Research results suggest the primary challenges for data center managers are stringent internal service-level agreements, ongoing data center growth and staffing issues. Budget growth is not keeping pace with data center growth, while stringent SLAs mean data centers must deliver ever-increasing levels of speed, agility and availability. While increased SLAs may indicate the value IT can deliver to the business, if they are unmet the performance of the business may suffer. According to research results:
- 65 percent of respondents report formal internal SLAs exist in their organization.
- 32 percent report service-level demands have rapidly increased.
- 51 percent report they've had more difficulty meeting service-level demands during the past two-year period.
- 52 percent of respondents report their data centers are currently understaffed.
- 69 percent of respondents reveal their data centers are growing at least 5 percent per year, while 11 percent report 20 percent growth or more per year.
- The average reported budget increase during the last two-year period is a modest 7 percent worldwide.
Server virtualization and consolidation are considered top cost containment strategies for the majority of respondents, particularly in the United States. According to the research results:
- 90 percent of respondents are at least discussing server virtualization; 50 percent are implementing virtualization strategies.
- 91 percent are at least discussing server consolidation; 58 percent are implementing consolidation strategies.
- 75 percent of respondents are considering storage virtualization as a potential solution.
- 59 percent of respondents indicate Web applications are the most likely to be moved into a virtual environment, followed by database management applications, selected by 42 percent of respondents.
Data center staffing challenges are pervasive among respondents. According to research results:
- 86 percent of respondents have difficulty finding qualified applicants.
- 68 percent report staffing is challenging because data centers are too complex to manage.
- 60 percent believe staff skill sets are too narrow.
- 57 percent indicate that employees' skills do not match their current needs.
that supports all major applications, databases, processors and storage and server hardware platforms, to protect their information and applications, enhance data center service levels, improve storage and server utilization, consistently manage physical and virtual environments, and drive down operational cost.
"Today's data centers face a truly intimidating -- and worsening -- set of challenges involving SLAs, data growth, staffing challenges and cost, as revealed by our State of the Data Center report," said Kris Hagerman, group president, Data Center Management, Symantec. "The services delivered by data center professionals have never been more important to their businesses, but at the same time, they are under relentless pressure to do more with less, and within an environment of maddening complexity. Data center managers can transform their data center and manage growing costs and complexity by standardizing on a common software infrastructure -- a powerful weapon in the arsenal of the respondents we surveyed."