Should You Outsource Your Infrastructure: 10 Points to Consider When Choosing a Service Provider

 

Due to the current economic conditions, IT departments are coming under increasing pressure to do more with less.  However, over the last few years upper level management has become leery of divesting themselves of the servers and network to a service provider.  In prior postings to this Blog I have provided reasons why outsourcing can benefit the enterprise, 10 Reasons to Outsource, and also a comprehensive checklist to consider prior to making the decision, Checklist Before Outsourcing Your IT.  In an effort to continually update this topic as events evolve, this posting is another in this series and concentrates on the concerns one might have regarding the Service Provider.  To get the full detail underlying the following points to consider when evaluating which Service Provider is best for your enterprise read Outsourcing Your Infrastructure: Ten Points to Consider When Making the Move.  Here is a brief summary of those ten points:

 

·         Uptime:  Greater reliance on the internet makes “On” the only option.  The global marketplace makes this a necessity.  The options could be straight hosting, managed service, or SaaS.

·         Redundancy and Business Continuity:    loss of customer call center could result in lost orders.

·         Data Restoration:  eDiscovery Laws require a significant and competent back-up plan.

·         Response Time and Site Performance: providers have high-performance servers and high-speed access, but do they have only one location.

·         Scalability to meet growth: Can the Service Provider add capacity quickly to meet the rapid increase in demand, in other words, does the Service Provider have the financial capital available to rapidly add more servers.

·         Customer Support:  This is the “value-add” dimension that differentiates one Service Provider from the other.

·         Security:  Must be able to adhere to the Data Privacy laws such as Sarbanes-Oxley, and Gramm-Leach-Bliley.

·         Cost Reduction and One-Stop Billing:  Abandon the ala carte approach to IT infrastructure.  Bundled services are discounted.

·         Optimized IT resources i.e. dedicated servers:  Allows IT staff to redirect their efforts to delivering their own services.  Plus services on demand priced on usage is better offered from a service provider’s business model.

·         Financial improvements:  Eliminates the need for cash oulay for hardware and turn the cost into an operational expense as the enterprise pays for a service.

 

 

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