 376억 달러로 평가되었고, 2026년에는 405억 3,000만 달러로 성장할 전망이며, CAGR 8.27%로 성장을 지속하여, 2032년까지 656억 1,000만 달러에 이를 것으로 예측됩니다.

주요 시장 통계
기준 연도 : 2025년 376억 달러
추정 연도 : 2026년 405억 3,000만 달러
예측 연도 : 2032년 656억 1,000만 달러
CAGR(%) 8.27%

네트워크 스위치의 역할이 어떻게 진화하고 있는지, 내결함성이 높은 고성능 엔터프라이즈 및 클라우드 네이티브 인프라를 구현하는 데 있어 네트워크 스위치의 역할이 어떻게 진화하고 있는지에 대한 간략한 전략 소개

현대 네트워크 환경에서 네트워크 스위치는 컴퓨팅, 스토리지, 사용자 경험의 교차점에 위치하며, 단순한 연결 장비가 아닌 전략적 자산으로 자리매김하고 있습니다. 대역폭 요구 사항 증가, 클라우드 및 엣지 센터로의 워크로드 분산, 강화된 보안 및 컴플라이언스 의무로 인해 용도 성능, 운영 효율성 및 비용 효율적인 확장에 있어 스위칭 인프라의 역할이 더욱 중요해지고 있습니다.

기술 혁신, 엣지 컴퓨팅의 확산, 그리고 지속가능성에 대한 요구가 네트워크 스위치의 아키텍처와 구축 모델을 어떻게 변화시키고 있는가?

세 가지 수렴하는 요인이 조직이 네트워크 스위치를 설계, 도입, 운영하는 방식에 변화를 가져오고 있습니다. 그것은 기술 혁신, 도입 토폴로지의 변화, 그리고 규제와 지속가능성에 대한 압력입니다. 첫째, 프로그래머빌리티와 소프트웨어 정의 네트워크(SDN)의 개념은 부가적인 기능에서 핵심적인 선택 기준으로 전환되었습니다. 그 결과, 스위치는 API의 성숙도, 개방형 표준 지원, 자동화를 가속화하고 평균복구시간(MTTR)을 단축하는 오케스트레이션 플랫폼과의 호환성 등의 측면에서 평가되고 있습니다.

2025년 미국 관세 조치가 네트워크 스위치 공급망, 가격 동향 및 조달 전략에 미치는 누적 영향 평가

2025년 미국이 발표하거나 시행한 관세 조치는 네트워크 스위칭 장비의 세계 공급망, 비용 구조 및 전략적 조달 결정에 다층적인 영향을 미치고 있습니다. 공급 수준에서 관세를 적용하면 미국으로 수입되는 부품 및 완제품의 수입 비용이 상승하여 몇 가지 즉각적인 반응을 일으킵니다. 구체적으로, 조달팀은 기존 공급업체 계약을 검토하여 가격 및 납기 조건을 재협상하고, 소싱 매니저는 대체 제조 거점을 평가하며, 단기적인 가격 변동을 완화하기 위해 재고 정책을 조정합니다.

디바이스 유형, 스위칭 기술, 포트 구성, 용도, 판매 채널, 고객 규모, 최종 사용자별 차이를 파악할 수 있는 부문별 관점

부문에 초점을 맞춘 관점은 수요, 차별화, 운영 우선순위가 교차하는 지점을 명확히 합니다. 유형에 따라 시장은 고정 포트 스위치와 모듈형 스위치로 분류하여 조사되며, 고정 포트 스위치는 관리형 스위치, 스마트 스위치 및 비관리형 스위치로 세분화하여 분석됩니다. 이 구분은 단순성, 관리성 및 업그레이드 유연성에서 트레이드오프를 강조합니다. 기술을 기반으로 이더넷 스위치, 파이버 채널 스위치, MPLS 스위치 및 광 패킷 스위치를 통해 시장 동향을 확인합니다. 각각은 용도 적합성 및 통합 복잡성에 영향을 미치는 고유한 지연 시간, 처리량 및 패브릭 요구 사항을 충족합니다.

