Friday, July 1, 2011

How you can Save $1.3 Million on a Data Warehouse Project

By Molly Webster


Why do data warehouse projects cost a fortune? Oracle, IBM DB2 along with other solutions, while having a high ROI for the enterprise, usually demand considerable investment in software, hardware and services to implement a solution.

Fast forward to a full DR technique and multiply that infrastructure by TWO - and now you might have a serious investment on your hands.

Scenario Recently one of the best nation-wide grocery stores within the United States had this precise issue on their hands: How could they create a world-class information warehouse remedy without blowing their spending budget? A couple of alternatives were accessible:

Choice A) Get brand new equipment from IBM and others, including IBM p6 p570s, IBM Storage, Switches, F5 Gear, and the works for over two million dollars for just the hardware. Software licenses, implementation along with other services that were required to complete the remedy would also add thousands more to that total.

Alternative B) Function with a professional data storage expert and deploy a combination or new/used IBM, gear for much less than $700K.

Benefits Besides saving the corporation over $1,300,000 by going with Alternative B, their ROI jumped by 10%. Also by going with this choice, they were able to make use of a portion of their savings to buy some super fast load balancers - which gave them much more efficiency, resulting in the capability to make quicker decisions with their data. Decisions that generate these types of continued advantages are sufficient to keep any CEO smiling.

5 tips to reduce costs on your next data warehouse project:

1.)Make a hit list of the must have technologies for your project. 2.)Soul search and figure out which technologies need to be purchased new. 3.)Question the software vendors requirements for most recent technology - particularly in dev/test. 4.)Think about storage alternatives that allow you to de-duplicate, upgrade an existing array or deploy used or refurbished equipment. 5.)Make use of your existing SAN and Network infrastructure for additional connectivity if at all doable.

Extra Tip - look at your existing server infrastructure and you might be surprised to uncover extra CPU capacity in your UNIX or Windows footprint. With a basic memory upgrade you could be able to develop a low-cost dev/test environment (by creating a partition or LPAR)




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