Your Software Licenses Are Lonely

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June 2, 2009, 12:27 PM —  Tideway — 

Everyone realizes that companies today are doing everything they can to cut costs. From layoffs to forced furloughs and salary reductions, large and small firms alike are scrambling to find a way to wring out just a few more dollars in savings. For IT departments, that often translates into delayed projects and purchasing freezes – which can have a serious impact on innovation. The ultimate goal is to ensure IT can continue to support business-as-usual services and provide room to innovate without growing in size and cost. But while many companies are embarking on what they believe to be cost cutting initiatives, they’re actually missing a big chunk of what they could save.

More than 4.4 million jobs have been eliminated in the U.S. since December 2007. While that represents a cost savings in terms of headcount – what about the cost savings in terms of IT assets? The truth is that many companies that were forced to make employees redundant to meet cost cutting mandates probably don’t realize they have a serious mismatch between IT assets they previously purchased and staff that are still around to use them.

Typically about 5 percent of hardware is orphaned in corporate data centers. Each of those servers has associated administration, software license, facilities, power and cooling costs. Perhaps more startling, Forrester Research estimates that more than one in five businesses that have had software audits are holding on to unused software, and the average company spends 10 percent of its software maintenance payments on shelfware. Add these up and suddenly we’re talking about real money.

Most businesses have historically relied on tribal knowledge and ad hoc IT record-keeping to track hardware assets and software licenses. But when organizations leave crucial information like this in the hands of a few individuals, orphaned machines and unused licenses can slowly pile up, and security can be jeopardized. And when redundancies hit, you may find even that ad hoc tribal knowledge walking out the door.

Any IT cost cutting program should include software license management to identify and eliminate unused licenses in the data center. In fact, most firms could quickly reduce software maintenance costs by around 5 percent simply by identifying over-licensing and eliminating extraneous product instances. Not surprisingly, license management and optimization are now becoming much more attractive to IT executives as a means to lower overall software spend and reduce compliance risks.

Before a company can embark on a software license management program, they first need to understand what is actually being used in the environment. That may seem difficult in these challenging times, particularly for a company that has gone through major redundancies.

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Comments

Audits Reduce IT Overhead

Richard,

Great article.

Internal auditing massively reduces technology overhead and costs on several different levels.

- Auditing discovers weaknesses in your infrastructure that can be costly to fix, if left undiscovered

- Auditing reduces the time, effort, and resources required to maintain your IT production environment

- Auditing discovers surpluses of software licensing

- Auditing reduces liability, from 3rd party auditors like the Business Software Alliance and SIIA.

- Auditing dramatically increases the effective response time to license inquires

- Auditing reduces the expense associated with the defense of federal lawsuits, in the even your organization is found to be using software with our proper license documentation

Software license compliance is vital to the security and prosperity of your business. Software copyright, piracy and compliance are strictly governed by federal law. And that law dramatically favors the best interests of software companies, almost entirely.

My group released a 1 minute video that covers this very issue earlier this week:

http://www.sadien.com/video.html

Again, great article.

G.C. Hutson
Chief Executive and Senior Partner
Sadien, Inc.
http://www.sadien.com
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Sidekick: The Good News & the Bad News
Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
- mburton325

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