Part 5 - Outsource IT or parts of it

Outsourcing is probably a dirty word to some, especially when it is referring to jobs being sent overseas. That is not what I am referring to here, though it is difficult to know where the employees are if you use a large corporations services. I am talking about outsourcing either components of your system or perhaps all of it, but in the case of all of it, it should be done in a considered way or it may not work for you.

Partial Outsourcing

The first type of outsourcing I want to cover from a perspective of saving money is that of outsourcing one or more components – which could be an application or service that you currently run in house but could be done better by partners, either because it is not your core competency or it simply can be done cheaper in an alternative fashion.

My favorite current example of a component of IT being outsourced is that of email and in particular Microsoft Exchange. First of all, Exchange is a fabulous product that has been one of Microsoft’s best over the long haul and I have been involved in many implementations over the years and have never had a customer unhappy with the product or delivery. However, Exchange is a complicated product that requires continuous management and maintenance performed by someone with good messaging skills – there is more to it than meets the eye.

So consider this, even in the smallest organization, say with 5 users all with mailboxes, all requiring calendaring, contacts, tasks etc, the cheapest way to have the benefits of MS Exchange is probably to buy Small Business Server and a basic piece of hardware. Now the cheapest server with SBS 2008 costs around $3000 in the box, and that doesn’t include setup, backup and restore or anything else. Once it is in and all up and running, you then have the ongoing management costs, the upgrades, the electricity, etc.

Microsoft also provides Exchange via their Online Services (as do others but I haven’t been impressed by several other offerings I have tested) and for around $40 per month you can get your 5 mailboxes, the exact same benefits but literally none of the other costs from purchasing to managing and maintaining. You could enjoy the same features using the online edition for 6 years before it will cost you more than the initial outlay for hardware and software for your own internal version. To me that makes economic sense for any small or medium business.

The decision point as to whether it is relevant to you will be the number of users you have as there is a cross over point where it may not be so viable but I believe this could be a very high number in the thousands due to the increased levels of hardware and software you need to support big installations. Also for consideration is whether you use the server for other tasks. SBS will definitely provide other benefits that make it cost effective, as the server in a small environment will be performing multiple roles. Once you have Exchange on its own server the online version works out even better. I would love to see many companies taking advantage of this and having a professional email domain name to go along with it!

Total Outsourcing

Total outsourcing or outsourcing your entire IT operation provides definite savings if managed correctly. By removing your employee costs (and maybe re-allocating them to business growth tasks) and moving to a fixed cost contract you can save a large amount of money per year. A fixed cost contract means no more payroll, no more benefit expenses, no more overtime when the servers go down at 6pm on a Friday and instead hopefully a team of people who specialize in running IT for a business as their main task. They will have the procedures and skills in place to deliver a consistent security baseline, alert you to issues before they occur and be able to present to you improvements as technology develops and becomes relevant to you.

Here are a couple of thoughts:

1. If you do outsource, consider that local outsourcing is the way to go as you need to know that the company will have people on the ground to understand your environment and service needs quickly in the event of a problem - also the IT team external or otherwise is a key function of your business and knowing who they are is critical for success.

2. Key to saving with outsourcing is ensuring your IT house is in order before committing to a relationship, otherwise your fixed cost quickly becomes very variable. By this, I mean that if your systems are not standardized and rationalized first and you just handover a mess, then you are going to endure ongoing issues that will generate additional charges on top of the standard rates. Systems should already be built to a well documented standard then the outsourcer will only have to perform to the contract rather than performing continual ongoing fix projects. It is these fix projects that generate the extra fees and all of a sudden make outsourcing less effective.

Now for the shameless plug – Squeeze Technology (www.squeezetech.com) can hook you up with either of these options if you so wish and can help you evaluate which is more beneficial to you, as always, these are multi-faceted issues.