네트워크 스위치 도입 및 지원을 형성하는 북미, 남미, 유럽, 중동 및 아프리카, 아시아태평양의 지역별 전략적 우선순위 및 경쟁 동향

지역별 동향은 도입 속도, 조달 전략 및 파트너 생태계에 실질적인 영향을 미칩니다. 북미와 남미에서 의사결정 주기는 기업의 통합, 클라우드 전환의 진전, 번들 서비스 및 금융을 지원하는 성숙한 채널 생태계에 따라 크게 좌우될 것입니다. 이 지역의 구매자들은 벤더의 지원 SLA, 통합 서비스, 클라우드 연결 및 하이브리드 운영을 가속화할 수 있는 솔루션에 특히 중점을 두고 있습니다.

스위치 시장의 벤더 차별화, 파트너십, M&A 활동 및 혁신 동향을 파악할 수 있는 경쟁 정보 및 기업 전략에 대한 인사이트를 제공합니다.

주요 스위치 공급업체들의 기업 전략은 소프트웨어 차별화, 생태계 파트너십, 모듈형 하드웨어 로드맵이라는 몇 가지 전략적 우선순위로 요약됩니다. 벤더들은 하드웨어 판매 이상의 가치를 창출할 수 있는 고급 텔레메트리, 네이티브 자동화 후크 및 소프트웨어 기능 세트에 투자하고 있습니다. 이러한 변화를 통해 공급업체는 구독, 매니지드 서비스, 기능 기반 라이선싱을 통해 고객 관계를 확장하는 동시에 하드웨어의 수익 주기를 평준화할 수 있습니다.

업계 리더가 도입을 가속화하고, 총비용을 최적화하며, 스위칭 환경의 미래를 보장하기 위한 실행 가능한 운영 및 전략적 권장 사항

리더 기업은 네트워크의 성능과 미래의 유연성을 보장하기 위해 세 가지 실행 가능한 노력을 우선시해야 합니다. 첫째, 스위치 조달을 용도 SLA, 보안 기준 요구사항 및 지속가능성 목표와 일치시키는 기술 거버넌스 프로세스를 도입해야 합니다. 이 거버넌스에서는 균형 잡힌 의사결정을 보장하기 위해 네트워크, 보안 및 조달 팀의 부서 간 승인을 의무화해야 합니다. 둘째, 수동 설정의 리스크를 줄이고, 자동화 및 원격 측정 기능을 도입하여 예측 가능한 용량 계획을 가능하게 하는 자동화 및 원격 측정 기능의 도입을 가속화하는 것입니다. 표준화된 API와 모델 기반 관리에 투자하고, 이기종 환경 전반에 걸쳐 운영상의 레버리지를 확보해야 합니다.

본 분석에 사용된 조사 방법, 1차 및 2차 데이터, 검증 절차, 분석 프레임워크, 방법론적 엄격성 및 데이터 무결성 설명

본 조사의 접근 방식은 삼각측량법을 이용한 1차 인터뷰, 대상별 기술 검토 및 2차 자료 분석을 결합하여 견고하고 재현성 있는 조사 결과를 보장합니다. 1차 데이터에는 실제 우선순위, 과제, 조달 방법론(휴리스틱)을 파악하기 위해 여러 산업 분야의 네트워크 설계자, 조달 책임자, 운영 관리자를 대상으로 한 구조화된 인터뷰가 포함됩니다. 이러한 정성적 데이터는 기술 백서, 제품 릴리즈 노트, 공개된 규제 문서와 상호 검증을 통해 기능을 컴플라이언스 및 지속가능성 요건과 일치시키는 데 사용되었습니다.

기술 동향, 요금 체계, 시장 세분화, 지역 동향 및 네트워크 인프라 이해관계자의 전략적 이슈를 연결하는 요약

앞서 언급한 분석 결과, 네트워크 스위치에 대한 투자를 전략적 사업 목표와 일치시킬 수 있는 보다 명확한 로드맵이 도출되었습니다. 기술 혁신과 운영상의 요구가 결합되어 프로그래머빌리티, 텔레메트리, 에너지 효율성이 최우선 선택 기준이 되는 반면, 관세 및 지역 공급 동향은 실용적인 제약으로 작용하여 유연한 아키텍처와 공급처 다변화의 가치를 높이고 있습니다.

