Have to do more with a tighter budget? That's life in a Windows shop. Learn how to get the most for your money in our Cost Management Analysis Guide. Analyze costs in Windows desktop and Windows Server 2008 environments and develop a cost-effective plan for change management. Our Windows experts have the right advice to help you stick to your budget.
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[IMAGE]Cost Management Analysis Guide
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[IMAGE] Part 1: Reducing Windows desktop total cost of ownership
[IMAGE] Part 2: Using a cost management analysis to manage change
[IMAGE] Part 3: Cost management analysis may affect Windows Server 2008 plans
[IMAGE] Part 4: Calculating gains in your cost management analysis
Part 1: Reducing Windows desktop total cost of ownership
The Windows desktop is often a low priority when it comes time to allocate financial resources. In this section of our Cost Management Analysis Guide, Windows expert Bernie Klinder describes how standardizing hardware to create a common desktop environment can keep costs down in a well managed Windows environment.
The desktop workstation is the primary productivity tool in business today. Although it's the main metric most employees use to judge their IT departments, the Windows desktop environment is often given a low priority.
Well managed environments in Windows shops typically have very low call volumes and often have a desktop support-to-user ratio of 400 to 1 -- excluding the call center. If a system fails and the technician cannot resolve the issue in 20 to 30 minutes remotely, the system is replaced or re-imaged and up and running within the hour. Users have enough flexibility to do their jobs and customize their workspaces -- but they cannot change their core workstation configuration.
The corporate real
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ity is quite different. Most organizations go through the motions of applying best practices by implementing them superficially but then fail miserably at following through to make sure the details are implemented correctly. For example, most organizations have an OS imaging capability to rapidly re-image and deploy workstations. Ideally, enterprises should try to standardize on one or two images -- desktop and laptop.
In Windows Vista, organizations can standardize on one image for 32-bit or 64-bit platforms. However, Windows XP made this a bit difficult because of the different HAL requirements for single and dual core, different media for tablet PCs or different language support requirements.
As a result, some Windows shops have as many as 18 desktop OS images with an estimated annual maintenance cost of $20,000 per image. The practices in application management are even worse. It is not uncommon to find a large organization that has the capacity for putting centralized application packaging and automated distribution in place but, when audited, it discovers it has more "unmanaged" than managed applications.
There are several factors that lead to a high number of unmanaged environments:
Management can't smell how bad it stinks -- In my experience, IT managers who have worked only in poorly managed desktop environments don't appreciate how bad things are or know how much different things could be. For IT managers who have worked in well-managed environments, the benefits are obvious -- and they wouldn't have it any other way.
The goal is to create an extremely stable, reliable and consistent platform for applications that's easy to manage. Ideally, if the hardware, operating system and applications have all been thoroughly tested -- and the users don't have the ability to "break" their own systems -- the only support calls an organization should receive are for hardware failures, service requests for things like new software or password resets.
But implementing the changes needed to move from an unmanaged Windows desktop environment is frequently more of a political challenge than a technical one. Here are some tips on how to make changes with as little interference as possible:
The core components of a well managed Windows desktop environment include creating a common desktop environment by standardizing hardware, operating system configurations and applications. Preventing users from significantly changing the configuration and then centrally monitoring and managing the environment are key factors.
Application upgrades, hardware refresh efforts and even OS migrations should be simple and straightforward projects. If they are, then the Windows IT staff can be more responsive to the business needs and can spend their time identifying initiatives that can grow the business -- instead of simply being a cost center.
Bernie Klinder is an IT Project Lead with Blue Chip Consulting Group in Cleveland. He was the founder and editor of LabMice.net, a comprehensive resource index for IT professionals who support Microsoft Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 and BackOffice products. For his contributions to the information technology community, Bernie was selected as a Most Valuable Professional by Microsoft. He can be reached at berniekl@earthlink.net
Return to table of contents or proceed to Part 2 on Using a cost management analysis to manage change in a Windows shop.