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How does your garden grow ?

How does your garden grow ?

By:  Marty Grosh  On: 01 Nov 2008 For: CIO Canada Creator

Virtualization is taking root in datacentres across the country, but it needs the right kind of nurturing to ensure that it thrives in your IT environment. Here are some tips for developing a virtualization green thumb

The concept of virtualization has been applied to more and more information systems technologies since IBM prototyped its CP/CMS operating system in the 1960’s. Over time the technology has evolved and matured. Today, it has clearly hit a tipping point. More organizations than ever before are giving the technology a look, encouraged by the prospect of reduced costs, infrastructure optimization, and greater application rollout efficiency. So much so that the overall virtualization services market is expected to reach $11.7 billion in 2011, more than doubling its $5.5 billion value in 2006, according to IDC research.

But the notion of virtualization as a cost-saver is not universally shared. Some claim it doesn’t always live up to its promises. Yet the industry abounds in examples of successful deployments, demonstrating that with the right approach, the technology can reap benefits.

To understand the role of virtualization in the IT environment it’s important to look beyond perceptions and expectations. Decision makers may be drawn to the potential bottom-line benefits, but may not consider how the solution to one set of challenges can, in the process, create new ones. As a result, they attribute unforeseen pain points to the technology itself, not the approach.

Virtualization has the potential to help businesses overcome operational inefficiencies, but only when their IT infrastructure is ready and has the resources required to make the implementation a success. Taking a holistic approach to the technology during the planning and pre-deployment stages puts businesses in a better position to make more informed decisions about the solution and to ensure that the foundations for success are in place.

A DELICATE BALANCE

The IT ecosystem is complex. The addition of any new application or server has a ripple effect, and the implementation of virtualization is no different. The IT industry has done a great deal to educate businesses about the challenges virtualization can solve, but less to engender a deeper understanding of its impact on their IT environment.

Take server consolidation. Most agree that virtualization helps pave the way to fewer physical servers. The disconnect, however, is in what server consolidation means to the bottom line. From an objective standpoint, server virtualization and the management information it offers can provide CIOs with an optimized datacentre. For example, are all the servers, processors, licenses, and disk resources being used to full capacity? Is the system load well balanced for performance, interoperability and scalability? This is just a sample of questions businesses can answer with a virtualized datacentre.


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Marty Grosh Marty Grosh is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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