자주 묻는 질문

  • 네트워크 스위치 시장 규모는 어떻게 변화할 것으로 예상되나요?
  • 네트워크 스위치의 역할은 어떻게 진화하고 있나요?
  • 2025년 미국의 관세 조치가 네트워크 스위치 공급망에 미치는 영향은 무엇인가요?
  • 네트워크 스위치 시장의 기술 혁신은 어떤 방향으로 진행되고 있나요?
  • 네트워크 스위치 시장의 지역별 전략적 우선순위는 어떻게 되나요?
  • 네트워크 스위치 시장의 주요 기업은 어디인가요?

목차

제1장 서문

제2장 조사 방법

제3장 주요 요약

제4장 시장 개요

제5장 시장 인사이트

제6장 미국 관세의 누적 영향(2025년)

제7장 AI의 누적 영향(2025년)

제8장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 유형별

제9장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 기술별

제10장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 스위칭 포트별

제11장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 용도별

제12장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 유통 채널별

제13장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 고객 규모별

제14장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 최종 사용자별

제15장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 지역별

제16장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 그룹별

제17장 네트워크 스위치 시장 : 국가별

제18장 미국의 네트워크 스위치 시장

제19장 중국의 네트워크 스위치 시장

제20장 경쟁 구도

AJY

The Network Switches Market was valued at USD 37.60 billion in 2025 and is projected to grow to USD 40.53 billion in 2026, with a CAGR of 8.27%, reaching USD 65.61 billion by 2032.

KEY MARKET STATISTICS
Base Year [2025] USD 37.60 billion
Estimated Year [2026] USD 40.53 billion
Forecast Year [2032] USD 65.61 billion
CAGR (%) 8.27%

A concise strategic introduction outlining the evolving role of network switches in enabling resilient, high-performance enterprise and cloud-native infrastructures

The modern networking environment places network switches at the intersection of compute, storage, and user experience, making them strategic assets rather than mere connectivity appliances. Rising bandwidth requirements, the distribution of workloads across cloud and edge locations, and the intensification of security and compliance obligations have elevated the role of switching infrastructure in enabling application performance, operational efficiency, and cost-effective scaling.

Decision-makers confront a heterogeneous technology landscape that blends legacy switching deployments with cloud-native topologies and disaggregated hardware. Consequently, procurement and architecture choices increasingly prioritize programmability, observability, and lifecycle economics. As a result, network teams must balance short-term operational continuity with medium-term initiatives such as automation, telemetry-driven troubleshooting, and energy-efficient hardware refreshes.

Understanding these dynamics is essential because switching choices ripple across network design, server utilization, and application user experience. In practice, this requires a more integrated dialogue between network architects, security teams, and infrastructure procurement to ensure switch selection aligns with application SLAs, sustainability targets, and evolving compliance requirements. The following sections unpack the transformative forces, tariff impacts, segmentation nuances, regional considerations, vendor dynamics, recommended actions, methodology, and concluding implications that collectively inform an actionable strategy for network switch planning and execution.

How technological innovation, edge computing proliferation, and sustainability mandates are reshaping network switch architecture and deployment models

Three converging forces are driving transformational shifts in how organizations design, acquire, and operate network switches: technological innovation, deployment topology changes, and regulatory and sustainability pressures. First, programmability and software-defined networking constructs have moved from adjunct features to core selection criteria. As a consequence, switches are evaluated for their API maturity, support for open standards, and compatibility with orchestration platforms that accelerate automation and reduce mean time to repair.

Second, the proliferation of edge computing and microservices architectures has redistributed traffic patterns, requiring switches that support flexible segmentation, low-latency forwarding, and distributed telemetry. This redistribution compels network teams to adopt hierarchical designs that preserve centralized control while enabling localized decision-making at the edge.

Third, environmental policies and energy cost optimization have increased scrutiny on power efficiency, cooling requirements, and device lifecycle emissions. Organizations now weigh the total cost of ownership alongside procurement price, leading to procurement strategies that favor energy-efficient silicon and modular upgradeability.

Together, these forces create a landscape where hardware agility, operational telemetry, and sustainability credentials are as important as raw port density. Firms that align procurement, architecture, and operational processes with these shifts will achieve stronger resilience, faster deployment cycles, and clearer pathing for future upgrades.

