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VMworld LIVE From VMworld

Virtualizing your environment is more than simply taking a bunch of old servers (possibly laying around since the last Boom in the 1990s), and partitioning them. In most cases it means buying more hardware.

Virtually Speaking: Good hardware is a fundamental component of an effective virtualization deployment. Quantifying ROI and other benefits is often critical to getting the hardware.

This makes virtualizing pretty much a no-brainer for a company starting out or one building a data center from the ground up. But most companies don’t have that kind of cash just sitting around.

“Don’t skimp on hardware,” Wes Noonan, Lead Technical Analyst at NetIQ, cautioned in a briefing with ServerWatch earlier today. “If you skimp on hardware it won’t necessarily cost you in capital. It will, however, cost you in other ways,” he elaborated, citing the human toll, personnel issues, and lost sales.

So how to explain the need to invest heavily in hardware?

Return on investment is always king when it comes to spending, so selling whomever crafts the budget on a positive ROI is critical and a good place to start. But how to get there, and what if it’s not enough?

Quantify, Theodore Ritter, an analyst with Nermertes research, told the audience in a session titled, “Making the Case: Selling Virtualization When ROI Isn’t Enough.”

He said that, typically, the majority of enterprises go after low-hanging fruit and assume all costs go down. This is fine in the beginning, as costs do generally go down. It will not, however, work in the long term when enterprises go beyond low-performing servers and operations.

Oftentimes, the deployments themselves occur over several years. According to Ritter, a typical deployment process takes more than two years, and for a larger organization, it can be a five to seven year time frame. With such projects, you can see the initial benefits quickly, but as you move along into production and heavy database apps, the ROI is not as clear or as quickly forthcoming.

Enterprises therefore, must take a long-term view. Ritter recommends finding a key metric to measure early in the process that takes flexibility and agility into account. This way, they become standard trackers and in time can be the basis of a business case.

Ritter was emphatic about this, noting, “if you don’t put the metric is place early to measure the return, it’s going to bite you early.”

There are multiple approaches to measuring this way. High availability and disaster recovery, for example, are critical issues, and in some cases virtualization makes it financially feasible for organizations to set up a failover site, if they couldn’t before. Benefits such as these should be quantified and taken into account.

Cost reduction is another way to go. One company used cost prevention as justification for initial investment. Other things to bring up include:

  • Shorter maintenance windows
  • Some servers, such as Exchange, run better when virtualized
  • Extend the life cycle of hardware as a virtual machine (this is pretty much a no-brainer, as it’s taking advantage of hardware already in play, and most likely already depreciated)
  • The ability to start and stop hardware

Ritter provided one big caveat — Process and procedure must keep up with virtualization. Oftentimes, he explained, it’s not the hardware holding things up but the human processes around it.

At first blush, provisioning goes down from weeks to hours. However, most provisioning time organization face is outside of the actual virtualization process (e.g., getting the purchase order in and the time spent getting it in rack). The process that comes before the actual virtualizing must be fixed or the true impact of virtualization will not be felt.

Amy Newman is the managing editor of ServerWatch. She has been following the virtualization space since 2001 and is currently attending VMworld.

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