Monday, February 01, 2010

Technology, Process and People Must Combine Smoothly to Achieve Strategic Virtualization Benefits

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on how to take proper planning, training and management steps to avoid virtualization sprawl and achieve strategic-level benefits.

For more information on virtualization and how it provides a foundation for private clouds, plan to attend the HP Cloud Virtual Conference in March. Register now for this event:
Asia, Pacific, Japan - March 2
Europe Middle East and Africa - March 3
Americas - March 4

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes/iPod and Podcast.com. Download the transcript. Learn more. Sponsor: Hewlett-Packard.

Dana Gardner: Hi, this is Dana Gardner, principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions, and you’re listening to BriefingsDirect. Today, we present a sponsored podcast discussion on planning and implementing data-center virtualization at the strategic-level in enterprises.

Because companies generally begin their use of server virtualization at a tactical level, there is often a complex hurdle in expanding the use of virtualization. Analysts predict that virtualization will support upwards of half of server workloads in just a few years. Yet, we are already seeing gaps between an enterprise’s expectations and their ability to aggressively adopt virtualization without stumbling in some way.

These gaps can involve issues around people, process and technology and often, all three in some combination. Process refinement, proper methodological involvement, and swift problem management often provide proven risk reduction, and provide surefire ways of avoiding pitfalls as virtualization use moves to higher scale.

The goal becomes one of a lifecycle orchestration and governed management approach to virtualization efforts so that the business outcomes, as well as the desired IT efficiencies, are accomplished.

Areas that typically need to be part of any strategic virtualization drive include sufficient education, skilled acquisition, and training. Outsourcing, managed mixed sourcing, and consulting around implementation and operational management are also essential. Then, there are the usual needs around hardware, platforms and system as well as software, testing and integration.

So, we’re here with a panel of Hewlett Packard (HP) executives to examine in-depth the challenges of large scale successful virtualization adoption. We’ll look at how a supplier like HP can help fill the gaps that can hinder virtualization payoffs.

Please join me in welcoming our panel: Tom Clement, worldwide portfolio manager in HP Education Services. Welcome to BriefingsDirect, Tom.

Tom Clement: Thank you, Dana. Great to be here.

Gardner: We're also here with Bob Meyer, virtualization solutions lead with HP Enterprise Business. Hey, Bob.

Bob Meyer: Hey, Dana.

Gardner: And we’re here with Dionne Morgan, worldwide marketing manager at HP Technology Services. Hello, Dionne.

Dionne Morgan: Hello, Dana.

Gardner: Ortega Pittman, worldwide product marketing, HP Enterprise Services, joins us. Hello, Ortega.

Ortega Pittman: Hi, Dana.

Gardner: And lastly, Ryan Reed, worldwide marketing manager at HP Enterprise Business. Hello, Ryan.

Ryan Reed: Hi, Dana, thanks for having me.

Gardner: I want to start by looking at this notion of a doubling of the workload supported by virtualization in just a few years. Why don’t we start with Bob Meyer? Bob, tell me why companies are aggressively approaching the move from islands of servers to now oceans of servers.

Headlong into virtualization

Meyer: Yeah, it's interesting. People, had they known an economic downturn was coming, might have thought that it would have slowed down like the rest of IT spending, but the downturn really forced anybody who is on the front to go headlong into virtualization. Today, we are technically ahead of where we were a year or two years ago with virtualization experience.

Everybody has experience with it. Everybody has significant amounts of virtualization in the production environment. They’ve been able to get a handle on what it can do to see what the real results and tangible benefits are. They can see, especially on the capital expenditure side, what it could do for the budgets and what benefits it can deliver.

Now, looking forward, people realize the benefits, and they are not looking in it just as an endpoint. They're looking down the road and saying, "Okay, this technology is foundational for cloud computing and some other things." Rather than slowing down, we’ll see those workloads increase.

They went from just single percentage points a year and a half ago to 12-15 percent now. Within two years, people are saying it should be about 50 percent. The technology has matured. People have a lot of experience with it. They like what they see in results, and, rather than slow down, it's bringing efficiency to things like the new service model.

Gardner: Ortega Pittman, do you see any other issues around these predictions? The expansion of virtualization seems to be outstripping the skill sets that are available to support it.

Pittman: That's where HP Enterprise Services comes to add value with meeting customers' needs around skills. Many, times small, medium, and large organizations have the needs, but might not have the skills on hand. In providing our outsourcing services, we have the experienced professionals who can step right in and immediately begin the work and the strategic path towards their business outcomes.

The skill demand and the instant ability to get started is something that we take a lot of pride in, and in the global track record of doing that very well is something that HP Enterprise Services can bring from an outsourcing perspective.

Gardner: Dionne Morgan, what are some of the risks, if folks start embarking on this without necessarily thinking it through at a life-cycle level? Are there some examples that you have experienced, where the hope for benefits -- economic and otherwise: agility benefits, flexibility, and elasticity -- somehow end up being imperiled by not being prepared?

Morgan: Many people have probably heard the term "virtual machine sprawl" or "VM sprawl," and that's one of the risks. Part of the reason VM sprawl occurs is because there are no clear defined processes in place to keep the virtualized environment under control.

Virtualization makes it so easy to deploy a new virtual machine or a new server, that if you don’t have the proper processes in place, you could have more and more of the these virtual machines being deployed and you lose control. You lose track of them.

That's why it's very important for our clients to think about not only how they're going to design and build this virtualization solution, but how they're going to continue to manage it on an on-going basis, so they keep it under control and they prevent that VM sprawl from occurring.

Gardner: We’ve talked about this people, process, and technology mixture that needs to come together well. Tom Clement, from that perspective of education, are there things about virtualization that are dramatically or significantly different than what we might consider traditional IT operations or implementation?

Clement: Certainly, there are. When you talk about people, process, and technology, you hit upon the key elements of virtualization project success. There is no doubt in my mind that HP provides the best-in-class virtualization technology to our clients hands down. But, our 30-plus years of experience in providing customer training has shown, time and time again, that technology investments by themselves don’t ensure success.

The business results that clients want in virtualization won’t be achieved until those three elements you just mentioned -- technology, process and people -- are all addressed and aligned.



The business results that clients want in virtualization won’t be achieved until those three elements you just mentioned -- technology, process and people -- are all addressed and aligned.

That's really where training comes in. Our education team can help address both the people and process parts of the equation. Increasing the technical skills of our customers' people is often one of the most effective ways for them to grow, increase their productivity and boost the success rates of their virtualization initiatives.

In fact, an interesting study just last year from IDC found that 60 percent of the factors leading to the general success in the IT function are attributed to the skills of people involved. In that regard, in addition to a suite of technical training, we also offer training in service management, project management, business analysis, all with an eye to helping customers improve and integrate their virtualization projects to better processes -- just as Dionne was speaking about a moment ago -- and to better process management.

Of course, we have stable and experienced instructors, whose practical, hands-on expertise provides clients with valuable tips and tricks that they can immediately use when back on the job. So, Dana, you hit it right on the head. It's when all three of those components -- people, process, and technology -- are addressed, especially in virtualization situations, that customers will maximize the business results that they get back from their virtualization solutions.

Gardner: We’ve also seen in the field that, as people embark on virtualization and move from the tactical to the strategic, it forces a rethinking of what it is core and what might be tangential or commoditized.

Ryan Reed, are we seeing folks who, as they explore virtualization, start also to explore their sourcing options? What are some of the trends that you're seeing around that?

Seeing a shift

Reed: Thank you for asking that question. We do see a shift in the way that IT organizations have considered what they think would be strategic to their end business function. A lot of that is driven through the analysis that goes into planning for a virtual server environment.

When doing something like a virtual server environment, the IT organizations have to take a step back and analyze whether or not this is something that they’ve got the core competency to support. Often times, they come to the conclusion that they don’t have the right set of skills, resources, or locations to support those virtual servers in terms of their data-center location, as well as where those resources are sitting.

So, during the planning of virtual server environments, IT organizations will choose to outsource the planning, the implementation, and the ongoing management of that IT infrastructure to companies like HP.

They apply our best practices and our standard offerings that are available to IT organizations from HP data centers or from data centers that are owned by our clients, which would be considered an on-premise type of virtual server environment. Then, they're managed by the IT professionals that Ortega Pittman had mentioned earlier in either an on-shoring or off-shoring scenario, whichever is the best-case scenario for the IT organization that's looking for that skilled expertise.