Assessing the cumulative consequences of U.S. tariff measures in 2025 on supply chains, pricing dynamics, and procurement strategies for network switches

Tariff measures announced or implemented by the United States in 2025 exert a layered impact across global supply chains, cost structures, and strategic sourcing decisions for network switching equipment. At the supply level, tariffing increases the landed cost of components and finished goods imported into the U.S., prompting several immediate reactions: procurement teams revisit existing supplier contracts to re-negotiate pricing and delivery terms, sourcing managers evaluate alternative manufacturing locations, and inventory policies are adjusted to mitigate near-term price volatility.

These changes have downstream implications for pricing and procurement cycles without altering the underlying technological imperatives that drive switch selection. Purchasing organizations respond by extending equipment lifecycles where feasible and prioritizing modular architectures that permit incremental upgrades rather than wholesale replacements. In parallel, vendors accelerate local assembly or nearshoring strategies to reduce exposure to tariff differentials and to preserve competitive pricing for large enterprise and service provider customers.

Operationally, increased tariff-driven costs amplify the importance of total cost of ownership analyses that factor in energy consumption, maintenance intervals, and software feature longevity. Consequently, buyers are placing greater emphasis on contractual protections such as price adjustments, longer warranty periods, and software licensing flexibility to offset tariff-related cost pressures. Finally, tariffs influence vendor roadmaps: suppliers prioritize features and product configurations that minimize dependence on tariff-sensitive components while enhancing software differentiation to justify pricing resilience.

Segment-driven perspectives revealing how device types, switching technologies, port configurations, applications, channels, customer sizes, and end-users diverge

A segment-focused lens clarifies where demand, differentiation, and operational priorities converge. Based on Type, the market is studied across Fixed Port Switches and Modular Switches, with Fixed Port Switches further analyzed across Managed Switches, Smart Switches, and Unmanaged Switches; this distinction underscores trade-offs between simplicity, manageability, and upgrade flexibility. Based on Technology, the landscape is examined through Ethernet Switches, Fibre Channel Switches, MPLS Switches, and Optical Packet Switches, each serving distinct latency, throughput, and fabric requirements that influence application fit and integration complexity.

Based on Switching Port, deployments span Fast Ethernet switches, Gigabit network switches, and Ten-gigabit network switches, reflecting a performance continuum that maps to edge, aggregation, and core roles. Based on Application, the analysis differentiates Data Center and Non-Data Center contexts, since data center switches emphasize high-density, low-latency fabrics while non-data center environments prioritize resiliency, manageability, and cost-efficiency. Based on Distribution Channel, buying behavior diverges between Offline and Online channels, with channel selection shaping lead times, support models, and bundled services.

Based on Customer Size, needs are split between Enterprises and Households, with Enterprises further segmented into Large Enterprises and SMEs; large organizations prioritize scale, lifecycle support, and vendor partnerships, while SMEs focus on simplicity, total cost, and rapid deployment. Based on End-user, requirements vary across BFSI, Education, Energy & Utilities, Government, Healthcare, IT & Telecommunications, Manufacturing & Industrial, Retail, and Transportation & Logistics, each vertical imposing specific security, compliance, and availability constraints that should drive switch feature prioritization and procurement strategies.

Regional strategic priorities and competitive dynamics across the Americas, Europe Middle East & Africa, and Asia-Pacific shaping network switch adoption and support

Regional dynamics materially affect adoption pace, procurement strategy, and partner ecosystems. In the Americas, decision cycles are heavily influenced by enterprise consolidation, cloud migration trajectories, and a mature channel ecosystem that supports bundled services and financing. Buyers in this region place premium value on vendor support SLAs, integration services, and solutions that accelerate cloud connectivity and hybrid operations.

In Europe, Middle East & Africa, regulatory complexity, data sovereignty considerations, and a mix of mature and emerging markets create a patchwork of adoption profiles. Network switch procurement in this region often prioritizes compliance capabilities, energy efficiency driven by regional sustainability targets, and flexible service contracts to address a wide range of enterprise maturities.

