Networking has always been complicated – its management even more so. It is
no exaggeration to say networking has never been more important than it is
today, since it is used in almost every facet of IT service delivery.
But many organisations take their infrastructure for granted. As a result,
network management is treading water.
It is clear that network managers will need to perform a fine balancing act.
They will need to support new applications and new methods of working, as well
as enable effective security within stringent budgets.
An additional level of complexity for network management is being created by
demands for a new culture of openness that is encouraging collaboration within
the organisation and with other parties beyond the firewall. Only when such
demands are acknowledged can an effective 21st century network infrastructure be
built, along with the deployment of the processes and tools necessary for
dynamic management.
Challenging times
When it comes to network management, the biggest challenge organisations face is
complexity. Network administration has never been simple and, in many respects,
is probably the most technically demanding of all IT management tasks.
One just has to consider the variety of devices now deployed on the network
– core routers, edge routers, network switches, load balancers, WAN optimisation
appliances, WiFi access points, firewalls, content filters – to get a feel for
the challenge.
In most organisations, such systems will have been procured from a variety of
suppliers, which usually means different management tools are needed to install
and manage service delivery to users.
Even in organisations of modest scale, such factors conspire to ensure
network management gets more difficult by the day. Also, the trend towards IT
infrastructure consolidation has frequently resulted in organisations becoming
more dependent on the capabilities, responsiveness and availability of their
networks.
It is now often the case that the network needs to extend beyond the four
walls of the organisation to encompass employees operating outside of managed
locations, such as hotels or homes.
Such employees use a variety of connectivity options and create extended
security challenges. And the notion of extending can also include the growing
need to include the systems of partners and
customers.
Pressing issues
While many IT professionals and network administrators are now charged with
keeping networks up and running, few face service level agreements that require
them to meet quality factors based on user response time metrics.
Instead, most network managers are still centred on availability, possibly
with added requirements relating to security and connectivity specifics. Such
criteria are ripe for overhaul, especially as datacentre consolidation can cause
latency to become a limiting factor for certain business-critical applications.
Then there is the “big picture”: all IT services need to align with the
defined needs of the business. Today, this pressure is pushing all areas of IT,
including network management, to be able to accurately monitor and then manage
the delivery of IT services in ways that mean something tangible to the
business.
What the future holds
Organisations of all sizes already have to deal with a host of new applications,
such as voice over IP (VoIP) and streaming media. Such demand-driven network use
can stress even a well-designed infrastructure, unless systems and robust
processes are in place to cater for real-time stresses.
There seems no end to the number of new devices that can attach to the
corporate network. Moreover, it is clear that the borders – technical and
operational – between existing front- and back-end storage networks will blur.
There are also escalating, and often conflicting, demands of regulation, gove
rnance and compliance reporting, which are rarely well understood but which
consume resources and can easily sidetrack attention from value creation.
All such elements conspire against the network manager’s primary role, which
is to support service delivery. Indeed, the requirement to deliver acceptable
service quality to all users will differentiate organisations able to thrive and
reap value from technology, from firms that are doomed to regress.
Apart from exceptional circumstances, network management can become more
straightforward, although the path will rarely be pain-free and the details
will, naturally, differ in each organisation.
For some firms, the solution could be the networking equivalent of the
projects already undertaken in the name of server and storage consolidation:
rationalisation of network infrastructure can help simplify management and
reduce risk. At the same time, some movement is being made by the industry to
introduce standards but, as ever, there are many obstacles to overcome.
On the plus side, some interesting management tools are being created by the
likes of
EMC/Smarts,
Cisco,
Juniper,
Nortel and
PacketTrap. But while
each management tool has its plus points, none provides a magic pill. Perhaps
key to the future of network management is another wave of consolidation. We are
in a growth phase at the moment, one in which diversity, not uniformity, is
celebrated.
As the current wave of technologies stabilises, we expect suppliers to
deliver new management tools that take into account diversity, but which also
deliver end-to-end service control.
Tools alone will not solve the problem. Organisations should step back and
consider the management processes they have in place. For many organisations,
the processes are likely to reflect business and performance requirements as
they were, not as they are or will need to become. An easy example could be to
compare existing management capabilities against a hypothetical set of
requirements needed to support the management of an increasingly diverse range
of network devices.
Chances are it is happening already. Such a review should consider the
requirements and skills available across the entire IT organisation. In doing
so, not only will your network be in better shape now, it will also be in good
stead for the future.
Tony Lock is programme director at analyst Freeform Dynamics. Read the
blog at:
http://freeform.computing.co.uk
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