With nearly 80 percent of respondents in a recent survey conducted by StorONE indicating
that they have had cuts to their IT budgets. The effects of the
Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic have resulted in a negative impact on
organizations' ability to manage their storage infrastructures in order
to ensure continued access to an increasingly remote workforce and to
satisfy health protocols put in place to protect workers.
More than two-thirds of those questioned as part of the StorONE "How Has COVID-19 Impacted Your Data Center?"
survey maintain some level of on-premises storage. Because of the
pandemic, almost 40 percent of those organizations have had no or
critically restricted access to their data centers to address storage
hardware failures or increase data protection levels, such as improved
drive redundancies or snapshot intervals. Reduced budgets mean that
organizations will be unable to offer more performance and capacity to
their users or will need to rely on better vendor pricing to supplement
their needs.
Among the survey's findings are:
- 20
percent of organizations have not had any access to their data centers,
meaning that any physical hardware failures have had to wait. Another
20 percent have had restricted access to only allow work done in
critical instances. The remaining 60 percent have been able to maintain
moderate access with established maintenance windows and limited
workforces.
- A
third and have been forced to go to the data center to replace drives
despite health risks. 12.5 percent of respondents indicated that they
have had to live with the risk of data loss due to access issues, while
another 12.5 percent have leveraged hot spares for their failed drives.
- 20
percent of organizations had restricted access to storage systems
remotely during the pandemic, with 12 percent experiencing constrained
remote administration capabilities due to hardware limitations. Another
12 percent had no remote administration during the pandemic with
connections that either failed or were impractical.
- 33.3
percent of respondents said they had to count on their backup system
for improved data protection levels, with 20.8 percent not able to
enable any improvements to protection levels and 16.7 percent unable to
afford the performance impact required of increased data protection.
- 16.7
percent of companies cut their IT budgets by more than 50 percent, with
45.8 percent cutting budgets between 10 and 25 percent. 4.2 percent cut
budgets between 25 and 50 percent, 16.7 percent cut by as much as 10
percent and 16.7 percent reported no cuts to their IT budget due to
Coronavirus.
- To
deal with reduced budgets, 40 percent of organizations are hoping for
better pricing from their existing vendors, 30 percent will seek out
other vendors that provide lower prices, and 30 percent will stand pat
without increasing services to their users.
"While
some organizations have been able to weather the storm of this
unprecedented event, the negative impacts of COVID-19 on storage
infrastructures are already being felt by a large majority of companies
throughout the world," said Gal Naor, StorONE co-founder, and CEO. "IT
has long been expected to do more with less, but these survey results
show that data is being left unprotected and unavailable in many
instances due to lack of access to physical hardware or severe budget
cuts. Companies cannot afford to risk their data regardless of the
current issues at hand. Organizations need to implement a solution that
will allow them to take existing servers and storage to create a
near-zero additional cost system complete with data-protection services.
A storage system with these capabilities ensures mission-critical
information is always available, immediately recoverable and remains
durable during times of crisis."
StorONE's
S1 Enterprise Storage Platform simplifies organizations' storage
infrastructures while providing a solution that meets all the
software-defined storage objectives. StorONE's suite of data protection
services - S1:DirectWrite, S1:vRAID, S1:Snap and S1:Replicate - makes
storage invincible by ensuring organizations can not only recover their
information quickly but can also retain data indefinitely without
impacting performance. This combination of services delivers
unprecedented protection from data loss, no matter the threat.
StorONE
makes it easy to get an enterprise-class storage infrastructure up and
running quickly, while at the same time reducing storage spend. Because
the S1 Enterprise Storage Platform's software is simple to install,
StorONE engineers can guide customers through installation remotely via
web conferencing services such as Skype, WebEx, and Zoom, to maintain a
social distancing-compliant installation. Many customers can complete
the installation themselves simply by following StorONE's Quick Start
Guide.
The survey is still available for input at https://www.storone.com/how-has-covid-19-impacted-your-data-center/.
Naor and former storage analyst, now StorONE's CMO George Crump, are
conducting a live webinar " 5 Steps to Seamless Storage Operations
During a Pandemic" to provide the results of the survey and guidance on
how to protect your storage infrastructure from future pandemics. You
can register for the event at: https://www.brighttalk.com/webcast/5583/426935
All
pre-registrants will receive an advance copy of Naor's latest
whitepaper "10 Recommendations for Storage Managers to Prepare for
Future Pandemics"