IT's "New Normal"

New applications and solutions lead IT into the 21st century's 2nd decade.

By
Mon, January 25, 2010

CIO — Consolidation, expense reduction and risk mitigation have been the defining elements of most CIO conversations over the last 12 to 18 months. The intensity of that focus really paid off, as so many of your companies did a remarkable job of managing expenses.

The rough seas that pounded the business technology landscape really stress-tested the infrastructure side of the ship, which responded by battening down the savings hatches in everything from server and storage virtualization to data center consolidation and unified communications.

Our exclusive CIO research gives us a barometer to measure the impact of these changes, and in this issue you'll find the first in a new series of regular reports called "Numbers You Need." This month we turn up some encouraging news from our quarterly CIO Economic Impact Survey about how IT budgets are stabilizing while rising numbers of big-company CIOs are spending on new projects again. In the final months of 2009, we saw the number of large enterprises planning to increase IT spending jump from 29 percent to 41 percent. That's one dazzling display of readiness for action.

In last month's cover story on our annual State of the CIO research ("Acting on Opportunity"), you saw how CIOs are evaluating their business and technology priorities as they gear up for still greater developments in improving customer service delivery, revamping business processes and extending IT's direct impact on commercial success.

Like never before, this redoubled concentration on the business is setting a new course for CIOs in this century's second decade. No longer will IT narrow its gaze to internal capabilities alone. The game has clearly moved to applications and solutions at the edge of your businesses, where they can deliver more useful intelligence and actionable information. Technologies such as cloud computing, service-oriented architecture, business process management, data analytics, collaboration tools and mobile devices are the underpinnings of IT's "new normal." Your business colleagues want IT to deliver "intelligent velocity," meaning that data-driven ability to move faster and smarter as you respond to customer expectations and desires.

As this post-recession economy loosens its stranglehold on our psyches, CIOs are once again poised to drive growth and expansion. What a pleasure that will be to chronicle in the pages of this magazine. Welcome to IT's new normal.

For your IT organization to keep pace with the business, you need a new, faster approach to infrastructure deployment-an approach that increases agility and accelerates time to application value. That's HP Converged Systems. Built on Converged Infrastructure, these systems deliver the industry's first portfolio of pre-integrated, tested, and optimized infrastructure solutions for applications running in virtual, cloud, dedicated, or hybrid environments.
Even though virtualization has brought positive change to enterprise IT over the last decade, some skepticism remains about how valuable virtualization can be in the way companies deliver and run business applications. Uncover the truth about how you can run your business critical applications with confi dence without sacrifi cing
availability or service quality-and at lower costs.
This IDG whitepaper highlights key findings based on the Quickpoll Survey conducted with more than 300 Enterprise and Commercial IT decision makers worldwide about the state of their virtualization of business critical applications. This paper answers such questions as: What drivers are pushing companies to extend virtualization beyond servers? and What value are they realizing? Central to the paper are key results that expose risks of the past (fears of limited ISV support, performance impact) no longer are a factor for companies moving to 80+% virtualized.
This guide focuses on key considerations for IT Architects who are in the process of migrating Java applications from UNIX to Linux as part of their VMware server consolidation project.
This IDC white paper explains how much of the Enterprise IT community is at a crossroads in extending their journey to the private cloud: Companies must virtualize their business critical applications in order to reap the benefits of cloud computing. The paper also includes two case studies and a sidebar highlighting the experiences of three enterprises with virtualizing their business-critical applications, which include Oracle and Microsoft SQL databases, SAP and enterprise Java, and a Microsoft Exchange email system.
This guide provides best practice guidelines for deploying Exchange Server 2010 on vSphere.
Download this webcast to learn about the design considerations for virtualizing SQL workloads, performance and scalability information and high-availability options, as well as support considerations
Download this webcast to learn the virtual hardware design considerations for Exchange 2010, deployment using the building block approach, options for high-availability and disaster recovery and support considerations.
Virtualizing business-critical applications has become a key focus for organizations as they move along their virtualization journey. With the launch of VMware vSphere® 5, VMware is helping customers accelerate the deployment of business-critical applications, including Exchange, SQL, SAP and Oracle.
Want to say goodbye to missed SLAs? VMware can help you virtualize mission-critical applications such as Oracle, MS Exchange and SharePoint to achieve dramatic improvements in uptime, performance and responsiveness. In this webcast, we'll discuss the key benefits of virtualizing your agency's most critical applications and Oracle databases as a necessary first step in fulfilling OMB's mandate to move IT services to the cloud. With VMware, you'll be on the way to quick, effective and full compliance.
The complexity, cost and technological bloat of traditional Java EE application servers are often barriers to running a lean and efficient IT organization. Increased need for scalability and rapid application delivery are driving businesses to reconsider the platform they use for application deployment. By combining the portability and agility of the Spring framework with a lightweight application server, your organization can meet business demands while staying within budget constraints. VMware vFabric™ tc Server is a modern, lightweight Java application server based on Apache Tomcat. It improves developer productivity, control and manageability-and is the most flexible platform for virtualizing Java applications and workloads for the cloud. View this webcast to learn about real-world examples of companies that have adopted VMware vFabric tc Server and how to plan for future cloud deployments.
Traditional disaster recovery solutions are often too expensive, complex and unreliable to meet business requirements. As a result, IT departments are hesitant to expand disaster protection beyond their most critical applications, largely because they are uncertain whether the quality of the protection is really worth its cost. VMware vCenter™ Site Recovery Manager 5 is the market-leading disaster recovery product that addresses this situation for organizations of all kinds. It complements VMware vSphere to ensure the simplest and most reliable disaster protection for all virtualized applications.
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