Doing more with less: the state of today's data center
Nearly every initiative data center managers pursue today has a common goal: getting more work done with fewer resources, according to Symantec's second annual "State of the Data Center" report.
Data center managers are being asked to accomplish more and reduce costs, and are responding with various initiatives, from server virtualization and consolidation to automation of routine tasks and cross-training of IT staffs stretched increasingly thin.
IT budgets are still rising at some companies, but may not be keeping pace with the increasing amount of work data centers must perform, Symantec says in a report based on interviews with managers, directors and vice presidents at 644 companies in the United States, Canada, Brazil and Mexico. The companies range in size from 5,000 to more than 50,000 employees, and the median company has 500 IT employees and between 30 and 49 data centers.
"Expectations are rising faster than the budgets," says Marty Ward, director of product marketing for Symantec's data protection group. "The budgets are still rising -- which we found interesting -- but they're not rising dramatically."
Half of the companies say they anticipate funding increases over the next 12 months, while 34% say the budget will stay the same and 16% expect decreases. With a deepening recession, Symantec says "one would expect that this finding will change as companies begin to feel the full effect of the financial crisis."
Most of the budget increases are being taken up by costs such as power, infrastructure and facilities, while discretionary spending is taking a hit, Ward says. Data center operators said their top priority was reducing costs, while the goals of improving responsiveness, service levels and availability were secondary.
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