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How to reduce the burden on your IT budget

How to reduce the burden on your IT budget

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 06 Apr 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Info-Tech recommends 18 tactics to help IT managers cut server and storage costs using a new methodology called Cost-to-Serve.

Servers and storage services take up a “significant portion” of most IT department budgets, according to Info-Tech Research Group Inc.

The London-based firm released a report outlining specific techniques IT managers can use to reduce server and storage costs and improve performance of technologies already in place.

The report, “Reducing Cost-to-Serve: Server & Storage Services,” provides 18 recommendations organized according to short-, medium- and long-term goals.

Immediate tactics include wrapping up in-progress server consolidation projects, applying “quick-fixes” to cooling costs and extending the life of servers.

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“For organizations that have not started to virtualize, do not replace old servers before their useful life is over. If network bandwidth or storage throughput is bottlenecked, but the CPU operates at less than 80 per cent utilization, then this server does not yet need to be replaced,” states the report.

Another short-term suggestion is “removing extended warranties and maintenance agreements on non-critical servers,” which can save $700 to $800 per server, according to Info-Tech.

Mid-term tactics focus on hardware purchases and vendor contracts.

Recommendations include purchasing equipment that is “good enough” for business needs and opting for refurbished hardware that can save “up to 80 per cent of the price of new gear.”

Other mid-term suggestions include redeploying mid-life servers, right-sizing IT equipment and using a storage area network.

“A SAN (storage area network) extends the useful life of servers as it allows for rapid migration of data and applications to new servers and reduces the risk of data loss from failed disk drives on aging servers. Use Host Bus Adapters (HBAs) to offload CPU file processing,” states the report.

Nine long-term tactics are also presented, but unlike the other techniques, they involve upfront costs. “These savings may be interpreted as cost avoidance rather than actual reduction,” Info-Tech points out.

The tactic most often overlooked by IT departments is purchasing refurbished equipment for servers, networks and workstations, said Jennifer Perrier-Knox, senior research analyst at Info-Tech.

According to a recent Info-Tech survey, 68 per cent of IT respondents have not considered refurbished gear as a cost-cutting opportunity.

“That was a surprise because there are excellent deals to be had from vendors who sell refurbished equipment. Some stuff hasn’t even come out of the box and these things are at a 50 per cent discount,” said Perrier-Knox.

Another technique enterprises tend to ignore is downsizing the application portfolio, she pointed out. Enterprises have so many applications and a lot are redundant and some aren’t used very often, she said.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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