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fredag 5 november 2010

What Your Business Should Understand If You Are Considering IT Automation

We are living in an era of unprecedented change. Change brought on primarily by the advances of the technological age. Nowhere is this more evident than in the domain of business. Internet Technology (IT) has become a driving force behind successful business practices. As a result, there is an imminent need for an IT system that inherently adapts to rapid change. IT Automation presents a viable Solution.

With IT automation, it will be possible for business organizations to increase their agility hence dealing with sudden shifts in the market, changing customer behavior, emerging competition and constantly evolving technologies. It can also be useful in dealing with cascading mergers or acquisitions.

When we talk of increased agility, it means that business processes and rules can be changed constantly. It also means finding new ways of leveraging new information types which might involve more complex combinations than the existing ones. Not wanting to, throw the baby out with the bathwater, IT automation must be capable of including existing information from a variety of platforms, including legacy applications, mainframes and metadata. It will also be expected to maintain a data flow of information pertaining to customers and suppliers. Keeping the old and adapting to the new is why IT automation is the wave of the future. One might argue that there is no problem with the current It systems have no problem. It is true that web services have enabled us to collect new data types from within and without the organization. RFID also promises higher levels of real time data transfers. Such data has to be collected, filtered and deciphered. IT automation can do away with these inadvertent delays, which are a result of maximized manual data feeding. The automation shall also facilitate specific data collection about a particular topic from various apparently unrelated threads. Tracking any information cannot become quicker!

With all these apparent challenges it should be clear that remaining static on the current systems is not the way to the future. This is why many IT departments are challenged to react. What with the companies resources being too stretched to adapt fast. Such overworked IT departments only find consolation in shifting most of the burden to existing systems with people offering direction only. IT automation is not just another fancy word for the distant future. Automation itself sounds frightening to human existence! The need of the hour is to reassess the present working system. Any organization planning to go for automation needs to clearly lay down the rules and definition for its each and every department. It will be similar to the present goal setting done for each employee at the beginning of every year. Examples cannot be copied but can be the basis of urgent brainstorming session of the employers. It is just like William Gibson says, The future is here. Its just not widely distributed yet.

tisdag 19 oktober 2010

IT Managed Service Providers May Be Highly Cost Effective Answers

IT managed service providers can be extremely beneficial to the client receiving the services as well as attractive to businesses providing the services. The most well known example of managed IT services is that of the managed dedicated server where all technical changes as well as the physical server are taken care of by the service provider. IT management as a service has begun to receive notice and acceptance well beyond the simple managed server from both providers and from clients.

With almost every business dependent upon computers in some degree IT staffing costs for the business or corporation can be substantial. Services that are managed, release the owner from the necessity of maintaining a staff dedicated only to IT and instead allow them to focus on the main purpose of their business which is making money. Managed services can be budgeted for as they are predictable costs for both the provider and the client.

Almost every business uses their IT department in a different way and a managed solution allows the company access to experts in their area without the expense of attempting to locate and retain these experts. Providers are finding the idea of managed services attractive as well since they gain the added benefits of a stable and predictable income as well as familiarity with each client which usually results in better service.

Managed services for IT are not a new concept but some resistance may have to be overcome as many clients are used to considering IT an in house problem or in some cases calling for consultants only after the unthinkable has happened such as data loss or unauthorized access. There are particular areas that are simpler to transition to because the client base understands the potential losses or complications far outweigh the fixed monthly cost of a managed service. When considering a transition to fixed services a provider should also consider any government regulations which must be adhered to as well.

Security as a managed solution is a large market and because of the specialized knowledge and software needed to provide IT security. Potential clients are highly receptive to this type of managed service. Data storage, server provision and off site data backups are also fertile grounds for managed services as the potential clients have far fewer objections to overcome when contracting for these services. This is not to say these are the only potential services possible to manage and establish as fixed costs but simply the easiest to begin with.

The concept of managed website servers is well established and customers view these cost effective solutions as almost a necessity because they no longer need worry about maintaining server security or learning an entirely new field. The customer instead concerns themselves with sales and service. Outsourcing is becoming a very common practice for many types of services and the more widespread it becomes the less resistance the provider will usually encounter when offering these services.

Desktop as a service, software as a service and even infrastructure as a service have introduced customers to an entire new world of managed services which are cost effective and time savers as well. Both small companies and larger corporations find benefit in these service solutions. While not every potential customer is yet won over, the numbers increase daily.

With the right amount of marketing of the correct type it has been possible for service providers who formerly worked on an as needed basis to shift their focus to providing managed IT services. The benefits for both the service provider and the client are multiple. Once a client has been secured, those first months of service can cement customer loyalty.