The SMB IT money pit – from ITPro UK

ANALYSIS & INSIGHT 4 Apr, 2013 Stephen Pritchard

Inside the enterprise: A staggering proportion of SMB IT spend might be wasted. Is IT being mis-sold?

Managing an IT budget efficiently is never easy. For smaller companies, it can be close to impossible to ensure money spent on IT is money well spent.

The costs of hardware, security, software licences, hosting and services all add up. Even a relatively small firm, with around 250 employees, might be dealing with as many as a dozen IT suppliers.

Is that far fetched? Not at all. Take a look around a typical small business employing – just to make it simpler – mostly knowledgeworkers.

There is the desktop and laptop hardware: Dell, HP, Lenovo or Apple perhaps supply that. There will be tablets: Apple, again. Smartphones? Let’s assume Samsung. But the finance director still has a BlackBerry.

IT directors might like managing large budgets, but the business is more likely to spend wisely, if it is picking up the tab.

There is Microsoft for Windows and Office. Symantec, McAfee or Sophos for security. There will be some networking: for the sake of argument, pick Cisco. A physical server, or more likely, several of them: IBM.

Storage could be from any number of vendors, from Netgear or Iomega to NetApp or EMC. A back up power unit – you really should have these – takes it up to a round 10.

Bring in someone to install or maintain it, and an offsite backup – you really should have one of those, too – and it’s a dozen.

And that’s before adding accounting software, ERP or CRM, for example, or going anywhere near the cloud. Drawing a diagram of who supplies what to a small firm is like unravelling a plate of spaghetti.

Small company finance directors could be forgiven for thinking they may as well follow the lead of 80s pop group The KLF and burn a million pounds on a remote Scottish island.

Recent research by SolarWinds, an IT management tools vendor, appears to back up the suggestion that smaller firms are overwhelmed by the complexity of IT. As a result, much of their spending is wasted.

According to the company, 87 per cent of firms admitted to paying for software they never used; 28 per cent said that as many as a fifth of licences are wasted. Despite, or maybe because of this, IT spending by SMBs continues to increase.

Overspending, or wasted spending, may be slightly less common, because it is more visible, but it is still a problem. There are plenty of firms that buy more desktop or laptop PCs than they really need, and more still that over specify servers.

One solution could be to rip out all the IT and move to the cloud; another is to embrace BYOD – bring your own device – and either expect staff to provide their own computers, or give them a budget for buying them.

Neither solution is entirely practical for most companies. But there is another solution: make business units pay for the IT they use.

IT directors might like managing large budgets, but the business is more likely to spend wisely, if it is picking up the tab.

Stephen Pritchard is a contributing editor at IT Pro.

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great post, concise and fun – 7 ways your tomorrow changes without cloud computing – Xtium

7 ways your tomorrow changes without cloud computing – Xtium, GREAT post by #Desktone partner, #Xtium

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IVIS-1* Modern BPM: 10 New-Generation Applications

Modern BPM: 10 New-Generation Applications is a GREAT way for IT to get “in the shorts of the business” and uncover new ways to innovate…

* IVIS-1 is the first in a series of actionable recommendations for IT organizations to introduce and demonstrate innovation to their business executives.  IVIS refers to ITconnecter’s Innovation Methodology which was discussed in the early days of this blog but will be updated on both the website and this blog in the near future.

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whitepaper on Moving Virtual Desktops to the Cloud.pdf

docs.media.bitpipe.com/io_10x/io_107543/item_612896/Moving Virtual Desktops to the Cloud.pdf.

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Innovative CIO Alert #2 – Something Remarkable Is Happening: How To Transform Your Business With The Cloud – Forbes

Something Remarkable Is Happening: How To Transform Your Business With The Cloud – Forbes….have to love when a business magazine starts prescribing what to do to prepare for a move to the cloud.  Specific, actionable recommendations and not just a “what is the cloud.”

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Innovative CIO Alert – The ParElastic Database Virtualization Engine – YouTube

The #ParElastic Database Virtualization Engine – YouTube …seems to be a great way to add value today while building your internal knowledgebase around cloud database technology.  Try this on-prem in your private cloud, to start, and expand from there to any of your outsourced DCs (if any) and eventually to a more public cloud….

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IT influenced by end-user acquisition of cloud services: CDW

Nothing new in this article Mobile Devices, Applications Spur Cloud Adoption: CDW , which unfortunately only reinforces the fact that IT is following end-user technology leadership rather than innovating to lead.

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virtual desktops (DaaS) and “The Greenest Building in the World”

“The Greenest Building in the World” | Medfield02052’s Blog….another reason for replacing physical PCs with #zero-clients is environmental impact.  Although this may sound trivial to some, the fact you can get the same functionality at a lower-energy cost all while leaving a smaller carbon footprint is another use case for #DaaS.

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CAUTION, must read the fine-print – “Has VDI Peaked? A Change in the Adoption Drivers Sheds New Light, and New Life” | Forrester Blogs

Has VDI Peaked? A Change in the Adoption Drivers Sheds New Light, and New Life | Forrester Blogs was cited in a recent tech online pub article.  Reading the article and being in the space I am in (DaaS) got me to worrying…it was the first negative thing I had seen on the future of DaaS.

Luckily, I was pointed to the actual blog being cited and read:

“This is why I’m so excited about the explosive trend of BYOD and consumerization of IT on so many levels, from cloud computing to tablets…It’s also why I think we’ll see a rebound of Hosted Virtual Desktops (also known as VDI) through 2013 and beyond.” 

“The future looks bright for Desktops-as-a-Service (DaaS)
The number one barrier to client virtualization adoption is a lack of internal resources and skills. Also high on the list is immaturity of the technologies. However, as we see with other cloud and SaaS technologies, these concerns can go away when a provider has the expertise and infrastructure already, and the service is easy to consume and affordable.”

So, going from “sad to glad” is the only way I can describe my feelings after this exercise.  DaaS just makes too much sense for it to not accelerate as the next generation in VDI.  Innovators in corporate IT moved away from internally supporting desktops years ago.  Why would those same innovators now want to bring those non-strategic costs back in house?

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Android up 13%, iOS down 7%, BlackBerry down 81% … and Windows Phone up a massive 52% | VentureBeat

Android up 13%, iOS down 7%, BlackBerry down 81% … and Windows Phone up a massive 52% | VentureBeat has quite the headline, although it is deceiving…the 52% growth is an uptick of 1.9% of the total market (to 4.1%).

Compare this to Android’s growth of 5.8% within the total market (now at 51.2%).  Although I haven’t seen the details behind the survey, my guess is that Android is taking iPhone share while Microsoft’s small increase was a poach of Blackberry, which is hemorrhaging (down 2.9% to a shockingly low 0.9% of total market share).

Given that Microsoft only added 1.9% when RIM lost 2.9% is not as positive a sign for Microsoft as the headline would indicate.  Success stories for them in countries like Italy, where they have 13.1% share of NEW phone sales, are too few and far between to say this is encouraging for Microsoft….unless they used some specific corporate/consumer packaging  sleight of hand for a test run in Italy.

On the plus side for Microsoft, their “bundling option” around cloud, hypervisor and desktop licensing give them a significant competitive advantage for corporate IT.  They are still swinging for the fences there so those will be key metrics to look for going forward…if they can’t win corporate america, they aren’t going to win the consumer market either.

PS  For Apple, I guess they haven’t learned from taking their customer base for granted.  The lightning connector/adapter fiasco and their SIGNIFICANT iTunes price hike are “cash cow” actions and not innovation actions.  Given they have limited clout with corporate IT, this was a slippery slope for them to take.

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