Frame developed a compelling set of recommendations and a practical roadmap for evolving the university’s IT infrastructure. Our consultation with stakeholders followed by detailed analysis of the server infrastructure, storage infrastructure, network infrastructure and database architecture, uncovered one common theme: the university was in a position to achieve each of its stated objectives across all levels of its IT infrastructure.
Drawing on our strategic planning expertise and experience deploying complex IT infrastructure solutions in the higher education sector, the plan met the business needs to consolidate and save money. What’s more, the plan facilitated the university’s intrinsic need of freedom to exchange ideas and information internally, with other institutions and with external organisations.
Our recommendations for the server infrastructure addressed the inherent complexities of an environment that had grown over time, in often disconnected directions. We identified standardisation, consistency, virtualisation and better operating practices as ways to achieve cost effectiveness while ensuring greater flexibility and scalability, as well as improved service levels. To address constraints in data centre space, power and cooling, we highlighted ways to optimise existing capacity and so ensure services could be sustained and added, delaying the expense of a longterm data centre solution.
For storage infrastructure, our recommendations enabled the university to define and offer a variety of data storage services, and ensured the data resided on the most cost-effective platform while meeting requirements for the data’s access, growth and retention.
The university had already commenced virtualisation of its network infrastructure. To support this, and maintain the integrity of the environment, we recommended investment in necessary support approaches, processes and management tools that would enable the environment to operate efficiently and cost effectively, at the required level of performance.
The solution we recommended for the database architecture, catered for different customer service level agreements, and provided the flexibility, performance and levels of high availability expected from a consolidated database environment. By consolidating hardware and databases onto new, cost-effective, x86- based commodity hardware that can be scaled over time, the university will realise financial benefits and have an environment that’s easier to manage.