In Asia-Pacific, accelerating digitalization, dense urban deployments, and rapid expansion of hyperscale data centers drive demand for high-throughput switching and scalable architectures. Manufacturing hubs and regional supply chains also influence where vendors locate production and assembly. Across all regions, local service availability, partner enablement, and regional engineering presence are decisive factors that affect vendor selection and total lifecycle costs.

Competitive intelligence and corporate strategy insights illuminating vendor differentiation, partnerships, M&A activity, and innovation trajectories in the switch market

Corporate strategies among leading switch providers converge on a few strategic priorities: software differentiation, ecosystem partnerships, and modular hardware roadmaps. Vendors are investing in richer telemetry, native automation hooks, and software feature sets that permit value capture beyond hardware sales. This shift enables suppliers to extend customer relationships through subscriptions, managed services, and feature-driven licensing while smoothing hardware revenue cycles.

Partnerships with cloud providers, systems integrators, and silicon vendors are central to competitive positioning. Through these alliances, vendors can validate interoperability, accelerate time-to-deployment for large projects, and co-develop reference architectures that reduce buyer risk. Moreover, M&A activity and targeted acquisitions of software companies have become a primary route for incumbents to ramp up capabilities in orchestration, analytics, and security integration.

From a go-to-market perspective, successful companies emphasize verticalized solutions and flexible commercial models that accommodate financing, managed services, and consumption-based terms. After-sales support, professional services, and a global partner network remain critical differentiators, particularly for enterprise customers with complex, multi-site deployments. Finally, vendors that can demonstrate clear sustainability credentials and transparent component sourcing gain an edge with procurement teams under tighter environmental scrutiny.

Actionable operational and strategic recommendations for industry leaders to accelerate deployment, optimize total cost, and future-proof switching estates

Leaders should prioritize three actionable initiatives to secure network performance and future flexibility. First, implement a technology governance process that aligns switch procurement with application SLAs, security baseline requirements, and sustainability goals; this governance should mandate cross-functional sign-off from network, security, and procurement teams to ensure balanced decision-making. Second, accelerate deployment of automation and telemetry capabilities that reduce manual configuration risk and enable proactive capacity planning; invest in standardized APIs and model-driven management to gain operational leverage across heterogeneous estates.

Third, diversify supply risk by qualifying alternative manufacturing and assembly options, and negotiate contractual protections that include longer warranty terms and flexible licensing arrangements to hedge against tariff and component volatility. Parallel to these steps, prioritize modular hardware platforms that allow incremental capacity upgrades and power-optimized line cards to improve lifecycle economics.

Finally, adopt a vendor evaluation framework that weights long-term software roadmaps, partner ecosystems, and regional support capabilities above one-time hardware pricing. This approach reduces total operational risk and positions organizations to exploit emerging features such as intent-based networking and integrated security without disruptive forklift upgrades.

Methodological rigor and data hygiene describing the research approach, primary and secondary inputs, validation steps, and analytical frameworks used in this analysis

The research approach combines triangulated primary interviews, targeted technical reviews, and secondary document analysis to ensure robust, reproducible findings. Primary inputs include structured interviews with network architects, procurement leads, and operations managers across multiple industries to capture real-world priorities, pain points, and procurement heuristics. These qualitative inputs were cross-validated with technical whitepapers, product release notes, and publicly available regulatory documentation to map features to compliance and sustainability requirements.

Analytical rigor is maintained through a layered validation process: inputs are benchmarked against vendor technical specifications and third-party interoperability test results, followed by scenario-based stress testing to assess architectural fit under varying traffic, latency, and redundancy constraints. Assumptions are explicitly documented and sensitivity-tested to identify which variables most materially affect procurement choices and lifecycle economics.

To minimize bias, multiple analyst reviewers evaluated vendor claims and interview summaries, applying a consistent scoring rubric for attributes such as automation maturity, power efficiency, and support coverage. Finally, the methodology emphasizes transparency, and the appendices include interview protocols, validation matrices, and a glossary of technical terms to support reproducibility and client-specific customization.

Concluding synthesis connecting technological trends, tariffs, segmentation, regional dynamics, and strategic imperatives for network infrastructure stakeholders

The net effect of the preceding analysis is a clearer roadmap for aligning network switch investments with strategic business objectives. Technological innovation and operational imperatives are converging to make programmability, telemetry, and energy efficiency top-tier selection criteria, while tariffs and regional supply dynamics introduce practical constraints that heighten the value of flexible architectures and diversified sourcing.