It's definitely a good opportunity for IT organizations to take a step back and look at how they want to have that IT infrastructure managed, and often times outsourcing is a part of that conversation.

Gardner: It also sounds like that rethinking allows them to focus on the things that are most important to them, their applications, their business logic, and their business processes and look to someone else to handle the plumbing. In the analogy of a utility, somebody else provides electricity, while they build and manage the motors. Is that fair?

Reed: That's a very fair statement. By choosing a partner to team up with to manage that internal plumbing, as you’d referred to it, it allows the IT organization to get back to basics, to understand how to best provide the best-in-class, lowest-cost service to their end users -- increasing business productivity and helping them maximize the return on their IT investment. This powers the business outcomes that their end-users are looking for.

Gardner: I'm intrigued by this notion that these organizations are going to be encountering virtualization sprawl and trying to expand the use of it, but in different ways are they going to be exercising strengths and weaknesses. What are some of the gaps that are typical? What do we usually see now in the field that create a stumbling block to the wider adoption of virtualization?

Pittman: One of the things we observe in the industry is that many customers will start with a kind of phase one of virtualization. They'll consolidate their servers and maybe stop just there. They get that front-end benefit, but that exhausts the internal plumbing that you referred to in a lot of different ways, and can actually cause challenges and complexities that were not in their immediate expectation. So, it's a challenge to think that you're going to start with virtualization and not go beyond the hypervisor.

The starting point

We’d like to work with our customers to understand that it's the starting point to consolidate, but there is a lot more in the broader ecosystem consider, as they think about optimizing their environment.

One of HP’s philosophies is the whole concept of converged infrastructure. That's thinking about the infrastructure more holistically and addressing the applications, as you said, as well as your server environments and not doing one off, but looking more holistically to get the full benefit.

Moving forward, that's something that we certainly could help customers do from an outsourcing standpoint in enabling all of the parts, so there aren’t gaps that cause bigger problems than the one hiccup that started the whole notion of virtualization in the beginning.

Gardner: Does anyone else has some observations from the field about what gaps these organizations are encountering as they try to expand virtualization use?

Clement: One of the good things for our clients is the fact that within HP we have a great deal of experience and knowledge regarding virtualization. Through no fault of their own, many clients don’t understand or don’t realize the breadth or depth of virtualization options and alternatives that are available for them.

We want to make sure that the customers are thinking about this first from the business perspective.



The good news is that we at HP have a wide range of training services, ways that we can work with a client to help them figure out what the best implementation options are for them, and then for us to help them make sure that those options are implemented with excellence and truly do result in the business benefits that they desire.

Gardner: Now that you’ve mentioned some of the strengths that HP is bringing to the table, how do you get those to work in concert? It seems that it's a hurdle for these organizations themselves to look at things holistically? When they go out to a supplier that has so many different strengths and offerings, how do you customize those offerings individually to these organizations. How do they get started?

Morgan: We think about this in terms of their life cycle. We like to start with a strategy discussion, where we have consultants sit down with the client to better understand what they’re trying to accomplish from a business objective perspective. We want to make sure that the customers are thinking about this first from the business perspective. What are their goals? What are they trying to accomplish? And, how can virtualization help them accomplish those goals?

Then, we also can help them with their actual return on investment (ROI) analysis and we have ROI tools that we can use to help them develop that analysis. We have experts to help them with the business justification. We try to take it from a business approach first and then design the right virtualization solution to help them accomplish those goals.

Gardner: It sounds like there's a management element here. As we pointed out a little earlier, IT departments themselves have been divvied up by the type of infrastructure that they were responsible for. That certainly makes a lot of sense, and it follows the development of these different technologies at different times in the past.

Now, we're asking them, as we virtualize, to take an entirely different look, which is more horizontal across this converged infrastructure. Is there a management gap that needs to be filled or at least acknowledged and adjusted to in terms of how IT departments run?

Blurring the connections

Meyer: What it calls into focus is that one thing virtualization does very nicely is blur the connections between the various pieces of infrastructure, and the technology has developed quite a bit to allow that to ebb and flow with the business needs.

And, you're right. The other side of that is getting the people to actually work and plan together. We always talk about virtualization as not an end-point. It's an enabler of technology to get you there.

If you put what we’re talking about in context, the next thing that people want to go to is maybe build a private-cloud service delivery model. Those types of things will depend on that cooperation. It's not just virtualization that that's causing but it's really the newest service delivery models. Where people are heading with their services absolutely requires management and a look at new processes as well.

Gardner: In many cases, that requires a third party of some sort to be involved, at least, to get that management shift or acknowledgment under way.

Which of you can offer an example of how we move to a higher level of virtualization and got those payoffs that people are so enticed by -- that much lower number of servers, lower footprint, lower carbon and energy use, total cost, etc.? Can you provide an example of an organization that's done that and has also bitten the bullet on some of the management issues that allows that economic benefit?

They decided to virtualize, because that would help, of course, with the ability to consolidate and to improve on those service levels.



Morgan: I can give one example. There's an organization called Intrum Justitia, a financial services organization in Europe. We worked with them as they were embarking out their virtualization journey. The challenge they had was that they have multiple organizations and multiple data centers across Europe, and they wanted to consolidate from 40 different locations around Europe into two data centers.

At the same time, they wanted to improve the service level they were providing back to their business. They decided to virtualize, because that would help, of course, with the ability to consolidate and to improve on those service levels.

The way we helped them was by first having that strategy discussion. Then, we helped them design the solution, which included the HP Blade System, VMware software, EVA Storage, as well as other hardware and software products. We went through the full lifecycle with them helping with the strategy and the design.

We helped them build the solution. We managed their project office. We managed the migration from the 40 locations. Then, once everything was transitioned, we were able to help them go on the right path to further managing them. Some of the results were that they were able to manage that consolidation to the twin data centers, and they're beginning to see some of the benefits now.

Gardner: Let me put you on the line. What do you think HP brought to the table in this example that the Intrum wouldn’t be able to find anywhere else?

For more information on HP's Virtual Services, please go to: www.hp.com/go/virtualization and www.hp.com/go/services.

Wide expertise

Morgan: There are a couple of things. One is that we actually have the expertise, not only in the HP products, but also in the software products. We have the expertise, of course, for the Blade Systems and the EVA Storage, but also the expertise around VMware.

So, they had hardware and software expertise from one vendor -- from HP. We also have the expertise across the lifecycle, so they could just come to one place for strategy, design, development, and the ultimate migration and implementation. It's expertise, as well as a comprehensive focused life goal.

Gardner: Are there any other examples of a larger scale, top tier organization that has moved aggressively into virtualization and had a success?

Pittman: Yes, Dana, HP Enterprise Services worked with the Navy/Marine Corps Intranet (NMCI), which is the world’s largest private network, serving and supporting sailors, marines, and civilians in more than 620 locations worldwide.

They were experiencing business challenges in productivity and innovation and in the security areas. Our approach was to consolidate 2,700 physical servers down to 300, reducing outage minutes by almost half. This decreased NMCI’s IT footprint by almost 40 percent and cut carbon emissions by almost 7,000 tons.

We minimized their downtime and controlled cost. We accelerated transfer times, transparency and optimal performance.



Virtualizing the servers in this environment enabled them to eliminate carbon emissions equivalent to taking 3,600 cars off the road for one year. So, there were tremendous improvements in that area. We minimized their downtime and controlled cost. We accelerated transfer times, transparency and optimal performance.

All of this was done through the outsourcing virtualization support of HP Enterprise Services and we're really proud that that had a huge impact. They were recognized for an award, as a result of this virtualization improvement, which was pretty outstanding. We talked a little earlier about the broader benefits that customers can expect, the services that help make all of this happen.

In our full portfolio within the IT organization of HP, that would be server management services, data center modernization, network application services, storage services, web hosting services, and network management services. All combined, they made this happen successfully. We're really proud of that, and that's an example of the very large-scale impact that's reaping a lot of benefit.

Gardner: We've talked about how this can scale up, I suppose it's also interesting in the future, as more companies look to virtualization and think about services and infrastructure as a service (IaaS), that this could probably start going down market as well. Does anyone have some thoughts about how a company like HP, perhaps through their outsourcing capabilities, could move somebody’s values into an organization smaller than the Navy and Marines?

Mission-critical systems

Reed: What's interesting about the NMCI is that, as Ortega mentioned, this is a very large complex and mission-critical system. Thousands of servers were virtualized, having a major impact on how the service is being delivered. The missions that are being performed on such an infrastructure are still mission critical. You can't really have a much more impactful implication, because lives actually depend on the successful missions that are performed on this infrastructure.

