The larger the organizational footprint, the more challenging a cloud migration will be. Here’s how to make decommissioning your data center a little easier.

Guest Commentary, Guest Commentary

May 28, 2019

5 Min Read

Most companies underestimate the time and expense of moving to the cloud. During the transition, organizations incur the costs of maintaining both a cloud infrastructure and service stack as well as their legacy, on-premise stack, which can add 20-25% to the cost.

It pays to minimize the time spent in this transitional state. Once the stack is completely in the cloud, with full functionality and resiliency, you can rapidly achieve cost savings by quickly exiting the physical data center and repurposing or decommissioning any hardware and physical infrastructure.

To help ensure a smoother, more cost-effective journey, follow these tips.

Get executive leadership on board

The greatest successes occur when CIOs and other executives make cloud migration a priority and commit to the resources a migration will take. Without strong executive support, transitions can drag on, and the hybrid state gets expensive -- even demoralizing. When leaders are fully on board from day one, they can focus attention and resources to make a successful move as quickly as possible. This requires the commitment of the entire C-suite, everyone who owns the IT infrastructure and the finance teams supporting them.

Understand what you have

Companies with mature IT organizations are likely to have a firm grasp of which hardware and software they have running in their data centers. However, at the current speed of business change, it's easy for tracking processes to quickly lose grip of the actual state of things in a data center.

Launch your migration effort with a solid inventory of all hardware and software components. Which services are running on which hardware, and in which location? Are there any dependencies between services and hardware? If you don’t have an accurate record of what is running in your data center, invest the time and effort to gather this information before you embark on a cloud migration. Regardless of the cost, it will more than pay for itself in problem avoidance as you migrate.

With a detailed inventory and dependencies in hand, you can begin to plan for decommissioning. Identify the organizations and individuals needed for migration, and scope the magnitude of the effort.

One typical approach is to migrate all services that make up a particular set of business functionality. For example, if you have a dozen services (or micro-services) that make up an end-to-end payment process, you would coordinate a migration of all these services along a similar timeline and manage them as a single project.

Decide what stays? What goes?

There are situations in which you do not need to migrate certain functionality to the cloud. For example: If you have a service you’ve developed in-house and the cloud platform you’re moving to already offers comparable functionality (such as scalability), you do not need to migrate that functionality and can depreciate it once you migrate everything that uses it to the cloud.

It may make sense to keep some services on site. This is usually due to security considerations, potential performance issues or hardware requirements. Most organizations retain some sort of data center, although much reduced. If you have multiple data center rooms, develop a strategy to consolidate on-premise services into as few rooms or racks as possible.

For each service that will move to the cloud, decide whether you will "lift and shift" the service as it is, with only the modifications required to run in the cloud, or whether you will re-factor the service completely to take full advantage of cloud capabilities for scalability and resiliency.

Create a migration plan

Once you know what and how you want to migrate to the cloud, develop a migration plan and ensure that your company assigns adequate resources to accomplish the work within the allocated timeline. The plan should address all hardware and services, including their interdependencies and business prioritization.

In many cases, it makes sense to establish a dedicated team to perform much of the migration. Consider bringing on additional engineering capacity to address day-to-day business demands so key people with application and system expertise have ample time to focus on the migration.

Most migrations are executed as a gradual ramp-up of transactions over a period of time, rather than a hard cutover. Begin with a very small percentage of total transaction traffic -- typically less than 1% -- to prove that transaction success rates are at least as high as those of on-premise services. From there, you can gradually increase transactions to 10%, then 20-50%, if transaction success rates continue to be adequate. Once stakeholders are comfortable at the 50% milestone, you should be able to scale to 100% relatively quickly.

Execute relentlessly

Embarking on a program of this scope and importance calls for strong executive commitment, beginning in the C-suite. Leadership must be dedicated to making the program a priority, giving it visible support, and providing the dollars and people to see it through. Leadership can help build momentum and keep the lines of communication open as people take on changing roles and responsibilities.

Success is built on a strong program structure, together with the program and project management to accurately plan and track progress toward the end goal. It takes program leadership to manage the data center decommissioning process, and technical expertise to analyze and plan what can be depreciated when. Encourage transparency to identify and address any blocking issues as they arise.

A data center reduction program is a major undertaking for any company. The larger the organizational footprint, the more challenging it will be. To ensure success, secure executive support, know what hardware and services you have, and what you'll do with them. Build a reliable migration plan. And execute relentlessly when you're ready to go. The sooner you're able to move out of the hybrid state, the sooner you'll realize the full benefits of the cloud.

Kirby Lull is a consultant with Point B, an integrated management consulting, venture investment, and real estate development firm. Lull’s background includes nearly 20 years’ experience in business and technology project leadership in the technology industry, with a successful track record in a variety of roles including project leadership, program management, business process analysis and design and systems implementation.

About the Author(s)

Guest Commentary

Guest Commentary

The InformationWeek community brings together IT practitioners and industry experts with IT advice, education, and opinions. We strive to highlight technology executives and subject matter experts and use their knowledge and experiences to help our audience of IT professionals in a meaningful way. We publish Guest Commentaries from IT practitioners, industry analysts, technology evangelists, and researchers in the field. We are focusing on four main topics: cloud computing; DevOps; data and analytics; and IT leadership and career development. We aim to offer objective, practical advice to our audience on those topics from people who have deep experience in these topics and know the ropes. Guest Commentaries must be vendor neutral. We don't publish articles that promote the writer's company or product.

Never Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights