SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Infrastructure >> Data Centre

Taking over a trainwreck: Tridel's CIO speaks up

Taking over a trainwreck: Tridel's CIO speaks up

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 20 Aug 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

When life hands you a lemon, in the form of a network that's ready to fall apart, how do you make lemonade out of it? What to do when chaos reigns

Ted Maulucci got the good news and the bad news on the same day.

The CIO of Tridel Corp., one of the largest builders of residences and condominiums in the Toronto area, he’d largely been in charge of software development for the company’s 15 divisions, which range from a law firm to property management.

But in 2005 responsibility for the data centre was put into his hands.

It was not in good shape for a system running about 80 virtual servers for some 500 desktops spread across 20 locations on shared services model.

The Canadian Oxford dictionary defines chaos as “utter confusion.” That was pretty well what the affable Maulucci faced.

“I was left with a mess,” he recalls. “Just about everything imaginable was wrong with what I was given. I still had machines running Windows 95. The file servers were 90 per cent full. We had no fire suppression in our server room. One thing or another had to be upgraded.” On top of that, the nine-year Cisco core switch was past its expected lifespan and had to be upgraded.

Core switches aren’t called core for nothing, but in this case other things - like the 18-year-old air conditioner -- needed priority. Besides, switches are solid state, right? Management was told about the situation and approved his priorities. He gambled on the switch.

“We ended up winning the lottery,” he laughs, “and it did fail.” And on the day consultants were scheduled to drop in and chat about its replacement.

This isn’t a Cisco-bashing story - actually, Maulucci is very complimentary to the company for rushing to find replacement board -- but about what managers should do when suddenly faced with a chaotic situation.

Darin Stahl has faced more than a few of these. Now research stream lead for data centres at London-Ont., based Info-Tech Research, he’s been hired by a number of companies as a manager or consultant to clean up other people’s messes.

On one memorable job interview, he was asked one question: “Have you ever fired anyone?” There’s a warning signal.

“That particular place was pretty horrible,” Stahl says. It was a financial services company with a “dog’s breakfast” of platforms on outsourced mainframes and client-server systems which delivered information to brokers around the world. However, it was disorganized to the point where the network administrator “was a help desk guy three of four weeks ago.” Small wonder competitors were delivering better IT service and morale was bad. By the time Stahl got there “everybody else had been fired or never came back from lunch.”


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 2170   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

Related Content

Protecting your assets
Protecting your assetsLifecycle management is the Rodney Dangerfield of enterprise IT. A lot of the time, it just doesn’t get much respect. But if you pay it enough attention, it may have you laughing all the way to the bank.
Juniper jumps in with high performance switches
Juniper jumps in with high performance switchesIts EX switches will run on the same OS as its routers. One partner likes the end-to-end play
HP core LAN switch boasts new architecture
HP core LAN switch boasts new architectureHP may be emerging as a more formidable competitor to Cisco, which dominates the enterprise LAN switching arena. HP experienced year-over-year port growth for the second quarter more than double the industry growth rate, according to Dell’Oro Group.
Products are people, too. Wait, no they're not
whenever someone uses the term "product lifecycle management" i immediately imagine a new a&e version of biography (or maybe an it variant of the e! true ho
The Anatomy of a Pre-Analysis Cookbook – Part 2: Nuts and Bolts
arun nithyanandam -this is a series of posts, if you haven’t read the earlier ones, please read it here.the anatomy of a pre-analysis cookbook – part 1: overviewa four-part cook bookwhile every cook b
Yes, sir, that's my data
when i decided to tell my friends this week that my wife is three months’ pregnant with our first child, i also unintentionally conducted a bit of a social experiment.although in most ca

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.