IT infrastructure is critical. IT infrastructure enables businesses to run—from day-to-day operational execution to visionary strategic innovation and everything in between. What’s interesting, though, is that people are only aware of it when there’s a problem: HR can’t access the payroll application, customers are complaining about how slow the transactional system is or this month’s cloud bill was double what you expected it to be.
No one should notice a well-orchestrated environment, but once application performance slows or an outage occurs, people start to grumble. The same is true for IT infrastructure.
The Top Four Ways Your IT Infrastructure Can Become Undesirably Visible
Given the complexity of modern hybrid/multi-cloud environments and the applications they support, it’s no surprise that countless things can go wrong—and when they do, your IT team takes the flack.
If your infrastructure is humming along nicely, that’s a testament to the IT infrastructure team’s hard work and expertise. Sadly, they don’t get the recognition because it’s all invisible to the rest of the organization. It’s only when *BAM!* something happens that the team is scrutinized.
While there are many ways this can manifest, it usually falls under one of the following four categories:
• Availability — This may be the most catastrophic because when systems are unavailable, people can’t do whatever it is they need to do.
• Performance — A system might be available, but that doesn’t mean it’s performing to SLA or user expectations. The result can range from minor annoyance to lost revenue and customer churn.
• Cost — Runaway expenditures don’t necessarily affect users, but you do not want to be called to account by the finance team or, worse, executive leadership.
• Compliance — This is another area that may not have a broad impact on user experience, but the repercussions of non-compliance can be financially and reputationally significant.
Common Infrastructure Culprits and How to Address Them
To ensure the necessary availability, performance, cost control and compliance to keep your IT infrastructure under the radar, you must understand what can cause problems in these areas. Here are eight common culprits, along with ways you can address them, so your IT team stays invisible.
Broken or Misunderstood Dependencies
Your infrastructure is a complex web of interdependent applications and services. Every time you make a change, it could have a rippling effect on the categories mentioned above. Automated discovery and service mapping capabilities enable you to easily trace dependencies throughout your infrastructure to avoid unintended consequences.
Cloud Waste
Chances are very high that you’ve got cloud waste. This means that you could be getting billed for a storage block that’s attached to a stopped instance, for compute instances that are not being used, or for unattached load balancers. Finding idle and abandoned resources can keep your monthly cloud bill under control and on budget.
Un-Breakdownable Cloud Costs
Cloud bills are notoriously complex, and while cloud providers do offer tools to help you analyze your cloud spend, those tools often don’t answer all the questions your business might have. In addition to adding clarity to such opaque expenses, you need to be able to parse your cloud spend based on what makes business sense to your organization, not what makes technical sense to your cloud provider.
Poor Capacity Planning
Your infrastructure needs to meet your business needs, which are continuously evolving. As changes happen, whether it’s increased utilization of existing resources or modified/added resources to support new requirements, workloads could push current capacity and impact performance and stability. You need to be able to forecast infrastructure demands against business objectives to minimize potential issues before they happen.
Poor Workload Placement Decisions
Your infrastructure consists of various environments each with its own characteristics. If you migrate a workload without understanding the implications of that particular environment, you could risk performance problems or spiking costs. To prevent this, you need any-to-any migration insights to make better decisions about workload priorities, groups and deployments.
Poor Reservation Planning
Reservations (i.e., reserved instances or programmatic discounts) offer discounts for committing to a particular plan. If you plan well, the savings can be significant. But if you don’t use the capacity you’ve bought, the savings might not materialize. To improve cloud resource planning, you need to be able to evaluate your potential savings in varied scenarios.
Workload Drift
Over time, your workloads evolve due to changing demand, data volumes, etc. As a result, they can outgrow their current configurations, leading to performance issues or rising costs. This is a natural result of business growth, so the goal isn’t to prevent that drift. Instead, you want to optimize capacity and cost on an ongoing basis to keep your workloads right-sized.
Slow Problem Troubleshooting and Remediation
No matter how many precautions you take, something somewhere will inevitably go wrong. And once you become aware of the situation, the clock starts ticking to find the cause and fix it, all of which takes time. The longer the entire process takes, the longer your infrastructure will be visibly and painfully not working as expected. For those cases, you need full-stack visibility with application-centric, AI-based analytics to minimize impact duration as much as possible.
Keeping the engine running behind the curtain can be a daunting task, but with proper planning and management, your IT team will remain visible to those responsible for managing it and invisible to those in the rest of the organization. Of course, the complexity of today’s cloud infrastructure makes that challenging, and there will be IT fire drills that take place, but it’s about how IT leaders react to the situation and resolve it in the quickest way possible, allowing themselves to return to their preferred place in the shadows.