Commentary - Channel Insider
Empowering the next generation Channel
 

Sponsored Links
  • Get up and running in as quickly as 30 days with BI. Learn how today.
  • FREE Securing Smartphones & Tablets for Dummies Book from Sophos
  • 5 New Technologies That Will Change Enterprise ITAdvertisement
  • Build an IT Infrastructure That Delivers the Future

  •  

    Gartner Warns to Cut Infrastructure Costs

    in Commentary



    Article Rating:starstarstarstarstar / 0
    Article Views: 2275

    Reporter's Notebook: Business IT needs to catch up to the consumer market, and companies will embrace virtualization to cut hardware costs, say analysts at the Gartner Symposium/ITxpo.

    Rate This Article:
    Add This Article To:
    ORLANDO, Fla.—If this is October, it must be time to truck down to Orlando to hear warnings, opportunities and forecasts from the Gartner analysts. All those elements were present as the annual Gartner Symposium/ITxpo got underway here on Oct. 9

    The big theme this year for business IT was the need for techies to get off their butts and chase the consumer market. Consumer tech has outpaced business tech by creating blogs, social network sites, podcasts, search and video. Where's business? Has it been asleep at the switch?

    Yes, apparently, and the word from the Gartner oracles was to wake up and figure out how those consumer applications can be translated to the business world.

    Maybe business hasn't been sleeping so much as spending the boss' money doing the wrong thing. Eight out of every 10 IT dollars spent on the enterprise are "dead dollars," which keep the lights on but don't directly contribute to a company's growth, Gartner said.

    With two-thirds of IT dollars going to keeping the infrastructure running, the amount of investment available for new projects is small, and within that small amount the percentage that could be called truly game-changing is smaller still. Get your budget for maintaining your infrastructure down from 80 percent to 60 percent or risk being left in the dust, the Gartner analysts claimed.

    Click here to read more about why Gartner says consumer technology will form the next wave of enterprise IT.

    And wait, there's more bad news for IT departments. More and more executives are refusing to use the standard-issue corporate personal computer. The biggest offenders are C-level executives. In one of those stats that only Gartner can conjure up, the research company contended that 50 percent of C-level executives will perform 80 percent of their work on non-company-standard personal computers through 2008.

    While notebooks continue to grow in popularity compared with desktop computers (and will represent half the computers bought by businesses in developed countries by 2009), the big game-changer coming is virtualization.

    In a session on virtualization, Gartner Senior Vice President Thomas Bittman predicted massive changes for the user community and the X-86 server vendors starting in 2007 and accelerating from that point on. The ability to virtualize servers will result in a slowing down of hardware server sales as customers are able to get more useful cycles out of the boxes they are buying.

    "Prices are dropping like a rock," for virtualization software and licenses, Bittman said. Companies will embrace virtualization to cut hardware acquisition costs, ease management and build out a full-scale virtualized enterprise. The current leader in virtualization, VMware, could see its market share significantly eroded if it isn't able to keep up the virtualization management software pace that will be set by competitors Microsoft and XenSource, he said.

    While virtualization sounds like a panacea for IT costs, Bittman cautioned the audience to beware of software lock-in built around "sticky" management software.

    The management of all those technology and business changes may be the biggest issue facing IT executives over the next five years, Gartner Research Director John Mahoney said.

    Mahoney continued, "At least 60 percent of IT organizations in Global 2000 enterprises will divide into at least two organizations by 2012. One of those organizations will work on sourcing and delivery of infrastructure and another organization will work on architecture and change."

    Check out eWEEK.com's for the latest news, views and analysis on servers, switches and networking protocols for the enterprise and small businesses.




    comments dic


     
     
    >>> More Commentary Articles          >>> More By Eric Lundquist
     


     



    channel chatter


    HTML PLAIN TEXT

    Keep on top of news for VARs and Resellers with CI's Weekly Newsletter and Alerts.


    [ci] feeds
    XML
    Add Channel News, Product Reviews, Trends and Analysis to your RSS newsreader or My Yahoo!


     


    CHANNEL SPONSORED RESOURCE CENTER
     
     
     
    Start the New Year with business intelligence—it’s a smart move
    Join us on February 1 for an encore rebroadcast at either 5 am or 12 noon EST and discover how business intelligence (BI) supports companies in uncertain business and economic climates. Get expert advice on how to create a strategy that fits your organization's needs and budget and see how quickly it can pay for itself.
    Click Here
     
    Security and Availability Essentials for Running Your Business in the Cloud
    Are you moving to the cloud? Find out what every IT professional should know about security and availability before moving to the cloud. Hear what a security provider’s own CSO has to say.
    Watch Video
    A new algorithm automatically identifies relationships between variables to help reduce researcher prejudice.
    Click HereAdvertisement