WHITE PAPER. To Insource or Outsource Your IT Infrastructure? 4 Key Considerations



Similar documents
WHITE PAPER. Top 5 Ways Managed Hosting Can Transform Your IT Operations

Brennan Whitepaper Cloud Computing Part 1 - Facts and Trivia

Datamation. 3 Ways to Move Application Development to the Cloud. Executive Brief. In This Paper

Traffic Visibility Fabric for Revenue and Differentiation in the Cloud Provider Market // White Paper

Cloud Computing; the GOOD, the BAD and the BEAUTIFUL

Whitepaper. Cloud Computing. The facts minus the hype

Rose Business Technologies

GETTING THE MOST FROM THE CLOUD. A White Paper presented by

Using the Cloud to fill the void between the business and the IT Department

THE CLASSIC DILEMMA: INTRANET VS. CLOUD

Considerations in Using Managed IT Services. Executive Guide #12 IT Services: Use In-House Staff or Outsource?

Starting the Journey to Managed Infrastructure Services

<Insert Picture Here> Cloud Computing Inside Out

Market Maturity. Cloud Definitions

WWT View Point. Journey to the Private Cloud: Take the First Steps with FlexPod

THE SMART ALTERNATIVE TO DIY INFRASTRUCTURE OR CLOUD SERVICES. IT professionals weigh in on the pros and cons of managed cloud hosting

Starting the Journey to Managed Infrastructure Services

Commercial Software Licensing

Essential Characteristics of Cloud Computing: On-Demand Self-Service Rapid Elasticity Location Independence Resource Pooling Measured Service

Clarity in the Cloud. Defining cloud services and the strategic impact on businesses.

How To Compare The Two Cloud Computing Models

Bringing the Cloud into Focus. A Whitepaper by CMIT Solutions and Cadence Management Advisors

SMB ERP: How to Enhance the Benefits and Minimize the Burden

MANAGED SERVICES FOR NETWORKS DECISION MAKING GUIDE. Brought to you by Extreme Networks

White Paper. Enabling Sales and Distribution with the Cloud. Abstract. - Rafee Tarafdar, Subramanian Radhakrishnan (Subra)

Creative Shorts: Twelve lifecycle management principles for world-class cloud development

12090c 12090c. Is Cloud the way forward for Manufacturing Industries?

Developing SAP Enterprise Cloud Computing Strategy

HP Converged Cloud Cloud Platform Overview. Shane Pearson Vice President, Portfolio & Product Management

Simplifying Human Resource Management

THE CLOUD: PROGRESS AND POTENTIAL

Leveraging the Cloud for Smarter Development On Oilfields; What Does that Entail? Kevin Wagner, Director - Energy

NAREIM Session: Dangers and challenges of The Cloud. President, NiceNets Consulting, LLC

Cloud Computing Safe Harbor or Wild West?

Is the Time Right to Move Your Contact Center to the Cloud?

Professional Services for Cloud Management Solutions

CONVERGE APPLICATIONS, ANALYTICS, AND DATA WITH VCE AND PIVOTAL

TOP 7 THINGS Every Executive Should Know About Cloud Computing EXECUTIVE BRIEF

Delivering Real-World Total Cost of Ownership and Operational Benefits

Information Technology Outsourcing. Infrastructure and Application Outsourcing: The Reasons, Risks and Rewards. Secure-24 is a. leading provider of

How To Choose A Cloud Computing Solution

Cloud Security Panel: Real World GRC Experiences. ISACA Atlanta s 2013 Annual Geek Week

10 reasons to embrace a hybrid solution.

Who moved my cloud? Part I: Introduction to Private, Public and Hybrid clouds and smooth migration

Whitepaper. The ABC of Private Clouds. A viable option or another cloud gimmick?

The Cloud Opportunity: Italian Market 01/10/2010

Cloud Computing. The impact for IT departments and the IT professional. by Maurice van der Woude

Big Data Using Cloud Computing

Cloud vision and capabilities

WHITE PAPER OCTOBER Unified Monitoring. A Business Perspective

Cloud Computing in Banking

Cloud Computing. Bringing the Cloud into Focus

Software Defined Hybrid IT. Execute your 2020 plan

Computing in a virtual world Cloud Computing

Is the Time Right to Move Your Contact Center to the Cloud?

Hosting and cloud services both provide incremental and complementary benefits to the organization

Making Leaders Successful Every Day

Customers award top satisfaction scores to IBM System x x86 servers. August 2014 TBR T EC H N O LO G Y B U S I N ES S R ES EAR C H, I N C.