Now, if you take that and have it scaled to lower level implementations of virtual server environments, the lessons learned, the best practices, the technology, the people, the processes, and the skills are all absolutely relevant, when trying to scale this down to small- and medium-sized businesses.

That's because the standardized procedures for managing this type of infrastructure is documented for our service delivery organizations around the world to take advantage of. They’re repeatable, standardized, and consistently delivered.

Gardner: As we get into the future, and the use of virtualization becomes integral to more companies -- not as an island, but more of the ocean that they are sailing on -- this kind of changes the way the companies function. They'll become more IT services and service management oriented. Perhaps, they'll have more services orientation in terms of their architecture.

Does anyone have any thoughts about where this is going to lead next, if you bite the bullet, become holistically adept at virtualization partnering with companies like HP to use the skills and understanding they have and learn the lessons of the past? What are the next stages or steps? Bob, any thoughts?

Virtualization becomes a foundational element for the next set of service delivery model that people are looking at.



Meyer: We mentioned this in the beginning. Virtualization becomes a foundational element for the next set of service delivery model that people are looking at. So, from an IT provider’s perspective, if you get virtualization right, if you get the converged infrastructure that Ortega was talking about, you get the right mix and close the skill gaps. You get a strong foundation to move on to things like private cloud, and it really opens up your options for different service delivery models.

With this is this notion of pushing out virtualization more broadly, the next step leads you to a good place to build on top of those delivery models and ultimately lower the cost and increase the quality of the services you deliver to the business.

Pittman: You asked how it all fits in moving to the future. Recently, in a Gartner report, there were some key findings. One of the items that was reported was that mid-sized businesses are seeking a much more intimate relationship with IT providers. There is a perception out there that they can have a closer relationship with smaller vendors as opposed the large ones.

[Editor's Note: “The penetration of virtual machines in the market at year-end 2008 was 12%; by year-end 2012, it will be nearly 50%.” Source: Gartner October 7 2009. Research Title: Virtual Machines and Market Share through 20012. Research ID #G00170437.]

One thing I’d like to just put out there for the IT community that may be is thinking about virtualization is that HP offers solutions for small, medium and large organizations. The way we are set up in terms of the account support with our account leaders, we certainly can meet the needs of the small to medium to large menu. We are set up to engage, support, and be that trusted advisor at all three of those levels.

Just to dispel any misconception that "They’re large, and I'm not sure if I'm going to get the attention," we're ready and have the products and services to deliver outcomes that they are looking for at all levels.

Gardner: Sort of "have it your way" opportunity.

Pittman: Exactly.

Expertise and flexibility

Clement: Just to follow on to that point, which I think is a great one. As we've been hearing here, it boils down to expertise and flexibility. Does HP have the expertise strategically to help clients of any size? Do we have the expertise from a service delivery perspective, from an instructor perspective, from a course development perspective? And the answer is, we do.

Do we provide these services, these products, these training classes in a variety of flexible ways and are we willing to tailor these to our clients. The answer, again, is a resounding, yes, we are.

Gardner: I wonder if we could offer some concrete ways to get started. Are there some places people can go, some Google searches they should do, as they are thinking about virtualization and their expansion and their way of managing the risk?

Morgan: There is definitely HP.com. We have many pages on HP.com to talk about virtualization and our virtualization offerings. So, that is the one area. They could also contact their local HP representative. If they work with HP authorized channel partners, they can also have discussions with the channel partners as well.

Meyer: There's a very simple way to find out more about virtualization solutions. You could just type in www.hp.com/go/virtualization, and it will take you to virtualization home page. If specifically you want to find more about services, it's just www.hp.com/go/services. That shortcut will take you right to the very relevant information.

Gardner: Well, very good. We've been here with a panel of HP executives examining the in-depth challenges of moving to large scale successful virtualization adoption. We looked at some of the ways that HP has worked with some customers to help them make that leap successfully. I want to thank our panel today. We've been talking with Tom Clement, worldwide portfolio manager in HP Education Services. Thank you, Tom.

Clement: You're most welcome, Dana. Again, thanks for having me.

Gardner: Bob Meyer, virtualization solutions lead, HP Enterprise Business. Thank you Bob.

Meyer: Thank you.

Gardner: Dionne Morgan, worldwide marketing manager, HP Technology Services. Thank you, Dionne.

Morgan: You're welcome.

Gardner: Ortega Pittman, worldwide product marketing, HP Enterprise Services. Thank you.

Pittman: Thank you for having me.

Gardner: And, Ryan Reed, worldwide marketing manager, HP Enterprise Services.

This is Dana Gardner, principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions. You've been listening to a sponsored BriefingsDirect podcast. Thanks for listening and come back next time.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes/iPod and Podcast.com. Download the transcript. Learn more. Sponsor: Hewlett-Packard.

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on how to take proper planning, training and management steps to avoid virtualization sprawl and achieve strategic-level benefits. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2010. All rights reserved.

For more information on virtualization and how it provides a foundation for private clouds, plan to attend the HP Cloud Virtual Conference in March. Register now for this event:
Asia, Pacific, Japan - March 2
Europe Middle East and Africa - March 3
Americas - March 4

You may also be interested in:

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Time to Give Server Virtualization's Twin, Storage Virtualization, a Top Place at IT Efficiency Table

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on the improved business metrics from adopting a virtualized storage architecture.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes/iPod and Podcast.com. Download the transcript. Learn more. Sponsor: Hewlett-Packard.

Dana Gardner: Hi, this is Dana Gardner, principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions, and you’re listening to BriefingsDirect.

Today, we present a sponsored podcast discussion on storage virtualization. You've heard a lot about server virtualization over the past few years, and many enterprises have adopted server virtualization to improve their ability to manage runtime workloads and high utilization rates to cut total cost.

But, as a sibling to server virtualization, storage virtualization has some strong benefits of its own, not the least of which is the ability to better support server virtualization and make it more successful.

We're here to discuss how storage virtualization works, where it fits in, and why it makes a lot of sense. The cost savings metrics alone caught me by surprise, making me question why we haven't been talking about storage and server virtualization efforts in the same breath over these past several years.

To help us explain how to better take advantage of storage virtualization, we're joined by Mike Koponen, HP's StorageWorks Worldwide Solutions marketing manager. Hello, Mike.

Mike Koponen: Hello, Dana. How are you doing today?

Gardner: Doing very well. Thanks for joining us.

Koponen: You bet.

Gardner: As I said, a lot of folks have been taking up more server virtualization and understanding its benefits. It's become quite popular, particularly in the down economy, where cost is so important. Storage virtualization offers a number of the same types of benefits. Tell us why storage virtualization makes so much sense.

Economic environment

Koponen: Dana, you mentioned that, particularly in today's economic environment, customers need to boost efficiencies from their existing assets as well as the future assets they're going to acquire and then to look for ways to cut capital and operating expenditures. That's really where storage virtualization fits in.

It's a way to increase asset utilization. It's a way to save on administrative cost, and it's also a way to improve operational efficiencies, as businesses deal with the increasing storage requirements of their businesses. In fact, if businesses don't reevaluate their storage infrastructures at the same time as they're reevaluating their server infrastructures, they really won't realize the full potential of a server virtualization.

Gardner: A few years ago, people were putting in servers as fast as they could. Basically, their goal or their motivation was simply to keep up with demand. I have to believe that's the case with storage as well, and storage requirements are still growing rapidly. How do you both keep up with the high demand for more and try to cut cost at the same time.

Koponen: It's an excellent question and one that businesses deal with all the time. As you say, the storage requirements aren’t letting up from regulatory requirements, expansion, 24x7 business environments, and the explosion of multimedia. Storage growth is certainly not stopping due to a slowed down economy.

Storage virtualization and server virtualization are tools that businesses are using to deal with those. In the past, as you said, customers would just continue to deploy servers with direct-attached storage (DAS). All of a sudden, they ended up with silos or islands of storage that were more complex to manage and didn't have the agility that you would need to shift storage resources around from application to application.

Then, people moved into deploying network storage or shared storage, storage area networks (SANs) or network-attached storage (NAS) systems and realized a gain in efficiency from that. But, the same can happen. You can end up with islands of SAN systems or NAS systems. Then, to bump things up to the next level of asset utilization, network storage virtualization comes into play.

