Business expectations driving transformation

The Data Centre is under pressure to transform from a mere resource of hardware and software to a trusted partner helping business to compete in the digital market place, explains Sachin Bhardwaj, Director Marketing & Business Development, eHosting DataFort.

Sachin Bhardwaj, Director Marketing & Business Development, eHosting DataFort

In the past the on-premises, enterprise Data Center was the heart of the IT organization. Today its importance and role is increasingly diluted, if you use its legacy responsibilities as a benchmark. Similar to other operational functions of an organization, the role of the Data Center is rapidly transforming. But that does not mean, its strategic importance for business is diminishing.

With the increasing migration of applications to the Cloud, through SaaS, PaaS, IaaS, the extent of workloads hosted on premises are also in decline. Gartner predicts that by 2025, 80% of enterprises will have scaled down their traditional Data Centers.

Data residency rules, increasingly distributed global workforce, network latency, Internet of Things, emergence of managed service providers, are some of the drivers for migration of workloads out of the traditional, on-premises Data Center, to more suitable options.

Historically, the enterprise Data Center used to address challenges such as, how do we best build the required infrastructure, in terms of cost, time and performance. Today the demand has transformed to, how do we best place the workload in terms of agility and business benefits.

The on-premises legacy Data Centre is, increasingly shrinking and becoming centralized to manage mission critical workloads, with a higher degree of oversight, control, and responsibility, than is available through externally placed options.

While expectations from the traditional Data Center shrink in terms of size of operations and IT spending, the expectations from the modern and digital Data Center are rapidly increasing. The primary role of the Data Center head is changing from being a builder and manager of data center functions to becoming an enabler and collaborator for business to perform.

As business heads increasingly choose to find more agile application and service options outside the IT organization, by remaining steadfast on their traditional roles, the legacy Data Center faces extinction. By transforming to becoming an enabler of business, and playing the role of broker and trusted advisor, the function of the Data Center has a purpose in tomorrow’s digital organizations.

Transformation of the legacy data center into tomorrow’s multi-function diversified role requires working on numerous fronts. First, the on-premises Data Center needs to be highly agile and responsive to meet internal demands. It needs to build a hybrid Cloud delivery model, benchmarked using the best industry standards.

Second, it needs to attract and retain the best skills to manage internal expectations of delivering on machine language, artificial intelligence, business analytics and insights, amongst others. Third, and most importantly it needs to help business to compete and differentiate in the fast emerging digital market place, taking on born in the Cloud, pure play start-ups, and other digital juggernauts.

The story of the future Data Center is no longer about empirical metrics of hardware and software. It is about delivering real services that help business to accomplish their expectations. The future of infrastructure is everywhere and anywhere, and will be business-driven by nature, remarks a Gartner specialist.

According to Gartner, to drive success through this transformation, Data Center heads can leverage various enablers:
Artificial intelligence: These tools will help the IT organization to do vastly more with less resources, building suitable models for predictive failures and recovery.
Severless computing: This is also known as function platform as a service, and is an emerging software architecture pattern that reduces the need for infrastructure management and planning.
Network agility: Internal networking specialists must incorporate 5G technologies to enable the organization to meet modern use cases and the customers digital expectations.
Edge computing: This technology meets the expectations of the resident country and use cases, by bringing the workloads closer to the end customer.
Technology partnerships: The IT organization must enter into multiple supplier relationships to help scale operations and meet business expectations.

The Data Center of the past may have been a custodian of infrastructure, but going forward will need to play the role of a provider of leading-edge services for enhanced digital business performance.

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