IT Services. We re the IT in OrganIsaTion. Large Organisations

Cloud computing means happier customers

THE QUEST FOR A CLOUD INTEGRATION STRATEGY

THE POWER OF THE CLOUD IS CLOSER THAN YOU THINK. Michael Lee Aaron Saposnik SWC Technology Partners

Cloud Architecture and Strategy: Critical Success Factors

Unlocking potential with SAP S/4HANA

Elastic Private Clouds

CLOUD COMPUTING MEANS BUSINESS

IBM Software Cloud service delivery and management

Infrastructure as a Service: Accelerating Time to Profitable New Revenue Streams

<Insert Picture Here> Enterprise Cloud Computing: What, Why and How

END TO END DATA CENTRE SOLUTIONS COMPANY PROFILE

Cloud Computing Overview

Elevate your analytics with SAS in the cloud

VMware Hybrid Cloud. Accelerate Your Time to Value

Methods and Practices: Cloud in Retail

Fast IT: Accelerate Your Business

Hybrid Cloud Architecture: How to Streamline Hybrid Cloud Migration

Kent State University s Cloud Strategy

Technology. Accenture Data Center Services

Achieving Business Value with Avanade s Application and Infrastructure Managed Services

Cloud Computing in a Regulated Environment

System x x86 servers from Lenovo achieve top customer satisfaction scores. January 2015 TBR T EC H N O LO G Y B U S I N ES S R ES EAR C H, I N C.

ShipTek 2009 Conference IT Revolution in Maritime Industry

Transform your customer relationships. Avanade Enterprise CRM Solutions

IT Service Management aus der Cloud

Quantium captures new niche in data analytics market

IT is Moving to the Cloud. Are you Ready?

Always On Infrastructure for Software as a Ser vice

White Paper on CLOUD COMPUTING

How To Evaluate Saas And Cloud Solutions

Array Secure Mail Solution

Services Providers. Ivan Soto

The Production Cloud

Taming IT Management Chaos

Customer Engagement & The Cloud

SaaS, PaaS & TaaS. By: Raza Usmani

I D C T E C H N O L O G Y S P O T L I G H T. F l e x i b l e Capacity: A " Z e r o C a p i t a l " Platform w ith On- P r emise Ad va n t a g e s

Copyright 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Trends in HR-technology + tips regarding the make or buy decision

Transcription:

WHITE PAPER To Insource or Outsource Your IT Infrastructure? 4 Key Considerations

[ To Insource or Outsource Your IT Infrastructure? 4 Key Considerations ] 1 When it comes to technology, business and IT leaders are taking a hard look at the current status quo and finding it wanting. Today, many organizations find themselves asking why they choose to purchase and maintain costly servers, storage, networking and other IT infrastructure, when in just a few years time, much of it will be outdated. They also find themselves wondering if the cost and time spent hiring IT personnel to keep the lights on could be more strategically applied to support core business growth. These queries inevitably lead to the one decision at the center of these concerns: Should organizations be in the business of technology, or in the business of serving their customers and creating value for their shareholders? This is not a new dilemma, but advancements in the technology landscape are changing the answer. If you look at the big picture, IT as a whole is not inherently strategic. Individual technologies can be, but companies benefit little from owning their own infrastructure. On top of that, finding, hiring and retaining scarce IT talent presents a major challenge for time and resource-constrained enterprises. Given these realities, getting rid of in-house IT altogether seems like the simple answer. However, that thinking is unrealistic. Organizations that have invested millions in their IT infrastructure cannot simply walk away from those investments, nor should they. The fact remains that not every IT supported function, service, or application can or should be outsourced either to a third-party hosting provider, or the public cloud. However, whether you are a rapidly growing company that needs the flexibility to scale on demand, or an established enterprise that needs to respond to business disruption via technologies like Big Data, mobile or cloud, all organizations want to deploy IT strategies that can deliver more with less. That means the decision to outsource comes down to evaluating your current technology needs and capabilities, and contrasting those against future requirements all set against the backdrop of your overall business strategy. The goal is to figure out which functions are truly core and should be retained and run in-house, and which are non-core and can be run, managed and maintained just as effectively by a third-party. Presented here are four of the key factors to consider when evaluating whether to insource or outsource your IT infrastructure.

[ To Insource or Outsource Your IT Infrastructure? 4 Key Considerations ] 2 The 4 Key Considerations of Outsourcing IT 1. Technical Staff and Resources Unlike other occupations in the post-recession economy, demand for IT specialists has not waned. In fact, today s hyper-competitive technology landscape has increased the demand for IT talent. That means that companies big and small must vie for the same limited pool of candidates. As a result, IT skill sets have become increasingly hard to find, expensive to acquire, and difficult to retain. Also, much of what these highly-trained individuals do such as provisioning servers, configuring networks, patching operating systems, swapping out faulty drives, etc. is critical. However, thirdparty companies such as data center and managed service providers are able to deliver these services at much lower costs due to significant economies of scale and specialized expertise. Another consideration is whether or not you have the right staff to execute against your current and future business strategy. For example, many organizations are looking at cutting-edge analytics technologies such as Hadoop to help fuel gowth. Finding staff that understand the intracacies of solutions such as Hadoop-as-a-Service (HaaS), is not easy, especially when understanding that competitors are also courting the same highly sought after talent. Conversely, IT organizations need to envision the strategic projects they could tackle if they focused their resources in a different area. Outsourcing infrastructure provisioning, management, and maintenance frees up internal talent to focus on strategic business needs like rearchitecting home-grown business applications to run in the cloud. 2. Level of Support Even the best laid plans can go awry. IT architects calculate technology issues and downtime into their designs, but companies still need to evaluate what levels of IT support their business strategies require. Organizations must determine how much risk and downtime they can handle, and ensure the proper level of staff is employed to execute against their strategic company goals. For example, a high frequency trading firm on Wall Street can justify spending millions on IT specialists and infrastructure to attain a second or two of downtime per year. Supporting SharePoint or Exchange with simliar resource levels, however, would be unnecessary and excessive although that does not mean these critical business applications can be unreliable either. That is why managed service providers and their data center partners are focused on maintaining infrastructure, networking, and customer connectivity at the highest levels possible. If clients do experience application issues, infrastructure is typically the last place where problems will be found. For businesses that prefer to own their own hardware but forgo an in-house data center, on-site technical support services can act as an extension of their internal IT team. In this case, service providers can support an organization in many of the same ways a business IT team would by racking and

