Imagine the CEO of a company saying, "On the average, our employees are productive 10 percent of the day." Sounds unreasonable, right? Yet we regularly accept productivity level of 10 percent or less from our IT assets. Similarly, no CEO would accept their employees showing up for work 10 or even 50 percent of the time, yet most organizations accept this standard when it comes to server utilization.
So what can you do to get the most out of your IT assets? Here are six steps to improve efficiency.
1. Increase Server Utilization: Raising server utilization is a major part of enabling server power supplies to operate at maximum efficiency, but the biggest benefit comes in delaying build-outs. If you can tap into four times more server capacity then you can delay your need for additional servers or more space by four.
2. Sleep Deep: Placing servers into a sleep state during known extended periods of non-use, such as nights and weekends, will go a long way toward improving overall data center efficiency. Powering down your servers has the potential to cut your data center energy used by 9 percent, do it may be worth the extra effort.
3. Migrate to Newer Servers: In a typical data center, more than half of severs are 'old,' consuming approximately 65 percent of the energy and producing 4 percent of the output. In most enterprise data centers, you can probably shut off all servers four years old or older after you migrate the workloads with VMs to your newer hardware. In addition to the straight energy savings, this consolidation will free up space, power and cooling for your new applications.
4. Identify and Decommission Comatose Servers: Identifying servers that aren't being utilized is not as simple as measuring CPU and memory usage. An energy efficiency audit from a trusted partner can help you put a program in place to take care of comatose servers and make improvements overall. An objective third-party can bring a fresh perspective beyond comatose servers including an asset management plan and DCIM to prevent more comatose servers in the future.
5. Draw from Existing Resources: If you haven't implemented the ten vendor-neutral steps of our Energy Logic framework, here are the steps. The returns on several steps outlined in this article are quantified in Energy Logic and with local incentives, may achieve paybacks in less than two years.
6. Measure: The old proverb applies" what isn't measured isn't managed." Whether you use PUE, CUPS, SPECPower or a combination of them all, knowing where you stand and where you want to be is essential.
Share with us other steps you know to improve data center efficiency.