In this second of a two part series, Alex Watson-Jackson points out how a far-sighted virtualisation strategy can push the benefits well beyond consolidation and cost saving, to enable a brave new world in which IT departments and CIOs can take the lead in delivering powerful longer term strategic and competitive value.
As I pointed out in part 1 , virtualisation is about a lot more than consolidation these days. No matter how welcome a consolidated and therefore cost efficient IT environment may be, it is now only a starting point.
To quote my first post in this series, it is: “...enabling IT pros to implement dynamic data centre environments consisting of pools of high-performing computing resources that can be centrally managed, readily automated and efficiently maintained - and with an upgrade path that is evolutionary instead of disruptive.”
To expand on that slightly, virtualisation holds the key to delivering a truly converged infrastructure that is more efficient, more able to adapt to changing business requirements and easier to maintain and support.
Crucially for CIOs, it also enables IT departments to escape their traditional cost centre roles, and instead operate as a service centre that provides computing power as a utility – and it will be increasingly possibly to align IT assets, and costs, with revenue sources.
However, in this broad context, virtualisation is a vital enabler, not a strategy in its own right – and if it is to underpin this wider value, it must be built effectively from the ground up. Of course, planning an effective virtualisation programme is an involved and multi-faceted task – but getting it right means incorporating these seven best practices:
In summary, yes you need virtualisation today to keep up - but tomorrow, winning will be about using virtualisation better than the competition
Put another way, that means delivering the kind of virtualised environment today that opens up a brave new world of possibilities tomorrow.