[ To Insource or Outsource Your IT Infrastructure? 4 Key Considerations ] 3 stacking hardware, provisioning servers, and troubleshooting. The key difference is they are engaged only as long as needed, which moves CapEx to the OpEx side of the ledger. 3. Types of Applications As discussed earlier, not every application, IT function, or service can or should be outsourced. Deciding which applications make good candidates for outsourcing can be challenging until you evaluate them from an operational and strategic point of view. Applying the lessons learned from a simple 2x2 decision matrix as developed by the consulting firm McKinsey can be a very enlightening exercise. From low to high, the vertical axis represents strategic importance, while the horizontal axis represents operational importance. If an application is strategically and operationally important, retain it in-house. If, however, an application scores low in strategic importance, then it should be outsourced. If it scores low in both, it can be eliminated. High Strategic Importance STRATEGIC ALLIANCE ELIMINATE FUNCTION / TASK RETAIN IN-HOUSE OUTSOURCE Low High Operational Importance This same line of thinking can be applied to core vs. non-core IT functions. Is your IT infrastructure strategically and operationally important? If so, then continue to own, maintain, and run the infrastructure. If not, then outsourcing it is a viable option. According to this logic, even business backbone applications like enterprise resource planning (ERP), customer relationship management (CRM), or supply chain operations can make good outsourcing candidates. These applications are mission critical, but are not typically considered core, in that they do not differentiate the business.

[ To Insource or Outsource Your IT Infrastructure? 4 Key Considerations ] 4 Further, applications that rely on skill sets or a knowledge base found only within your company s four walls, can be another key criteria for differentiating core from non-core. 4. Business Growth Strategies Today, IT is about business enablement. How a company deploys IT and engages with technology matters from accelerating new product development and opening new markets in novel ways to realigning capital, virtualizing once hard-wired processes, and trying out new ideas quickly and cost-effectively. Fortunately, the 2x2 matrix mentioned above works just as well for determining which IT functions are growth-orientated as it does for applications. Strategic and operationally important functions stay in-house, but anything else is fair game for either outsourcing or elimination. For example, application development and testing is strategic, but operationally unimportant to perform in-house, making that function an excellent outsourcing candidate for infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) or platform-as-a-service (PaaS) providers. Ultimately, these decisions are determined by a business invididual needs and outcomes. Just as fast growing companies do not typically invest in infrastructure for business reasons (i.e., a lack of capital), this same mantra is being embraced by companies in mature industries, like insurance. Mature-industry companies are increasingly focused on taking market share from their competitors. How they do this is dependent upon understanding customers in greater detail and, today, that means fielding technologies like Big Data and analytics. These cutting-edge technology projects are perfect outsourcing candidates because the skills sets needed to execute them are scarce, and the outcomes may or may not prove useful. Conclusion The ability to mix and match internal capabilities with external service providers has never been greater or more effective than it is today. Most internal IT shops simply don t have the modern data center architectures, budgets, personnel, or knowledge required to field the technologies that will propel their businesses forward. This is not to say these IT organizations are ineffective or somehow lacking, but they were architected to support the business as it was yesterday, not where it needs to go tomorrow. Gone are the one-stop-shop and one-size-fits-all offerings of just a few years ago. Companies like T5 Data Centers and Carpathia can leverage their extensive expertise and nation-wide reach to provide customers with a technological edge that most internal IT organizations cannot attain. Such partnerships are unmatched in sophistication, scope, power, scalability, and flexibility to provide organizations the features, capabilities, and reach they need to try new ideas, explore new options, and move their IT infrastructures into the 21st Century.

[ To Insource or Outsource Your IT Infrastructure? 4 Key Considerations ] 5 About Carpathia and T5 Together, Carpathia and T5 offer businesses a simplified approach to IT efficiency through top-tier managed services and flexible cloud solutions purpose-built to meet the needs of any business or mission. The companies full suite of IT services and hybrid cloud solutions, operated out of T5 s single and multi-tenant data centers nationwide, ensure that customers IT infrastructure is always operating at peak performance. Together, Carpathia and T5 deliver on-site support, incident response, hardware troubleshooting and repair, visual verification inspections, audit preparation and more, all backed by Carpathia s experienced and professional team. To learn more, visit http://t5.carpathia.com.