Guidelines for How to Plan a Next-Gen Data Center (
Page 1 of 3 )
What factors and best practices should be considered in developing a data center strategy and architecture while balancing risk, cost, quality and agility? Gartner Research analysts Donna Scott and Paul McGuckin offer their perspectives at the Gartner Data Center Conference Dec. 2 at the MGM Grand Hotel.LAS VEGASFew IT managers ever get the
opportunity to put together a well-written, well-researched strategy with
detailed architecture to build a fresh new data center.
What is most likely to happen in the real world is that a manager will inherit
an older data centerone in which the inventory increases over time due to
business initiatives, mergers and acquisitions, shadow IT, and business growth.
Then, depending upon budgetary allowances, the manager may occasionally start a
project to rationalize the value of the data centertypically driven by a large
fiscal-year savings he or she may have achieved after consolidating a bunch of
servers, thanks to virtualization software.
This scenario was reported as a typical one in a survey taken at the November
2007 Gartner Data Center Conference, where nearly three-quarters of the
attendees said they were in the process of a physical data center consolidation
project. This is still pretty much status quo today.
At the Gartner Data Center Conference Dec. 2 at the MGM
Grand Hotel, Gartner Research analysts Donna Scott and Paul McGuckin offered
their perspectives on what factors and best practices should be considered in
developing a data center strategy and architecture, while balancing risk, cost,
quality and agility.