CA and VMware Announce Results of Server Virtualization Maturity Study
IT Process Institute Identifies Specific Procedures and Controls that Optimize Benefits and Reduce Risks at Different Levels of Maturity
ISLANDIA, N.Y. and PALO ALTO, Calif., September 29, 2009 – CA and VMware today announced the results of a study the companies sponsored investigating the impact of virtualization on data center operations. The study, conducted by the IT Process Institute (ITPI) in December 2008, identifies specific procedures and controls that should be considered to reduce risk as organizations virtualize business-critical systems and when production virtualization objectives beyond server consolidation evolve to high availability, disaster recovery, and dynamic resource management scenarios.
ITPI collected data from 323 North American IT organizations about their server virtualization practices. The survey focused on the procedures and controls used most frequently to manage the technology. Based on an analysis of the procedural changes the IT organizations made to optimize the benefits and reduce the risks of virtualizing production data centers, the IT Process Institute developed the following recommendations for each level of maturity:
- Baseline Maturity Practices: for those organizations consolidating servers and virtualizing business-critical systems in production environments, ITPI identified 11 practices, which include host access, configuration and provisioning controls, virtual machine provisioning, and capacity and performance management.
- High Maturity Practices: for those organizations expanding beyond server consolidation to high availability and disaster recovery objectives in an otherwise static environment, ITPI recommended 25 practices. The practices help IT organizations quickly respond to performance-impacting conditions with a high degree of configuration standardization, provisioning with approved build images, and using a “trust but verify” strategy for change process and configuration compliance.
- Dynamic Computing Practices: for those organizations pursuing dynamic resource management objectives, ITPI recommended 12 practices including controls primarily in the area of configuration discovery, change approval and tracking; capacity and performance management; and overall process maturity needed to support automation.
“When comparing the use of recommended practices with actual outcomes, the ITPI found that all groups score high on the soft outcome measures that indicate virtualization makes production quality and service management efforts easier,” said Kurt Milne, managing director, IT Process Institute. “In general, the study found that higher levels of virtualization maturity predict higher levels of performance in key areas of reduced sprawl and configuration variance, increased use of automation, and reduced operational risk. In addition, organizations pursuing dynamic resource objectives had higher performance in the areas of increased speed and agility, fewer ‘war room’ responses to service outages, as well as reduced audit effort.”
“The ITPI study confirms what we see with CA’s customers; those who develop a virtualization management plan, with formalized procedures and controls, are most successful in achieving Lean IT in enterprise and cloud environments,” said Stephen Elliot, vice president of strategy for CA’s Infrastructure Management and Automation business unit. “A sound approach to virtualization includes mitigating risk through real-time change management for the governing of automation rules, and instilling self-service enablement to reduce lengthy provisioning cycles.”
“The results of this study are consistent with the feedback we receive from our customers who tell us that strong management and automation tools are essential for maximizing the payoff from VMware virtualization,” said Shekar Ayyar, vice president of infrastructure alliances, VMware. “Standardized processes and controls, supported by mature virtualization technology and smart tools, help to ensure high performance, enterprise-class reliability, and the agility necessary to make organizations more responsive and more competitive in the face of dynamic business conditions.”
Analysis of hard performance measures revealed a statistically significant correlation between the use of recommended practices and various hard outcome measures, such as:
- The use of host access controls predicts a higher level of availability measured by minutes of downtime per month
- The use of capacity management practices predicts better service support performance with measures such as the rate of incidents resolved within service level agreement limits, and mean time to repair large outages
- The use of provisioning automation and discovery practices predicts a higher rate of production systems that match target configuration.
A free copy of the full report is available at http://ca.com/itpi/virtualizationand
http://www.vmware.com/partners/alliances/technology/ca.html.
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VMware (NYSE: VMW) delivers solutions for business infrastructure virtualization that enable IT organizations to energize businesses of all sizes. With the industry leading virtualization platform – VMware vSphere™ – customers rely on VMware to reduce capital and operating expenses, improve agility, ensure business continuity, strengthen security and go green. With 2008 revenues of $1.9 billion, more than 150,000 customers and 22,000 partners, VMware is the leader in virtualization which consistently ranks as a top priority among CIOs. VMware is headquartered in Silicon Valley with offices throughout the world and can be found online at www.vmware.com.
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