6 Ways to Cut IT Costs …

Part 3 - Automated Desktop and Applications

A disproportionate amount of time is spent by technical staff, end users and management in making sure that applications are installed on PCs where a user is going to work, in additional to providing a stable operating system for those applications to reside on.

Implementing an infrastructure with automated desktop builds and applications that install wherever the user goes will dramatically cut the amount of time spent by all parties, but especially IT staff, in keeping the show going. End user productivity can be measurably enhanced when you take away the frustration of getting the tools they need and fighting with the system.

Most businesses don’t realize that Microsoft ships all the tools you need to “hands free” install Windows and any application. Sure you can buy Systems Center Configuration Manager or a third party product too, but all you need, especially in a small and medium business (10 to 1000 seats) environment is included.

What’s the Deal?

A scenario: a new user joins your organization (yes this must be a public sector example!), you un-box their PC that meets the corporate standard, plug it into the network, power on and hit a few keys. Shortly afterward you have a pristine operating system installed with all the base configuration, core applications and security settings deployed and applied. The new user sits in front of the PC, signs in for the first time and immediately the 3 specific applications they require are installed in a few minutes. Finally, the system is automatically patched for the latest security holes.

If the user then has to use a PC over the other side of the building for a week, they can sign in at that PC and once again the users applications will install instantly for them and their environment will be exactly as they expect.

Finally, if the user encounters a problem with the system, you can simply pick up the old system, swap in a pre-built one, and have the user log in.

What Do I Need?

So how do you achieve all this.

Well firstly it has been possible since the NT4 days – give or take a few items. Some of the components and tools have been renamed (some many times),some have been improved, expanded and gained sophistication, they have even given you a multitude of ways to do the same thing, but bottom line you can have a fully automated (that reacts to new hardware and devices), centrally controlled, standardized desktop infrastructure out of the box. No extra costs, no extra software and this is just the tip of the iceberg of whats available FOC.

Here’s what you need:

  1. Windows Server (2008 preferably)
  2. Windows XP (or Vista or Windows 7)
  3. Active Directory (included with Windows Server)
  4. Group Policy (included with Active Directory)

That’s it. Now, you can add to this, embellish, but this solution will scale to many sites and many thousands of users, desktops and applications.

At this point people will stop me and say, yes but we use Ghost and it only cost $70 to do the whole company. My usual answer to this is twofold, Yes, Ghost is great the first few times for automating a build. It is very fast and when you only have one to two types of PC it is easy to manage, however once you have multiple hardware types, multiple configuration standards then Ghost loses it’s appeal quickly. More importantly though, Ghost rightly has to be licensed per system managed and one retail copy supporting 500 users is actually breaking the law.

Anyway, you will already have all the items on my list , even if you are a Small Business Server operation.

Remind Me of The Benefits?

Ok, so by doing this kind of infrastructure you can ensure that users have the applications they need wherever they go, always installed in the prescribed way with no deltas. You can ensure that, all PCs are built and maintained to corporate standards for usage, approved applications, system lock downs, security policies and all this without ever having to get out of your seat.

The savings flow through also in greatly reduced support calls and desk side visits. This means you can re-deploy helpdesk staff and minimize the waste of your user’s time – which over a year adds up to significant numbers.

We have seen 40% drops in overall logged calls when this is applied and it is viable for any size business – though once you scale, you will definitely want to consider further tools or systems that address particular enterprise requirements.

The Same Only Different

Over the years I have seen organizations avoid dealing with a proper managed desktop infrastructure by going down solution routes that have been totally inappropriate and horrendously expensive and eventually deemed a failure, when they had the tools and proven methodologies to make this work. In the past, Terminal Server / Citrix was the solution du jour for avoiding the problem of delivering a managed desktop, all it did was move the issues to the data center but you still had the desktops out there essentially un-managed, and I see the Virtual Desktop Infrastructure is trying to become the new flavor. Beware! See a future blog on this topic.

For more information on this, please see my web site for the expanded version of this topic (www.squeezetech.com).

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