Benefits of having a Data Center For Your Business

Managing Power Outages Better

In the event of a disastrous power outage or failure, your business can suffer vast consequences through no fault of its own. On-site servers are already prone to broadband issues, and significant power outages can cripple them completely. Outsourcing data control enables a business to mitigate the impact of such events. Organizations need to understand that the impact of just losing power for as little as 1/50 of a second can give rise to events or outages in IT equipment lasting as long as 15 minutes to multiple hours. Onsite power failures could even lead to irreversible data loss. This is where data centres turn out to be much more reliable than on-premise data storage. As storage systems, servers, and network devices have shrunk in size, the miniaturized components they use are also much more prone to failure under unpredictable power conditions than earlier-generation equipment. This is where a data centre from Managed Service Providers like IT support 24/7 can provide a reliable alternative with abundant storage without the shortcomings of on-premise servers.

Reducing Costs

According to some estimates, the U.S. economy suffers losses between $200 billion and $570 billion every year - just from power outages and other disruptions. Data centres can help you offset the damage considerably. Data centres are designed to be resilient in the face of fluctuating power conditions. Even with generators and surge suppressors, on-premise servers cannot hope to replicate the same and need an energy kick-start to start up their functions and maintain them. Their vulnerability to power surges and other electrical disturbances also makes them unreliable and increases power costs. With the cost of power and cooling constantly inching upwards, companies can ill-afford such inefficiency. On the other hand, data centres are built to ensure high availability with consistently improving power efficiencies that ultimately lead to lower power costs.

Improving Efficiency

Did you know that the law in the US actually allows electrical power to vary enough to generate significant disruptions in IT equipment? U.S. standards allow voltage to vary from 5.7 percent to 8.3 percent under absolute specifications, and as can be expected, this sort of variability can lead to significant equipment malfunction or failure. A data centre comes in handy here as they implement stringent guidelines and monitoring processes to manage all potential power uncertainty and maintain power levels. Moreover, power derived from public utilities can often come under pressure as more and more organizations utilize the same power grid. This results in a significant slowing down of IT functions. This is another problem that is circumvented with the use of a data centre. Since data centres mostly use private power sources, it is routine for organizations to notice significant improvements in technological speed and function as power levels remain consistent when supplying electricity to a single entity, and there are no fluctuations.

Top Data Center Technology Trends

Automation

Automation is being deployed widely in data centre technologies. The applications of automation can range from robots used to automatically retrieve cold-storage data tapes to security robots monitoring the facility and more. Big Technology companies took the opportunity presented by the pandemic to actually implement sensors in Roomba vacuum cleaners to measure data centre temperatures and humidity. As data centres increase in scale and the volume of hardware and software gets beyond the capabilities of human management, robotics will have to step in to fill the gap. In fact, many companies are already discussing the scope of having fully automated server centres that could potentially operate at higher temperatures and have lower requirements for cooling and lower running costs.

Hyper scalability

Hyper-scale data centres are fast becoming mainstream with the introduction of big data management. Large corporations and cloud and hosting services providers such as AWS, Microsoft Azure, or Google Cloud need increasingly more hyper-scale data centres to keep up with the volume of produced and managed data. Hyper-scale centres are generally built to services an individual client's needs, such as one of the Big Tech companies like Amazon, Google, and Microsoft that already occupy 50% of the total hyperscale market. Since they are designed to service the requirements of a single client, data zoning becomes a possibility. This means that data allocation can be done as per priority and environmental requirements. Data-intensive workloads with more intensive CPU activities are moved to the appropriate environmental zones with the right temperature controls. Managed IT Services can help you distribute workloads across the infrastructure and balance them across servers for ideal heat displacement and more reliable energy distribution.

Sustainability

The debate around climate change has forced many organizations to truly focus on sustainability initiatives. Many organizations like Microsoft have set highly aggressive sustainability targets and want to be carbon negative by 2030. This requires a complete rethinking of current infrastructure with a multi-faceted approach too closely monitoring and optimizing all business and technical processes, including energy production and water usage. Large corporations like Microsoft want to rely entirely on renewable energy - a target that’s hard to emulate without high reserves of energy storage on-site as fluctuations in wind and solar power are incredibly common. Many data centres are trying to follow in their footsteps with experimental batteries with a massive capacity built by companies like Tesla. IT consulting services can also help companies implement sustainability measures in their own data centres.

About Nora:

Nora Erspamer is the Director of Digital Marketing at New Charter Technologies, a group of companies specialising in IT outsourcing services. She is an experienced marketer and sales strategist with a demonstrated history of working in various technology industries. Skilled in strategic campaign development, lead generation, and marketing automation software. Her blog can be found at https://www.newchartertech.com/learning/.