The Evolution of the Network Engineer

As new technologies emerge, there's plenty of network engineering--and architecting, design and implementation--left to do. The trick lies in understanding the distinctions between technologies that have become commodities (and can therefore be outsourced) and those that are emerging as strategic differentiators.

By Johna Till Johnson

Thu, July 02, 2009Network World IT is undergoing one of the most significant transformations in recent memory—yet most IT practitioners (including telecom managers) are only dimly aware of what's happening.

Some history: After the Internet went mainstream in the early-to-mid 1990s, networking and infrastructure specialties became mission-critical. Designing, implementing and operating IP networks, client-server computing systems and storage (including the newly invented storage networking technologies) were major challenges. Staffs swelled, and IT managers struggled to cope with challenges around hypergrowth, particularly when it came to rapidly rolling out infrastructure that could scale exponentially.

Meanwhile, telecom deregulation flooded the market with new players touting exotic technologies and business models—and the emerging competition brought prices down sharply, for those who knew how to negotiate. (Throughout the late 1990s, telecom prices dropped an average of 20 percent year over year).

After the dot-com bust, the economy moved into a period of more moderate growth, and the watchwords for infrastructure teams were consolidation and optimization. IT folks worried less about fast, scalable buildout, and more about optimizing operations and reducing total cost of ownership. As these efforts proved successful, IT departments began divesting themselves of infrastructure engineering expertise.

With outsourcing, we're seeing the natural conclusion of that evolution: IT departments are increasingly handing off their networks to managed services providers. All indications are that the trend will continue for the foreseeable future (the growth in demand for managed services is hockey-stick steep). Add to that the ongoing trend towards relying on the Internet to connect remote and distributed workers—as a full 81 percent of the IT professionals I work with say they do—and it becomes clear that telecom and networking is increasingly about crafting credible service-level agreements, negotiating rock-solid contracts, and effectively selecting and managing providers.

It may seem like these developments mark the end of the career of the "network engineer." Not at all. As new technologies come on line, there's plenty of network engineering—and architecting, design and implementation—left to do. The trick lies in understanding the distinctions between technologies that have become commodities (and can therefore be outsourced) and those that are emerging as strategic differentiators.

Some examples: Unified communications (including presence and conferencing) is revolutionizing how far-flung organizations interact. UC is all about gluing together disparate systems and services—something networking folks have, by necessity, gotten good at. So networking teams should be taking lead in UC architecture, strategy and implementation.

Mobility's another example. Many firms are considering offloading support for mobile devices and strategies altogether, and simply asking employees to provide (and pay for) their own cell phone services. Big mistake. Mobile devices and services aren't just portable phones—they're the computing and communications platforms across which next-generation applications will be delivered—and need to fit in with an overall strategic architecture.


Loading...
Network MarketSpace
Thinking About Deploying Mobile Broadband?
Explore lessons and best practices experienced by companies that have deployed mobile broadband to their workforce. Learn more »
Increase Application Performance and User Experience
This research shifts the attention from basic load-balancing features to application delivery features. Learn more »
Gartner Magic Quadrant, Application Delivery Controllers 2009
The market for products to improve the delivery of application software over networks remains dynamic. Learn more »
McAfee's Network Security Platform IPS
McAfee's Network Security Platform IPS; the costs, benefits, flexibility, and risk elements. Learn more »
The Cost of SQL Sprawl
Learn how a new approach to SQL server consolidation can reduce server counts by 50%, lower maintenance costs by 70% and reduce administration time by 75%. Learn more »
A Bottleneck-free Infrastructure
Storage bottlenecks have a significant impact on performance and productivity. Learn more »
Application Delivery Despite Emerging Challenges
IT organizations need to choose appropriate application delivery solutions that can scale to support the emerging challenges. Learn more »
 
SPONSORED LINKS
 

ROI of Application Delivery Controllers

Unified Communications: Thoughts, Strategies and Predictions. Join the discussion.

Return on Information: Google Enterprise Search pays you back

Cut Costs & Green Your IT Operations with PC Power Management

White Paper: 4 Customer Service Myths

White Paper: Managed Security for a Not-So-Secure World

White Paper: 5 Best Practices for Smartphone Support

Global Research: CIOs Weigh In On Virtualization

5 Key Virtualization Management Challenges

Secure Email and Web-Based Communication from Evolving Attacks

WagerWorks Takes Fraudsters Out of the Game using iovation

Seven Design Requirements for Web 2.0 Threat Protection

Increase UPS efficiency without sacrificing protection.

Learn how advanced forecasting tools can deliver significant business results for global corporations.

Lower IT Costs with Oracle Database 11g Release 2

White Paper: Visibility and the New Normal of Mobile Work

Taking the Service Desk to the Next Level

Learn about The Information Technology Infrastructure Library.

Return on Information: Google Enterprise Search pays you back. Get the facts.

VMware. The source for Business Infrastructure Virtualization.

ShoreTel tells businesses to untangle from competitors' complexity and turn to its brilliantly simple UC solution

Top Five CIO Challenges

Read the RSA report: Security for Business Innovation

64-page prescriptive guide to security, compliance, and IT operations.

A Clear View Toward Virtualization

Gartner Magic Quadrant, Application Delivery Controllers 2009

Upgrading to VMware vSphere with vWire

Maximizing website Return on Information with high-quality search

See how AT&T can help protect your network.

Webcast: Unleashing the Power of Customer Data

White Paper: Improve Agility with Operational Responsiveness

White Paper: Legacy Tools: Not Built for the Helpdesk

Taking a Seat at the Executive Table: The Reality of Virtualization

White Paper: Next Generation Remote Infrastructure Management

Keeping Your Members Safe from Online Scams and Predators

The Total Economic Impact of Network Security Intrusion Prevention

Generation Remote Infrastructure Management - Changing the Paradigm

Cloud-Based Email Management: Opinion Shifts In Favor

eBook: How Can You Make Your People Productive Anywhere?

Achieving Business Agility with Application Grid

Ready to virtualize tier one applications? Check your virtualization maturity.

Seven Ways ITIL Can Help You in an Economic Downturn

Tips for successful virtualization management.

AT&T Synaptic Storage as a Service. Expand on demand

Trend Micro ranked #1 against real-world malware. Read more.

Webinar: Jump-start your in-house e-discovery with Ringtail QuickCull from FTI Technology

Streamline IT Costs. Boost Performance with WAN Optimization.

Build your 1st app FREE with Force.com

TDWI checklist helps define data readiness for analytics. Download report.

eZine: A Roadmap to Reducing IT Complexity

 
 
RESOURCE CENTER