You can pool all those heterogeneous systems under one common management environment to make it easy to manage and provision these islands of storage that you wound up with.

Gardner: You mentioned this notion of silos of storage and I think I heard at least two or three different levels of silos of storage. Can you break that out for us? What are we really talking about, when we think about the various components at play here?

Three levels

Koponen: I break it down into three levels. One, I'd call basic virtualization. That's where you just have internal storage in your servers or direct attached storage to those servers. The next level would be what I'd call virtualized network storage. We've got SAN systems that have the ability to virtualize the arrays and the disk spindles within that SAN system.

The third level is what I call network-based storage virtualization. There, you have the ability for heterogeneous storage systems to all be managed under a common structure and virtualized as a single common pool of storage. Those would be the three levels that I break them down into.

Gardner: So, the goal with storage virtualization is not just to virtualize on each of those levels, but to virtualize them all together, so there is a single pool of storage. Is that correct, or that I am oversimplifying?

Koponen: No, that's basically it. In the second two levels I described, where you've got a SAN system, those can also come in two types. You can have a traditional one that's non-virtualized and then you can have a virtualized one, such as the HP Enterprise Virtual Array or the HP LeftHand SAN, where you have the ability to stripe data out across disk spindles and multiple drive trays, and all of that is abstracted from the system administrator.

There are different needs or requirements that drive the use of storage virtualization and also different benefits.



The storage is virtualized, and then the level above that is where you have network-based storage virtualization, such as our SAN virtualization services platform, that can take heterogeneous storage systems, multiple SAN systems for multiple vendors, and present those as one common pool of storage. It's this concept of pooling storage, but at different levels.

Gardner: Of course, it's a big management task to be able to do that and then get to the storage the way that you want to prioritize different storage requirements and some responses based on the application set or whether you're doing it for backup or archives. Is that right?

Koponen: That's true. There are different needs or requirements that drive the use of storage virtualization and also different benefits. You mentioned some of them. It may be flexible allocation of tiered storage, so you can move data to different tiers of storage based upon its importance and upon how fast you want to access it. You can take less business-critical information that you need to access less frequently and put it on lower cost storage.

The other might be that you just need more efficient snap-shotting, a replication of things, to provide the right degree of data protection to your business. It's a function of understanding what the top business needs are and then finding the right type of storage virtualization that matches those.

Gardner: It also sounds like we're taking a complete look at storage. We're looking at it from all angles and, therefore, are able to architect in such a way that we can take advantage of all the capacity we have and do that intelligently. Is that a fair assumption?

Key driver

Koponen: That's true. One key driver is boosting asset utilization. We found that in a lot of businesses they may have as little as 20 percent utilization of their storage capacity. By going to storage virtualization, they can have a 300 percent increase in that existing storage asset utilization, depending upon how it's implemented.

Gardner: Mike, tell me how this relates to server virtualization. If I've got a server virtualization program underway and I've enjoyed some benefits from that, what is taking this added step to storage virtualization going to do for me?

Koponen: Well, a couple of things, Dana. First, in order to take advantage of the advanced capabilities of server virtualization, such as being able to do live migration of virtual machines and to put in place high availability infrastructures, advanced server virtualization require some form of shared storage.

So, in some sense, it's a base requirement that you need shared storage. But, what we've experienced is that, when you do server virtualization, it places some unique requirements on your storage infrastructure in terms of high availability and performance loads.

Server virtualization drives the creation of more data from the standpoint of more snapshots, more replicas, and things like that. So, you can quickly consume a lot of storage, if you don't have an efficient storage management scheme in place.



Server virtualization drives the creation of more data from the standpoint of more snapshots, more replicas, and things like that. So, you can quickly consume a lot of storage, if you don't have an efficient storage management scheme in place.

And, there's manageability too. Virtual server environments are extremely flexible. It's much easier to deploy new applications. You need a storage infrastructure that is equally as easy to manage, so that you can provision new storage just as quickly as you can provision new servers.

Gardner: So, is this a case of a whole being greater than the sum of the parts? If we do server virtualization well and then we do storage virtualization well, not only do we get the usual benefits in terms of capacity, cost, flexibility, and intelligence at each of those perspectives, but, by combining them, we get something additional.

Koponen: Yes, you certainly do. The way I would describe that X factor of what you're getting in addition is just the highest level of business agility and flexibility. The underpinning of that would be that you're making maximum use of your assets, both your server assets and your storage assets.

Gardner: Is there something else here in terms of security, compliance, complexity, or those other necessary things to deal with nowadays? Do we get anything else in combining these two?

Increased protection

Koponen: You certainly get an increased degree of data protection by being able to meet backup windows and not having to compromise the amount of information you back up, because you're trying to squeeze more backups through a limited number of physical servers. When you do server virtualization, you're reducing the number of physical servers and running more virtual ones on top of that reduced number.

You might be trying to move same number of backups through a fewer number of physical servers. You also then end up with this higher degree of data protection, because with a virtualized server storage environment you can still achieve the volume of backups you need in a shorter window.

Gardner: So, it's better control, better understanding, higher utilization, and lower cost. If someone is interested after hearing this, where do you start, how do you undertake a journey? I assume you don't do this all at once, but rather it's something you need to do on a rollout basis. Where do you start when it comes to storage virtualization?

Koponen: Step one is assessing your environment and understanding what your starting point is going to be. Is it a greenfield environment, where you've got a lot of departmental, work-group type servers that you don't have tied into shared storage or virtualized storage? It might be starting with putting in place virtualized storage to support those.

You're more exposed now to that single physical server going down, because, if that single physical server goes down, you've lost multiple applications, and not just one.



Or, do you have existing SAN systems in place that are just underutilized. Then, you might look at putting in place, say, the HP SAN Virtualization Services Platform (SVSP), to get a higher degree of asset utilization out of the existing systems.

It depends on where you're starting from. So, step one is to determine that, figure out where your most underutilized assets are, and what's causing you the most pain today from a management complexity standpoint. Or, it could be the case that you don't have an adequate business continuity plan in place. That's your key factor in where to start. So, it's assessing that starting point, Dana.

Gardner: Let's drill into that business continuity one for a second. That's pretty important. What does virtualizing your storage bring to the table, when it comes to data recovery, disaster recovery, backup, archiving, or continuity issues?

Koponen: Well, first, when you virtualize your servers, you're taking multiple applications and running them on a single physical server. You're more exposed now to that single physical server going down, because, if that single physical server goes down, you've lost multiple applications, and not just one. So, the need for high availability goes up.

Server virtualization suppliers like VMware, Microsoft, and Citrix, all have capabilities to provide high availability on the application side. You need to make sure you match that with high availability on the storage infrastructure side, so that you've got the same capabilities within your storage from a high availability standpoint as you do your sever infrastructure.

Gardner: Right, it doesn't make sense to have the applications humming along at whatever requirements are, if the storage and data can't keep up.

High application availability

Koponen: Exactly. From an HP portfolio standpoint, we have some innovative products like the HP LeftHand SAN system that's based on a clustered storage architecture, where data is striped across the arrays and the cluster. If a single array goes down in the cluster, the volume is still online and available to your virtual server environment, so that high degree of application availability is maintained.

Gardner: Mike, how about some examples? For folks that have done this already, what are the typical scenarios? What are some of the paybacks? What's the usual case scenario?

Koponen: Dana, there was a white paper recently done by IDC on the business value of storage virtualization. It looked at a number of factors -- reduced IT labor, reduced hardware and software cost, reduced infrastructure cost, and user productivity improvements. Virtualized storage had a range of payback anywhere from four to six months, based on the type of virtualized storage that was being deployed.

It found asset utilization increases up to 300 percent, savings of administrative cost of 2x to 3x, and shrinking back-up times by up to 80 percent as well. The benefit in the payback was really compelling. That IDC paper is posted on the HP website.

Virtualized storage had a range of payback anywhere from four to six months, based on the type of virtualized storage that was being deployed.



Gardner: What are some of the business returns? Clearly, we've got some cost benefits and technology benefits that folks in the IT department would enjoy, but what would we expect from storage virtualization for the larger business outcomes or goals?

Koponen: You have these benefits of reduced CapEx and OpEx that companies can take to the bottom line, particularly in these economic times, and you also have improved business agility as well. Let's say, a company makes an acquisition and they've got to merge an existing IT resource into their existing IT infrastructure. The ability to do that is going to be greater, given that you've got a virtualized storage infrastructure in place.

