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Is Your Infrastructure Leaking Money?
reprinted with permission from HP
Whoever
said "don't sweat the small stuff" never managed an IT
infrastructure—and certainly never during turbulent economic times.
According to independent
analyst Forrester Research, global IT purchases in 2008 will grow by
only 6 percent, versus 12 percent growth in 2007. So, although you're
already doing more with less, it's time to do even more with even less.
Investing in management
solutions to control infrastructure costs is one way to meet that
challenge. Effective infrastructure management tools can lead to
significant savings over time and help position your business to take
full advantage of the upside when the economic tide turns.
Here are five ways effective
infrastructure management can help keep you fighting lean:
1. Curb Power Use
The costs of cooling your data center can be as much as (or more than)
the cost of powering its IT equipment. In fact, a study by HP and the
Uptime Institute suggests that, in a majority of the world's data
centers, 60 to 70 percent of power use is associated with cooling IT
equipment. Management
solutions that monitor, measure, regulate, cap and otherwise optimize
power usage on an ongoing basis can keep power savings flowing long
term. By moving compute power where it's needed, when it's needed, you
can cut operating expenses in your data center and help keep the data
center energy crisis at bay. And, sometimes, plans for costly data
center expansions or new construction can be postponed or even
abandoned. 2.
Prevent Problems—or Resolve Them Faster
With remote management, IT administrators can discover, diagnose and fix
a problem on a server halfway around the world, saving travel costs,
wear and tear, and time.
Some solutions help IT
employees collaborate and train more efficiently, too. For example, a
database expert in Taiwan might collaborate with a storage guru in
Singapore to work on a Hong Kong-based server–with both controlling the
server in real time. And, with recording and playback, other IT
employees can see how the problem was fixed, click by click.
3. Continuously Analyze &
Optimize Server Workloads, Virtual & Physical
Capacity planning can be a complex, time-consuming and
resource-consuming exercise if you're using a patched-together
spreadsheet to get the job done.
Today's sophisticated
capacity-planning software can monitor a mixed physical and virtual
environment with fluid workloads, real time. Look for a solution that
can handle complexity: a combination of large and small servers, blades,
virtual machines, hard partitions, variable workloads and global demand.
You also want a solution that works continuously behind the scenes,
analyzing each server's utilization, performance and power consumption.
And it should incorporate significant quantities of historical data to
help you make on-the-fly decisions.
4. Automate Deployment &
Provisioning
Hardware investments might be slowing, but that doesn't mean they'll
stop. Deploying and provisioning new systems is a big time drain that
can keep people away from more value-added tasks.
Look for management solutions
that automate deployment and provisioning with a simple drag-and-drop
interface; instant, out-of-the-box functionality; and integrated storage
and server management. Features such as auto-discovery, on-the-fly
server configuration and scheduling can allow your team to deploy dozens
of servers in minutes.
5. Increase Productivity
with Unified Infrastructure Management
Unified infrastructure management software often results in all of the
benefits cited above, plus the natural result of increasing
server-to-administrator ratios. In fact, an IDC study of 12 enterprises
using HP Systems Insight Manager, a management software solution, found
that the companies were able to nearly double the number of servers
managed per administrator, increasing the sever-to-administrator ratio
by an average of 98 percent.
With the right
infrastructure management solution, your IT staff can accomplish
numerous tasks–decreasing deployment times, speeding time to problem
resolution and balancing workloads, just to name a few—using a single
console across multiple servers, both physical and virtual.
Smart Investment Can Be
an Umbrella in Stormy Times
Investing in management software to control infrastructure costs is
always important, never more so than during an economic crunch.
A recent IDC study found
that HP Insight Control, which offers core management functionality for
the full server lifecycle, provides positive financial benefits across
the board, with three-year projected return on investment starting at
more than 400 percent and payback periods of less than 10 months.
Not only can smart management
tool investments help you pull through an economic downturn, but they
can put you in lean, fighting shape for the inevitable recovery. |