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Building a Data Center Roadmap

With automation and multicloud technologies impacting the data center, management services become more important.

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Data centers have changed quite a bit since pizza boxes reigned supreme. We replaced those servers with virtualization, reducing our physical footprint and utilizing more of the CPUs and memory. Next came the idea of fully tested systems in the form of converged infrastructure: making sure different components of compute, storage and networking worked well together. This all leads us to today’s leading technologies: the software-defined data center and hyperconverged infrastructure.

RETHINK YOUR APPROACH: Explore HCI best practices.

Automating in the Data Center

With HCI, compute, storage and virtual networking become software defined: easily changeable and upgradable. More importantly, HCI gives us the ability to easily scale out resources, adding more capacity when needed, not having to include as much overhead at the initial time of acquisition. Deploying and managing these data center systems is easier than it has ever been before, but this is only a base: the components needed for what is being asked of data centers in satisfying today’s smart and connected businesses.

The public cloud has shown what can be possible in speeding the time to delivery of development, processing and analytics. To enable that functionality into a private cloud, we use these advances as a foundation on which we build more advanced functionality.

Standardized components such as HCI are an enabler for automation. We want to be able to go to a self-service portal and request resources to use. That invokes a cloud management platform that provisions virtual machines (VMs), configures the software for it to be used and delivers it to us in minutes, not weeks.

Supporting a Multicloud Environment

We can use traditional data centers as another spoke in the wheel of a multicloud strategy. The choice should become seamless with cost modeling and business logic that defines when I can place my work without additional approvals, or when I need someone to review my request. The entire ecosystem should allow us to chargeback based on a user’s business unit, or at least show back the cost of what your consuming.

Microservices are lighter weight, using less overhead than a full-blown operating system and its associated services. Microservices can spin up and down more rapidly than traditional VMs and their life expectancy is often shorter than their full-blown counterparts. Add to that modern agile development methods and continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) and we are driving more scaling and configuration operations through an API without a person initiating a traditional request. Entire instances of an application could be started and stopped for a very short period of time, with many iterations before committing to production.

Services for the Modern Data Center

These automation, multicloud and development tasks are just a small portion of the work that’s being asked of IT organizations. They are often overloaded. Luckily, CDW has a number of strategic and advisory services to help map all of this out.

Looking at all the software-defined components, we add the appropriate automation tools to achieve your goals. While most customers are utilizing at least one public cloud provider, we enable a multicloud strategy to best leverage all your resources or diversify your options with additional clouds. We will extend observability resources, keeping eyes on infrastructure, applications, logs, event correlation and a centralized dashboard of key performance indicators.

When it comes to application modernization and Kubernetes, we lay the foundation with different private or public container engines, evaluate your CI/CD toolset or refactoring existing applications to take advantage of microservices and cloud optimizations, transforming them to become “cloud-native.”

CDW strategic and advisory services help our customers achieve these outcomes by looking at their entire ecosystem of data centers and cloud tenants. This allows you to use your infrastructure as a foundation for innovation, freeing up staff and delivering results back to the business faster.

Read our white paper on why organizations are adopting hyperconverged infrastructure.

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Urban  Haas

Urban Haas

Field CIO
Urban Haas is passionate about successfully enabling business/digital transformation for customers and mapping technology to deliver real outcomes. A field CIO for CDW, Urban is known for pushing the envelope while controlling risk, working with cutting edge and emerging technologies, and always takes a step back to see the bigger picture.