Gardner: That gives more agility for changing your organization from a merger and acquisition perspective. How about sourcing, when it comes to what we think about now as cloud computing? Is there some benefit in having virtualized storage that gives you more options for your sourcing?

Koponen: Well, it gives you more options in terms of the flexibility with which you manage your internal cloud, how you can meet your quality of service levels to your internal user community, and how you partition out storage to them, because you can make much more efficient use of those resources. Using your outsourced cloud providers, you can augment that existing server and storage capacity that you've got in place.

Gardner: Returning to the road map of how you would get started and involved with this, what else do you need to consider other than certain technologies? Is this something that's going to change the nature of your organization? Are we going to be asking different folks inside of IT, and perhaps outside of IT, to work together in ways they hadn't before? What are the cultural implications?

Combining resources

Koponen: That's a good question, Dana. In the case of enterprise organizations, you may have the storage management done by a particular set of folks. Then, you may have the management of it, the server infrastructure, done by another set of folks. This will bring those two sets of resources together and provide them more efficient platform to be able to work together.

In medium-sized businesses, it's all about being able to manage storage assets without having to have expert storage administrators in place, so that server administrators can manage the storage assets as easily as they do their server assets.

Gardner: I wonder, if there's something we left out. Is there another item around this that folks should be aware of?

Koponen: I don't think so. However, for people who want to learn more about storage virtualization and what HP has to offer to improve their business returns, I suggest, they go to www.hp.com/go/storagevirtualization. There they can learn about the different types of storage virtualization technologies available. There are also some assets on that website to help them with the justification of putting storage virtualization within their companies.

HP has very strong relationships with all of the server virtualization suppliers in the marketplace, so that we can bring complete solutions to bear on customers.



Gardner: Just to be clear. When HP approaches storage virtualization, you're working with a number of different vendors and suppliers and different technologies. This is really quite a heterogeneous landscape. Is that correct?

Koponen: That's correct. HP has very strong relationships with all of the server virtualization suppliers in the marketplace, so that we can bring complete solutions to bear on customers. We use best-of-breed technology from the entire ecosystem.

Gardner: Well, thanks. We've been hearing about server virtualization in the past few years, but today, we've taken the time to look at a sibling, storage virtualization. It involves improved runtime workloads in the server side, getting the storage and data that it needs, but there is also a lot of pure, economic rationale for going about the storage virtualization on its own.

Here to help us better understand the whys and hows of storage virtualization is Mike Koponen. He's the HP StorageWorks Worldwide Solutions Marketing Manager. Thanks for your time, Mike.

Koponen: Thank you, Dana.

Gardner: This is Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions. You've been listening to a sponsored BriefingsDirect podcast. Thanks for listening and come back next time.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes/iPod and Podcast.com. Download the transcript. Learn more. Sponsor: Hewlett-Packard.

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on the improved business metrics from adopting a virtualized storage architecture. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2010. All rights reserved.

Friday, January 29, 2010

Security Skills Offer Top Draw Across Still Challenging U.S. IT Jobs Outlook

Edited transcript of BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition podcast, Volume 48, on where to find opportunities in IT during this stage of the recession.

Listen to the podcast. Download the transcript. Find it on iTunes/iPod and Podcast.com. Learn more. Charter Sponsor: Active Endpoints. Also sponsored by TIBCO Software.

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Gain additional data and analysis from Foote Partners on the IT jobs market.

Dana Gardner: Hello, and welcome to the latest BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition, Volume 48. I'm your host and moderator Dana Gardner, principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions.

This periodic discussion and dissection of IT infrastructure related news and events, with a panel of industry analysts and guests, comes to you with the help of our charter sponsor, Active Endpoints, maker of the ActiveVOS business process management system, and through the support of TIBCO Software.

Our topic this week on Analyst Insight Edition centers on the IT job landscape for 2010. We have with us here today David Foote, CEO and chief research officer, as well as co-founder, at Foote Partners LLC of Vero Beach, Fla.

David closely tracks the hiring and human resources trends across the IT landscape. He'll share his findings of where the recession has taken IT hiring and where the recovery will shape up. We'll also look at what skills are going to be in demand and which ones are not. David will help those in IT, or those seeking to enter IT, identify where the new job opportunities lie.

So, please join me in welcoming David Foote to our show. Hello, David.

David Foote: Great to be here, Dana.

Gardner: First, tell us a little bit about yourself, your background, and then a bit more about the Foote Partners.

Foote: I started my career in technology in Silicon Valley, just about the time the IBM PC came to market. About half of the 10 years I spent there were working with vendors. I started in consumer electronics, in the games business.

Then, I gravitated to consulting, particularly with extremely rapid-growth technology companies, those that were making their first billion within four years. That led to becoming an analyst, and I started at Gartner in the '90s.

I was recruited to META Group to start and run their service for CIOs. While I was there, the discovery I made was that there was so much the analyst community was offering executives in IT and in business around vendors and products, and not much on the execution side.

Once we've made all of our purchases, how do we actually execute and get this stuff done? That's a spending issue, a people issue, a workforce issue, and, these days, very much a skills issue, and there really wasn't much being done.

Business focus

So, I developed a number of products and took them out to my own company in 1997. I co-founded this company with a former senior partner at McKinsey. We not only have that big IT executive and trends focus as analysts, but also very much a business focus.

We've also populated this company with people from the HR industry, because one of the products we are best known for is the tracking of pay and demand for IT salaries and skills. It's been a wild ride over 13 years, but that's pretty much it. We are in the execution business.

The last thing I'll say is that we have a proprietary database -- which I'll be drawing from today -- of about 2,000 companies in the U.S. and Canada. It covers about 95,000 IT workers. We use this base to monitor trends and to collect information about compensation and attitudes and what executives are thinking about as they manage IT departments.

Gardner: Before we get into where we're going in 2010, maybe we should pause and take a look at what's happened for the last three years. We know the bigger story about the recession, but what has happened in IT hiring? What have the last three years and, more specifically, 2009 been like?

Foote: One of the biggest trends has been in defining who an IT person is. For many years, IT people were basically people with deep technical skills in a lot of areas of infrastructure, systems, network, and communications. Then, the Internet happened.

All of a sudden, huge chunks of the budget in IT moved into lines of business. That opened the door for a lot of IT talent that wasn't simply defined as technical, but also customer facing and with knowledge of the business, the industry, and solutions. We've been seeing a maturation of that all along.

What's happened in the last three years is that, when we talk about workforce issues and trends, the currency in IT is much more skills versus jobs, and part of what's inched that along has been outsourcing.

We have labor arbitrage now. If you need to get something done, you can certainly purchase that and hire people full-time or you can rent it by going anywhere in the world, Vietnam, Southeast Asia, India, or many other places. Essentially, you are just purchasing a market basket of skills. Or, these days, you can give it over to somebody, and by that I mean managed services, which is the new form of what has been traditionally called outsourcing.

In execution, you don't have to hire bodies. It's not so much about hiring, but about how we determine what skills we need, how we find those, and how we execute. What's really happened in two or three years is that the speed at which decisions are made and then implemented has gotten to the point where you have to make decisions in a matter of days and weeks, and not months. To move an organization, or shuffle resources around, which in this case are people and skills, is tough to do in these very, very short time frames.

So, agility, flexibility, and speed of execution in a global market have been extremely important. In the recession, the idea of being constrained by costs has really tested the mettle of a lot of managers -- how good they are as leaders and managers. Clearly, we have seen that a lot of them are not, but a lot of them are.

Resisting the temptation

There have been some interesting behaviors during this recession that I haven't seen in prior recessions. That lead me to believe that people have really resisted the temptation to reduce cost at the expense of what the organization will look like in 2011 or 2012, when we are past this recession and are back into business as usual.

Do you have the people and the skills necessary for the long-term or were you stupid enough to let people go, simply because they weren't the right person at the right time, in the right spot, and were vulnerable? People have learned something. That's been a big difference in the last three years.

Gardner: So, clearly this is a complex issue. Shuffling people around and maintaining skills, while also recognizing there is a pressure for cost, but also wanting to be mindful of what the recovery is going to look like, has all got to be done carefully. But, generally, did IT, as a sector, fare better than other sectors in this recession? Was it as bad as it was perhaps back in 2001-2002?

Foote: IT has always done better. You have to realize that unemployment in IT is usually half of what it is in the general job market, if you look at Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) numbers. I can tell you right now that jobs, in terms of unemployment in IT, have really stabilized.