Segmentation analysis reveals that one-size-fits-all procurement is increasingly untenable: data center fabrics require different performance and manageability characteristics than campus or edge deployments, and vertical-specific compliance demands necessitate tailored feature sets. Regionally, buyers must weigh supplier presence, support models, and regulatory frameworks when making multi-region deployment decisions.

In sum, network switch selection is no longer a tactical refresh decision but a strategic infrastructure choice with implications for operations, sustainability, and vendor relationships. Organizations that adopt governance, invest in automation, and proactively manage supply risk will be better positioned to extract long-term value from their switching estates while maintaining agility to adopt future innovations.

Table of Contents

1. Preface

  • 1.1. Objectives of the Study
  • 1.2. Market Definition
  • 1.3. Market Segmentation & Coverage
  • 1.4. Years Considered for the Study
  • 1.5. Currency Considered for the Study
  • 1.6. Language Considered for the Study
  • 1.7. Key Stakeholders

2. Research Methodology

  • 2.1. Introduction
  • 2.2. Research Design
    • 2.2.1. Primary Research
    • 2.2.2. Secondary Research
  • 2.3. Research Framework
    • 2.3.1. Qualitative Analysis
    • 2.3.2. Quantitative Analysis
  • 2.4. Market Size Estimation
    • 2.4.1. Top-Down Approach
    • 2.4.2. Bottom-Up Approach
  • 2.5. Data Triangulation
  • 2.6. Research Outcomes
  • 2.7. Research Assumptions
  • 2.8. Research Limitations

3. Executive Summary

  • 3.1. Introduction
  • 3.2. CXO Perspective
  • 3.3. Market Size & Growth Trends
  • 3.4. Market Share Analysis, 2025
  • 3.5. FPNV Positioning Matrix, 2025
  • 3.6. New Revenue Opportunities
  • 3.7. Next-Generation Business Models
  • 3.8. Industry Roadmap

4. Market Overview

  • 4.1. Introduction
  • 4.2. Industry Ecosystem & Value Chain Analysis
    • 4.2.1. Supply-Side Analysis
    • 4.2.2. Demand-Side Analysis
    • 4.2.3. Stakeholder Analysis
  • 4.3. Porter's Five Forces Analysis
  • 4.4. PESTLE Analysis
  • 4.5. Market Outlook
    • 4.5.1. Near-Term Market Outlook (0-2 Years)
    • 4.5.2. Medium-Term Market Outlook (3-5 Years)
    • 4.5.3. Long-Term Market Outlook (5-10 Years)
  • 4.6. Go-to-Market Strategy

5. Market Insights

  • 5.1. Consumer Insights & End-User Perspective
  • 5.2. Consumer Experience Benchmarking
  • 5.3. Opportunity Mapping
  • 5.4. Distribution Channel Analysis
  • 5.5. Pricing Trend Analysis
  • 5.6. Regulatory Compliance & Standards Framework
  • 5.7. ESG & Sustainability Analysis
  • 5.8. Disruption & Risk Scenarios
  • 5.9. Return on Investment & Cost-Benefit Analysis

6. Cumulative Impact of United States Tariffs 2025

7. Cumulative Impact of Artificial Intelligence 2025

8. Network Switches Market, by Type

  • 8.1. Fixed Port Switches
    • 8.1.1. Managed Switches
    • 8.1.2. Smart Switches
    • 8.1.3. Unmanaged Switches
  • 8.2. Modular Switches

9. Network Switches Market, by Technology

  • 9.1. Ethernet Switches
  • 9.2. Fibre Channel Switches
  • 9.3. MPLS (Multiprotocol Label Switching) Switches
  • 9.4. Optical Packet Switches

10. Network Switches Market, by Switching Port

  • 10.1. Fast Ethernet switches (FS)
  • 10.2. Gigabit network switches (GS or JGS)
  • 10.3. Ten-gigabit network switches (GSS)

