More PCs, more servers, more software to patch, more data to store, and growing network complexity means your business's information technology environment is tougher and more expensive to manage than ever before. This paper considers important system, network, and data management issues and what you can do to ease the burden.
Cost-Effective Data Storage Solutions
Even smaller companies are seeing their data storage needs explode by as much as 50% to 100% per year.5-1 Depending on the nature of your business, there are a number of ways you can meet your burgeoning data storage needs. To ease storage management hassles, you may want to venture into some sort of networked storage alternative (see the sidebar at right entitled Data storage solutions: options).
To figure out what's best for your business, you'll need to ask and answer these questions:
Patching and Updating Your Software -- Shortcut to Security
One of the most effective ways to protect the systems and applications on which your business depends is to make sure your software is up to date, since unpatched software vulnerabilities cause a majority of viral and worm-based security breaches.5-2
Fortunately, there are some actions you can take to ensure that your software is patched and updated in timely fashion:
Why Software License Management?
Chances are that someone in your company is doing something with software that is illegal or dangerous to your corporate health. What's more, lack of awareness probably means you're spending more on software than you need to -- as much as 30% more by one estimate.5-3
Here's what you can do:
The result: you'll spend less on software; you'll be able to track its usage and intervene when it's misused; and you'll be able to plan more effectively for future needs.
Crossing the PC-Macintosh Divide
If your business uses multiple types of computer systems -- a mix of both Windows-based and Macintosh desktop systems for example -- then you know how frustrating it can be to move data between platforms or enable them to share network drives or printers.
Indeed, many people simply recreate data and content rather than try to move it from one desktop environment to another. Similarly, companies often duplicate equipment rather than struggle with sharing printers and network drives among their PCs and Macs.
Your employees no longer need to waste time on such tasks. Today, there are many low-cost, easy-to-implement products that are available to make short work of PC-Macintosh compatibility. So before you buy that extra printer or start someone re-keying, research the various PCMac cross-platform integration tools. It will save time and money.
Moving Beyond Manual Desktop Migrations
Even if everyone in your business uses the same kind of personal computer hardware and software, each of those desktop systems is unique. Not only do end-users maintain unique content -- documents, address books, web page bookmarks -- but each one also has modified hardware and software settings to suit individual blends of job requirements, personal needs, and personality.
Thus, when it's time to migrate to new operating systems, applications, or hardware, doing it quickly and cost-effectively has been a challenge for both end-users and the IT staff they turn to. One estimate puts the minimum cost of manual migration at over $200 and as much as seven hours of a technician's time per desktop. So what can you do?
Tips and Tactics to Ease the Migration Pain
Here are some suggestions:
Meeting Enterprise IT Challenges: Business Modeling Can Make a Difference As the world gets more and more complex, ensuring that your information systems, networks, and databases can effectively support your business gets more and more difficult. But competitive necessity demands that your company embraces new technologies and adapts to ever-shifting risks, more geographically dispersed resources, and shorter and more iterative development lifecycles.
Time for a Paradigm Shift
Successfully dealing with these challenges requires something of a paradigm shift -- from a focus on distinct and separate applications fulfilling isolated departmental requirements to a focus on the whole enterprise and the strategies and IT architectures that can integrate and streamline its parts.
Thus the goal of enhancing total business value and efficiency drives operational -- and IT -- choices and adaptations.
Business modeling software can help you take the first step toward making the changes your business needs. By combining modeling of data logic and processes, business modeling software provides:
The view of your organization derived from business modeling can help you assess the risks, costs, and benefits of the changes you make and avoid expensive mistakes.
When processes are defined, managed, and optimized in this way, a company can reduce project cycle time by more than 30% and cut application defects by more than 50%, according to estimates by The Software Engineering Institute.5-4
Well-designed business modeling can do these things for your business:
Where To Begin
Here are some suggestions about how you can prepare your business to take advantage of today's business modeling tools:
A Positive Bottom Line
Doing business in the 21st century requires a set of tools different than anything the world has ever seen before -- computers for many employees, task-specific servers, multiple types of networking devices, data storage equipment, and a wide array of software -- all to support your company's ability to acquire, analyze, understand, and protect the information that has become its lifeblood.
For even the largest organizations, putting all these technologies and capabilities together in a cost-effective and productive way presents a serious challenge.
But it is, for companies of all sizes, a challenge made much easier with the right combination of data storage, software, desktop management, and business modeling tools, which together can save your business plenty by protecting your data and applications, reducing your IT costs, easing upgrade hassles, and helping you streamline your entire business operations.
Endnotes
5-1 Are big storage solutions right for small businesses? smallbusinesscomputing.com, April 2004 5-2 Patch deployment best practices in the enterprise, Robert Frances Group, CSO magazine, October 20035-3 Are you on top of your software licensing? Financial Executive, June 2004.5-4 Process Maturity Profile of the Software Community, Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, March 1999
For more information on CA's small and medium business solutions, please visit ca.com/smb.
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