We put out a report recently. Every month we look at the BLS numbers, and in this most recent report we saw that if you look at the five bellwether segments in the BLS where you would find IT jobs, in the last three months there has been a net gain of 11,200 jobs in these five categories. If you look at the previous eight months, prior to September, there was a loss of 31,000 jobs.

There has been a real stability, and in the case of the services industry in particular, a BLS segment called Management and Technical Consulting Services has gained 11,600 jobs in the first 11 months of 2009, including gains for the last five months.

Looking for talent

So, let's just say that, going into 2010, the services industry will absolutely be looking for talent. There's going to be probably a greater need for consultants, and companies looking for help in a lot of the execution. That's because there are still a lot of hiring restrictions out there right now. Companies simply cannot go to the market to find bodies, even if they wanted to.

Gardner: So, 2010 is already a recovery period for IT. IT's not as bad as other sectors in this recession, but clearly this is spotty. This isn't across the board that we're seeing these recoveries already. What are the hot areas that you can see so far for hiring picking up in IT?

Foote: Well, number one, overall in 2010, we're not going to see any kind of, what I would call, a meaningful return to employment in IT. It's going to be a very slim-to-no chance of any noticeable hiring, particularly if you look at the way things were in 2008. I don't see that happening in 2010. At the earliest, 2011.


There are certain areas, for example, like security, where there is a tendency to not want to hire talent outside, because this is too important to a company.



Companies are still very nervous about hiring, or to put it this way, investing in full-time talent, when the overhead on a full-time worker is usually 80-100 percent of their salaries. If they can find that talent somewhere else, they are going to hire it.

There are certain areas, for example, like security, where there is a tendency to not want to hire talent outside, because this is too important to a company. There are certain legacy skills that are important, but in terms of things like security, a lot of the managed services that have been purchased in 2009 were small- to medium-sized companies that simply don't have big IT staffs.

If you have 5,000, 6,000, or 7,000 people working in IT, you're probably going to do a lot of your own security, but small and medium size have not, and that's an extremely hot area right now to be working in.

Generally speaking, Dana, you're not going to see much happening in hiring in 2010, except maybe certain industries or niche skills, which I will talk to today. Security is one. Enterprise resource planning (ERP), particularly around SAP is another. We're looking at eCommerce, whole market basket of eCommerce jobs and skills, and web development. We can talk about a few of those as we go on today. There are pockets, but overall, don't expect much.

Gardner: Right. So, as with the general economy, doing more with less will continue for some time. I think people have a sense that productivity can be squeezed out in a number of ways, and just because the recession technically might be over, doesn't mean that they are going to stop looking for that productivity.

I guess the question then moves to, if you are an IT person, and you already have a job, what skills should you be investing in? Where should you be taking your own skills in order to make yourself more valuable, perhaps to your current employer, or perhaps even to ensure your ongoing employment with a particular company? Where are the hot skills?

Security gains value

Foote: We track the value of skills and premium pay for skills, and the only segment of IT that has actually gained value, since the recession started in 2007, is security, and it has been progressive. We haven't seen a downturn in its value in one quarter.

Since 2007, when this recession started, overall the market value of security certs is up 3 percent. But if you look at all 200 certified skills that we track in this survey that we do of 406 skills, overall skills have dropped about 6.5 percent in value, but security certifications are up 2.9.

It is a tremendous place to be right now. We've asked people exactly what skills they're hiring, and they have given us this list: forensics, identity and access management, intrusion detection and prevention systems, disk file-level encryption solutions, including removable media, data leakage prevention, biometrics, web content filters, VoIP security, some application security, particularly in small to medium sized companies (SMBs), and governance, compliance, and audit of course.

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Gain additional data and analysis from Foote Partners on the IT jobs market.

Most recently, we've seen some nice numbers go up in the certifications related to auditing. You tend to see that towards the end of the year and the beginning of the year when a lot of this auditing happens. There are few more that I could mention, but these are areas in security for which companies have said they are absolutely looking for talent and skills.

Oh yes. The public sector has been on a real tear.



Gardner: Does this cut across both public and private sectors, do you break that out?

Foote: Oh yes. The public sector has been on a real tear. As you do, we get a lot of privileged information. One of the things that we have heard from a number of sources, I can't tell you the reason why, is that a lot of recruiting is happening in the private sector right now with the National Security Agency and Homeland Security -- in-the-trenches people.

I think there was a feeling that there weren't enough real deep technical, in-the-trenches kind of talent, in security. There were a lot of policy people, but not enough actual talent. Because of the Cyber Security Initiative, particularly under the current administration, there has been a lot of hiring.

Gardner: And that of course reduces the pool available to the private sector?

Smart place to be

Foote: Well, you could say that, but I believe that there are more people that have gotten religion and listen to people like us. We've actually gone out on a limb and we have been saying for about a year and a half that, bar none, for short and long range IT job security, the smartest place to be is, ironically, in IT security.

Unlike a lot of other job segments, pay and demand has risen steadily for the last two years. Neither budget nor headcount has diminished during the recession. There is this perfect storm of drivers right now that is driving momentum, and that is the idea of more regulation, constant fear of increasing threats, greater customer expectations and demands aimed at vendors who have responded. If you look at the Oracles and the Ciscos, they have built a lot of security into their products now.

The other thing, which isn't spoken about a lot, has been the splitting of the operational securities activity side from the business and strategic risk side. That has created a lot of job opportunities in security for people who don't come at it from this deep, in-the-trench technology focus. You can now work in a line of business or in a corporate staff without these deep technical skills, and work in governance and risk management side of that. It has attracted people into the field who didn't think they had the chops to really do it.

As more people come into the field, supply starts to match demand, and it has been such that there has been a pretty steady increase in pay, because demand has really exceeded supply in a lot of cases.



So, Dana, what you've seen is a lot of people who were network administrators and systems administrators now choosing security as a career. As more people come into the field, supply starts to match demand, and it has been such that there has been a pretty steady increase in pay, because demand has really exceeded supply in a lot of cases.

Gardner: Now, another big issue that we have heard about in the last year is cloud computing. And I see from your list of where hiring has taken place the strongest and SAP and ERP, but also open-source operating systems, virtualization, IP networks, social media, PHP, and what is called web-oriented architecture (WOA). Is there a building sense that the cloud hysteria is not just vapor, but that there is now starting to be a call for these sorts of jobs that might be driven by cloud-computing activity?

Foote: Let's be careful about what we call cloud. There's a lot of disagreement as to what cloud computing actually means. Let's call it managed services for a second. That market is projected to be a $66 billion market by 2012. Most people estimate the global managed services market at between $22 billion and $31-32 billion right now.

You're seeing compound annual growth rates in various segments of managed services, particularly in networking of between 19 and 39 percent, between now and 2012-2013. There absolutely is this x-factor. If people choose managed services, and many of them are right now, more will companies need to hire many full-time workers.

We're saying that you'll see increase in headcount in IT, because as companies farm out some of the work that they don't want to do and purchase services in those areas, that allows them to reshuffle their workforce and put people into a lot of other areas, which don't get a lot of mention, except from companies like ours.

Business technology work

And, that is the number of IT people you see in product development groups, marketing, finance, accounting. There are so many IT people now that don't work in IT departments under a CIO, but work in the lines of businesses, doing all kinds of business technology work.

They are in product development groups right now, because most companies have gotten smart and said, "Security is a product feature now, because our customers tell us it is. We need to have IT people involved from the very beginning as we are conceiving our products, which we'll be delivering over the web and supporting and maintaining, and all of that stuff."

I don't want to simplify it, but the definition of an IT worker has really changed quite a bit over the years. When I visit companies, I can't really tell if a person is “IT" or not, because they are in the fabric of companies.

Plus, there is all that market intelligence that can be gained. The web has become central to business globally.



That's one of the reasons right now that in 2010 we'll see a lot of activity around eCommerce and web development, in places you wouldn't exactly expect. It's cost effective to deliver products over the World Wide Web, and companies have simply now defined that as a launching point or as a delivering mechanism for a lot of what they do.

Plus, there is all that market intelligence that can be gained. The web has become central to business globally.

Gardner: That’s probably going to become probably more the case over the next several years, right?

Foote: At some point, where we have an IT department, or where we just have a bunch of consultants, analysts, and expeditors, a lot of the work traditionally done will be farmed out -- either rented, as I said before, or given over -- but that doesn’t diminish the number of people working in IT. It just changes what they do on a day-to-day basis.