11. Network Switches Market, by Application

  • 11.1. Data Center
  • 11.2. Non-Data Center

12. Network Switches Market, by Distribution Channel

  • 12.1. Offline
  • 12.2. Online

13. Network Switches Market, by Customer Size

  • 13.1. Enterprises
    • 13.1.1. Large Enterprises
    • 13.1.2. SMEs
  • 13.2. Households

14. Network Switches Market, by End-user

  • 14.1. BFSI (Banking, Financial Services & Insurance)
  • 14.2. Education
  • 14.3. Energy & Utilities
  • 14.4. Government
  • 14.5. Healthcare
  • 14.6. IT & Telecommunications
  • 14.7. Manufacturing & Industrial
  • 14.8. Retail
  • 14.9. Transportation & Logistics

15. Network Switches Market, by Region

  • 15.1. Americas
    • 15.1.1. North America
    • 15.1.2. Latin America
  • 15.2. Europe, Middle East & Africa
    • 15.2.1. Europe
    • 15.2.2. Middle East
    • 15.2.3. Africa
  • 15.3. Asia-Pacific

16. Network Switches Market, by Group

  • 16.1. ASEAN
  • 16.2. GCC
  • 16.3. European Union
  • 16.4. BRICS
  • 16.5. G7
  • 16.6. NATO

17. Network Switches Market, by Country

  • 17.1. United States
  • 17.2. Canada
  • 17.3. Mexico
  • 17.4. Brazil
  • 17.5. United Kingdom
  • 17.6. Germany
  • 17.7. France
  • 17.8. Russia
  • 17.9. Italy
  • 17.10. Spain
  • 17.11. China
  • 17.12. India
  • 17.13. Japan
  • 17.14. Australia
  • 17.15. South Korea

18. United States Network Switches Market

19. China Network Switches Market

20. Competitive Landscape

  • 20.1. Market Concentration Analysis, 2025
    • 20.1.1. Concentration Ratio (CR)
    • 20.1.2. Herfindahl Hirschman Index (HHI)
  • 20.2. Recent Developments & Impact Analysis, 2025
  • 20.3. Product Portfolio Analysis, 2025
  • 20.4. Benchmarking Analysis, 2025
  • 20.5. ALE International
  • 20.6. Allied Telesis, Inc.
  • 20.7. Amphenol Corporation
  • 20.8. ANTAIRA TECHNOLOGIES, LLC
  • 20.9. Arista Networks, Inc.
  • 20.10. Axis Communications AB by Canon Inc.
  • 20.11. B & H Foto & Electronics Corp
  • 20.12. Broadcom Inc.
  • 20.13. Buffalo Americas, Inc.
  • 20.14. Cisco Systems, Inc.
  • 20.15. Comark Technology Co.,Ltd.
  • 20.16. D-Link Systems, Inc.
  • 20.17. Dell Technologies Inc.
  • 20.18. Emerson Electric Co.
  • 20.19. Ependion (formerly Beijer Group)
  • 20.20. Extreme Networks, Inc.
  • 20.21. Fortinet, Inc.
  • 20.22. FS.COM
  • 20.23. Fujitsu Limited
  • 20.24. Grandstream Networks, Inc.
  • 20.25. Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company
  • 20.26. Honeywell International Inc.
  • 20.27. Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
  • 20.28. LANTRONIX, INC.
  • 20.29. Larch Networks Ltd.
  • 20.30. LINKOH
  • 20.31. Linksys Holdings, Inc.
  • 20.32. MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED
  • 20.33. Monoprice, Inc.
  • 20.34. NEC Corporation
  • 20.35. NETGEAR Inc.
  • 20.36. New H3C Technologies Co., Ltd.
  • 20.37. Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation
  • 20.38. Nvidia Corporation
  • 20.39. Omnitron Systems Technology, Inc.
  • 20.40. Perle Systems Limited
  • 20.41. Pica8 Software Inc.
  • 20.42. PLANET Technology Corporation
  • 20.43. QNAP Systems, Inc.
  • 20.44. SALZ Automation GmbH
  • 20.45. SENAO NETWORKS INC.
  • 20.46. Siemens AG
  • 20.47. SonicWall, Inc.
  • 20.48. STORDIS GmbH
  • 20.49. TRENDnet, Inc.
  • 20.50. VVDN Technologies
샘플 요청 목록
0 건의 상품을 선택 중
목록 보기
전체삭제