Alcatel Lucent’s Data Center Consolidation

Added 15th Jun 2008
By Laurianne McLaughlin

Article Highlights

  • It's critical to maintain an effective relationship with the consulting partner you've chosen
  • No matter how good your own working team on the ground with the consulting partner, don't underestimate the need for the CIO to work the phones

After the Alcatel-Lucent merger in late 2006, CIO Elizabeth Hackenson found she had 25 data centers and 125 server rooms spread across the globe. If all goes well with the company's massive data center consolidation project now under way, that complexity will soon be history. "The goal is to get to six primary data centers and zero server rooms," Hackenson says. The project, which started in June, 2006, is slated for completion in late 2009. Hackenson's team has just finished the first year of work; they're down to 19 data centers and 88 server rooms so far, she says.

 

 

“The need for reliability and a more robust and flexible environment sparked Alcatel-Lucent's massive data center consolidation, says, CIO Elizabeth Hackenson”

Beyond IT cost considerations, what business goals shaped the decision to consolidate so much, now? "We had two very important business goals," Hackenson says. "First, reliability. We need an environment that can support our mission-critical applications worldwide." Second, she says, the environment had to become more robust and flexible to business demands. "There's tremendous growth in video and messaging across the enterprise," she says. That appetite for video is one reason that the company's new tier-four data center that opened recently in Marcoussis, France, near Paris. It hosts the company's most mission critical applications and makes heavy use of multiprotocol label switching technology out to the company's backbone, which allows for efficient handling of video streams, as well as caching and compression techniques on the networks. (This unique new center, which uses Alcatel-Lucent networking equipment and HP servers, will also be the primary network operating center to support Alcatel-Lucent's application businesses and its services business group.)

 

The consolidation, for which Alcatel-Lucent hired HP Services as a consulting partner on everything from initial assessments to disaster planning, is expected to make a large cost difference as well: Alcatel predicts that the data center consolidation project will reduce the total cost of data center operations by 25 percent before the end of 2008. The company declines to share a figure for its total data center spending or IT budget. The massive project comes at a tough business time for telecom equipment maker Alcatel - and its peers. In early February, the company reported a fourth-quarter net loss of about Rs 15,200 crore, including a Rs 14,600 crore write-down on its CDMA technology, a mobile standard that has fallen out of favor with wireless giants such as Verizon. Alcatel's market value, roughly Rs 54,000 crore, is now less than before the merger with Lucent. How do you get from here to there when you're doing a data center consolidation on this kind of scale, in this kind of environment? Hackenson and her consolidation project leader, Cliff Tozier, VP of global infrastructure, talk about the project and share seven lessons that she and her team have learned so far:

 

  • Page 1 : Alcatel Lucent’s Data Center Consolidation
  • Page 2 : Consolidating applications is harder than closing server rooms
  • Page 3 : There's a middle ground between outsourcing and owning it al

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