Gardner: If service management is a hot area, does that affect the regions where hiring would be taking place? You look at the U.S. and Canada. Are there any geographic or regional trends afoot that we should look at vis-à-vis security, the recession, or even this emphasis on managed services providing?

Foote: I don’t know if we have enough time in this forum to go much outside of North America, but I would say, yes, of course, it’s global.

Gardner: And global, but it's not in terms of regions?

Foote: You mean around the world?

Gardner: Let’s just stick with North America for now.

Managed services

Foote: I talked about managed services before. It looks like one of the hottest areas right now in managed services is in networking and communication: Metro Ethernet, VPNs, IP voice, and wireless security. And if you look at the wireless security market right now, it’s a $9 billion market in Europe. It’s a $5.7 billion market in Asia-Pacific. But in North America it’s between $4 and 5 billion.

There's a lot of activity in wireless security. We have to go right down into every one of these segments. I could give you an idea of where the growth is spurting right now. North America is not leading a lot of this. Other parts of the world are leading this, which gives our companies opportunities to play in those markets as well.

For many years, as you know, Dana, it was everybody taking on America, but now America is taking on the rest of the world. They're looking at opportunities abroad, and that’s had a bigger impact on labor as well. If you're building products and forming alliances and partnerships with companies abroad, you're using their talent and you're using your talent in their countries. There is this global labor arbitrage, global workforce, that companies have right now, and not just the North American workforce.

For many years . . . we were reminding companies that the way that you need to run yourself is to be flexible, to have an extremely agile workforce.



Is it appropriate to always think of a home labor force? No, it’s appropriate to think of your labor force all around the world. And it’s cost-effective too. Look at the number of people that IBM has displaced in Europe and North America and moved those jobs over to places like India. That’s our world now.

Gardner: So, just as the idea about cloud computing is that you go for resources when you need them and acquire them the best way that you can under the particular circumstances, you think there is a parallel from cloud computing into hiring. You don’t necessarily hire people. You acquire skills. You pick them up and then you drop them as you need them. Is there a strong parallel there? It’s like a human resources cloud of skills that you can have elasticity with?

Foote: For many years, to anyone who would listen, we were reminding companies that the way that you need to run yourself is to be flexible, to have an extremely agile workforce. Companies had such trouble with that idea, because they were so used to the idea of hiring people, keeping them around, reskilling them, and carrying so much inappropriate skills. The idea is that, at any one moment, six months to six months to six months to six months, the mix of skills you need changes.

The idea they finally learned is that it’s better to mix-and-match your skills. Hire people up front who you know are flexible enough in terms of the market basket of skills, the multidimensionality they bring into the job, when they start, knowing that you are going to be moving that person around in the company. You're going to be tweaking their skills from here to there.

Not cutting it

The idea of a specialist who came in -- this is our Microsoft guy, this is our Lotus guy, this is our Novell guy or girl -- ain't cutting it. Companies are looking for Swiss Army knives quite a bit, when they hire people. If they need deep specialists, often they will go to the market, independent consultants, or contractors to get a lot of that deep skill. Then, when it’s over, bye, bye.

Gardner: To this issue of recruitment, traditional recruitment methods seem to be giving way to more social-media or community-generated word of mouth, but in a digital format sort of activity. Can you help us, David, understand a little better about what’s shifting in terms of how companies are recruiting these skills?

Foote: Right now, about 80 percent of employers are using or tell us that they are using or plan to use social media to fill vacancies. Ninety five percent of employers that we talked to use LinkedIn in one way or another. On the recruiting side, about 60 percent of recruiters that we talked to use Facebook.

Right now, about 80 percent of employers are using or tell us that they are using or plan to use social media to fill vacancies.



Now, that was 36 percent in 2008 and 59 percent in 2009. Forty two percent of recruiters use Twitter. You're looking at a situation now where companies have finally decided to do this, after many years of being unwilling to change the traditional method of recruiting. That was to use body shops and headhunters, collect CVs and resumes, apply the software that searches through them with filters. You had a lot of people who are incredibly good at what they do, but who don’t have certification get knocked out.

They have now said, "If you are an employee, let’s talk to those people in your audience." You have got a brand, and your brand is you. It’s a combination of technical skills, your personality, and other skills that you have. What is it that companies are hiring when they hire you, beyond simply what you see on paper in terms of skills? What have you done? What solutions have you been a part of? If you worked in SAP, how many cycles have you gone through? Have you been through two or three full development cycles?

Using social media sites, you're going right upfront answering the kind of questions that people ask you in a job interview. You're networking in places like LinkedIn, where you can actually get people to recommend you. Recruiters are looking at those recommendations that are given by executives and by colleagues. They are right there. You see it. It’s an online picture of you and your brand.

Why wouldn’t you use social media, if you look at the kind of numbers I just gave you? The recruiters and employers, they are all using it. You should be smart as a worker in IT to connect with them there.

Going back to security for a second, it’s unbelievable to me the number of boutique, niche security consulting firms that I have been talking to over the last two and three years who say that the demand for their services is greater than their ability to meet that demand. They are in a perpetual situation of not having enough consultants on board to do the work that comes their way.

Now that’s unbelievable. Why can't they connect to the people? There are reasons for that. If you go to RSA conferences or SAP TechEd conferences, you meet all these people who say, "I have been looking for a job for months and months and months and I just can’t find one." I say to them, "Well, exactly how are you looking for that job? Are you on LinkedIn? Are you using Facebook? Are you using Twitter? There are people out there that want to find you. They can’t find you. You have to find them and make yourself available to them." Basically, it’s old fashion networking, web-enabled, that's what social networking is.

Strut your stuff

Gardner: Perhaps there's never been a better time, if you have good stuff to strut, to strut it in these forums. And, there's never been a better time, if you're recruiting, to use these tools to find those folks that you need to fit that exact need that you have.

Foote: Yes. And those areas right now seem to be in security, SAP, web development, eCommerce applications and systems, business intelligence (BI). There are number of areas that we have identified in 2010 that will be hot.

You can go to our website. We put out a hot list where we look at all the data we have: pay and demand data and what 2,000 companies are telling us they are looking for in the market. We put all that into a list of 24 certifications and 32 non-certified skills, and we rank them 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and you can see that list.

If you are anywhere in the top 15 or 20, get out there, pound the pavement, and be smart.



It's updated every three months as to what the hot skills are. These are skills people are looking for. People should get ahold of that hot list and map to it. Where are you on that list? If you are anywhere in the top 15 or 20, get out there, pound the pavement, and be smart.

Gardner: What about the not-so-hot list? Are there certain IT niches or skill sets that just seem to be drying up, where there is really no demand or very little growth?

Foote: Well, always. Yes. Do you want to talk about those?

Gardner: Yeah. What's the new not-hot list?

Foote: I haven't looked at that list lately, but we do get calls, about every two years, from an enterprising editor or a reporter, who wants to publish the dead or dying list. We say to them, "This is going to kill your career as a writer, if you do this, because anybody who is on that list, and that's their specialty, is going to come after you." It has happened where reputations have been badly sullied. You can Google "Foote Partners' dead and dying skills" and you can find us, because we contribute to every one of these lists for good or bad.

Gardner: At the risk of being overly reality-oriented, let's take that plunge anyway and come up with a few areas that just don’t seem to be growing any more.

Foote: There are a number of networking skills that have fallen out of favor over the years. Things like Smalltalk. I would say probably the C language, not C++ and C#, but I would say the C language probably has taken hits. There have been a number of older web development, web authoring tools that are no longer on that list.

I wouldn't put Gigabit Ethernet on that in general, but I think there are some people that will tell you that certain old brands of Gigabit Ethernet, like 1 Gig versus 10, would be falling more out of favor. The OS/2 from IBM, is that still hanging around? It's probably dead.

There are so many dead skills that companies have just abandoned them as platforms and products. There are still people around that might have those skills. So yeah, there are plenty of dead skills.

What's hot

Gardner: Back to the more lively news. What certification areas are hot? You mentioned the idea of being a Swiss Army knife as a person, the walking in with multiple skills. I would think that having multiple certifications would be a very strong thing to have, make you more valuable and more interesting. What sort of certifications should people be looking at?

Foote: Well, the certifications that are on our current hot list that are doing quite well -- in fact, the first and sixth positions -- are Red Hat certification engineers, open systems, Linux. Twelve of 24 on this list of hot certifications are security.

