Enterprises considering an IT consolidation strategy must ensure that
consolidation of systems management tools and infrastructure policies and
procedures are included in plans.
To do otherwise can offset the benefits achievable through IT consolidation.
While the business impact of converting end users from one application to
another is easy to understand, the consequences of changing the underlying IT
infrastructure platform will be much less apparent.
Operational processes and procedures refined over many years and left to
mature in a production environment will need to be transplanted to provide an
equivalent set of services in completely new surroundings.
Where IT consolidation is driven by virtualisation, the challenge is often to
contain server sprawl.
Each new virtual machine needs its own set of management tools to be
dynamically configured and ongoing operational demands must be catered for.
If the risks and overheads introduced through significant manual intervention
are to be avoided, automated configuration, management and monitoring of all
operational tasks is imperative.
Consolidating IT operations to a service delivery or outsourcing provider can
help manage costs but may also impose constraints that limit future business
growth.
Companies have to ensure they get a foundation IT platform that can scale
in-line with future growth and offers granular controls down to business unit
level.
Adoption of standard operational procedures, naming conventions and
automation of manual processes can mean enterprises get the best from their
service delivery provider.
Many datacentres rely on legacy applications, which are getting increasingly
difficult to support and maintain as senior IT developers retire. IT departments
have several consolidation options – modernise, migrate or manage their legacy
applications.
While each option can breathe new life into ageing systems, non-invasive,
cross-platform automation and monitoring of IT workloads is the most effective
way to get applications talking to each other.
In a company buyout, finance and accounting systems are consolidated, which
usually necessitates a corresponding consolidation of IT systems.
Companies need an agile IT infrastructure to support business data
aggregation and conversion of end users to corporate applications.
Many individual mundane tasks within this exercise must be repeated many
times, especially if the organisation is complex. Automating these activities
enables companies to complete the integration of acquired companies more rapidly
and with less pain.
Users don’t have to rely any longer on an old IT operations run book or the
fading memory of a senior software developer.
Automated procedures can mean errors are dealt with more effectively,
analysing resource use and responding quickly to provision additional resources
in a virtualized environment.
Organisations seeking to rationalise business processes and procedures
through IT consolidation can similarly benefit from creating automated process
templates that map and execute functional tasks.
This workload can run repeatedly on behalf of multiple business units with
almost zero maintenance overhead and provide companies with the scalability that
can drive future business growth.
When consolidating IT, organisations need to introduce new processes,
procedures or technologies. Instead of repeating old bad habits, IT departments
can automate all workload wherever applicable from day one and not as an
afterthought.
Stefan Zeitzen is senior vice president for sales and services at UC4
Software
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