The ever growing amount of data, which some believe is growing at 40 to 60 percent each year, means that data storage has become one of biggest challenges to solve for large enterprises.
Gartner Research reported 1 November that nearly half (47 percent) of its survey respondents ranked data growth as one of their three biggest daily challenges.
The others are system performance and scalability (37 percent), and network congestion and connectivity architecture (36 percent).
Hardware and software vendors will be glad to know that data centre managers are planning to do something about this stored-data surge. Sixty-two percent of respondents reported that they will be investing in data archiving or retirement initiatives by the end of 2011 to address the problem.
In large IT systems, substantial amounts of data often do not get deleted on a regular schedule, despite company policies. This is most often due to multiple backup copies and mirrored systems that get passed over at cleanup time.
All those extra copies take up valuable space on digital disks or tape that can cost the enterprise dearly over time.
Other high-ranking IT projects that will be employed to address the issue of data growth are data security from internal, external or hacker risk; storage consolidation; storage management tools; and data reduction techniques.
Gartner’s research was conducted from June to August 2010 with representatives from 1,004 large enterprises from eight countries.
“While all the top data centre hardware infrastructure challenges impact cost to some degree, data growth is particularly associated with increased costs relative to hardware, software, associated maintenance, administration and services,” said Gartner Research Director April Adams.
“Given that cost containment remains a key focus for most organisations, positioning technologies to show that they are tightly linked to cost containment, in addition to their other benefits, is a promising approach.”
Countries included in the report “User Survey Analysis: Key Trends Shaping the Future of Data Centre Infrastructure Through 2011” were Australia, Brazil, China, Germany, India, Russia, US, and the UK.
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