In order, the GIAC Certified Incident Handler is at the number three position. The ISC-squared Systems Security Certified Practitioner is at number four. Check Point Certified Security Administrator is at number eight. The CISA, the gold standard auditing certification from ISACA is number 11. And then at positions 14, 15, 16, Check Point Security Expert, the Forensics Analyst, and Intrusion Analyst from SANS Institute.

One not related to security is Cisco Certified Design Expert, which is the number five position. That is an excellent advanced-level certification.



One not related to security is Cisco Certified Design Expert, which is the number five position. That is an excellent advanced-level certification. Again, it's always on our list, somewhere in the top ten positions most of the time.

What's interesting this time is that the SAS-Certified Advanced Programmer is there. Before, I mentioned BI, and now we see SAS coming in at number seven on that, so good news for SAS. BI and business analytics is on our hot list, as I mentioned before, as strong skills for 2010.

Even the Java Programmer Certification from Sun. Java is also number eight out of 32 on our non-certified skills hot list too. As I look at eCommerce and web development skills, we're looking at things like the Microsoft Commerce Server, Microsoft SharePoint, C++, SOAP, Python, Perl, a number of those. The certifications, I think, are mainly in the areas of open systems, security, and believe it or not, things like WebSphere.

Some of the service-oriented architecture (SOA) skills are back. There has been sort of a resurgence of not these big grand, huge SOA projects, but point solutions. Small-chunk SOA has made a comeback this year. We see that both in the number 12 ranked certification, the Certified Solutions Developer - WebSphere from IBM. And then you see the BEA SOA Enterprise Architecture Certification. In that regard, what I didn't mention before is, architecture continues to be a good skill area for 2010.

What's interesting about architecture is its one of those skills, as we've said to people, is a long run kind of career opportunity for you. There will always be a great need for architects, and most companies will tell us that. They have been flat lining as far as pay in those certifications in 2009 because of cost containment.

You don’t look at architect skills and certifications as short-term investments, but more sort of long-term, core competency skills for organizations. So, the focus has gone off of architecture a little bit.

Need for architects

On the other side of this recession, I think you'll see what we saw in 2007 and 2008, which is a lot of companies looking for architects. They're continually telling us, "We don’t have enough of these architects around here. We need more of them." I mean, enterprise architects, data architects, security architects, SAP architects, and information architects, a whole lot of them.

I'd like to see that come back in 2010. I always put architecture on the list, but it comes down to how much money people have, and how short range a lot of their decisions are.

Gardner: To just touch briefly on the notion of having a cross-pollenization of skills. In the past, someone with an engineering degree and an MBA would have done well in certain sectors. Are there any two areas that we might not think intuitively would be related, but that stack up really well in 2010, if you wanted to combine skills in a way that would give you an advantage in the market?

When you look at IT hiring in the last two or three years, you see that they want IT people working in their marketing departments, their human resource departments, their finance and accounting departments, operations, and logistics.



Foote: Well, I have been saying for a while, and also for 2010, is if you are in college, you want a minor in computer science and a major in something like mathematics, marketing, finance, or accounting. When you look at IT hiring in the last two or three years, you see that they want IT people working in their marketing departments, their human resource departments, their finance and accounting departments, operations, and logistics.

They want people with that kind of background to understand what that part of a business does. Then, they want that person to help them to think through how technology can either have them do it quicker and more efficiently to raise the bar on their ability to deliver services internally in those areas.

I have often said that you can easily have a major in any of the functional areas of business that I just mentioned and have some sort of knowledge that you have gained, either through a degree or by personal experience in IT, and you would be a very strong candidate for a lot of companies.

These are those jobs that don’t fall under the corporate CIO, but under the lines of business, where you are an IT person working in a line of business, usually under a CTO or some managing director level person in IT. But, you're working in a P&L part of the business. Your job is to figure out how to make money, how to increase profitability, and how to improve customer satisfaction. There are so many ways that IT has been able to do that. As I pointed out before, you're also now involved in product development in these areas.

Gardner: That's very interesting, because in the past, let's say, 10 or 20 years, the conventional wisdom was that you wanted to have a general business education background, but then specialized in IT. I think what I am hearing from you is that you want to have a jack-of-all-trades, general sense of IT skills and maybe some certifications, but then specialize in a particular business function. Is that what's happened, a sort of a flip?

Multiple areas

Foote: Yeah. Right now, you can hear this by talking to anybody. We talk to a lot of people who hire and we ask them exactly what they need and what they're looking for. And they will say, "I need somebody who understands our business and our customers, who really understands this industry and the products that we supply in this industry. And, oh, by the way, they should have a good IT background too." It's the third or fourth thing they may mention.

Now, of course, if it's in security or if it's in routers or something like that, they may be looking for a deep certified person in that infrastructure specialty. This is particularly true in areas like SAP and ERP, and in Oracle. Look at what SAP has done in its product strategy. They have really gotten down to industry and function.

You're really looking at being a specialist in finance and accounting systems, sales distribution or logistics, or even global travel management, and you become an expert in that area using SAP products. So, you're an IT person, but you are specializing in a domain that is usually functional or industry.

That's what a specialist is in IT these days. They have a technical specialty and they have a business specialty . . .



That was a smart move for SAP, and a lot of companies have taken to that sort of segmentation of the market. That's what a specialist is in IT these days. They have a technical specialty and they have a business specialty, and it's probably in a function within that business that is supported and enabled by technology.

Gardner: Well, just to recap a little bit, we have said that the recession has certainly hurt the IT sector. There are fewer jobs, not as severe in cuts in terms of some others, perhaps half the general unemployment rate in IT. Things have leveled out. We're seeing some rehiring in specific areas, late in 2009, going into 2010.

You expect 2010 to be fairly flat, not a huge spike in demand, but in specialized areas that we have talked about, security being prominent among them. There's going to be growing demand. There's going to be this opportunity to position yourself, if you have that right balance of technology, skills, and business acumen.

But, you expect things to be picking up later in 2010, perhaps 2011, where we might see a bit more of that significant growth. And, the hot skills and being able to present yourself through a social network makes a lot of sense. Did we miss anything?

Foote: No, but the projection of late 2010 or 2011, that's for hiring. There is still a tremendous amount of investment and money moving around in 2010, but the focus is more on skills than it is on hiring full-time workers. That creates a lot of opportunities for contractors and independent consultants, as I pointed out before, which is supported by the BLS numbers.

The IT services business, the systems integrators (SIs), the small boutique consulting firms, are going to get a lot of play in 2010, because there won’t be a lot of full-time workers added to companies in that period.

They're still in a time where they are going to have a lot of work to do and they've got to get it done. They won’t have nearly the restrictions in renting or giving over some of this activity to managed services, but they still will have certain restrictions in full-time hiring, and that full-time hiring will be in niche areas and in the four, five, or six specializations I have mentioned.

Gardner: So, perhaps it's a good time, if you've got the right skills, to hang your shingle up, go into your own boutique consultancy, maybe partner up with a few other folks that are in complimentary skill sets, and then promote yourself through a social network. This will be a good time to do something like that.

Foote: Yeah. But, as a person who has actually hung a shingle a lot and competes against those big firms, you have to have a lot of intestinal fortitude if you are going to do that. I'd recommend that the best thing you could do is find old pals who you used to work with -- even if it was five, six, seven, eight years ago -- and network with them. You might find that they're interested in bringing you on, because I do think there is going to be much more activity in 2010.

And then, in 2011, we may see a return to some full-time hiring. Then, you can choose whether you want to go back into working for a big company or a small company, or stay as a consultant. Again, Dana, consulting and that kind of activity is not for everybody’s personality.

Gardner: Excellent. We've had a deep penetrating and interesting discussion about IT hiring and trends. I certainly want to thank our guest David Foote, CEO and chief research officer, as well as co-founder at Foote Partners LLC, in Vero Beach, Fla. Thanks so much, David.

Foote: You bet, Dana.

Gardner: I also want to thank our sponsors for this BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition podcast, and that would be Active Endpoints and TIBCO Software.

This is Dana Gardner, principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions. Thanks for listening, and come back next time.

Listen to the podcast. Download the transcript. Find it on iTunes/iPod and Podcast.com. Learn more. Charter Sponsor: Active Endpoints. Also sponsored by TIBCO Software.

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Gain additional data and analysis from Foote Partners on the IT jobs market.

Edited transcript of BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition podcast, Volume 48, on where to find opportunities in IT during this stage of the recession. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2010. All rights reserved.

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