Download - Infrastructure Hosting in the credit crisis
Infrastructure Hosting in the Credit Crisis
Anthony FoyGroup Managing Director Interxion
www.interxion.com
Outsourcing versus in house data centre?
With the current climate as it is who is thinking of building a new data centre or expanding their existing facilities this year?
Who is thinking of outsourcing all or part of their data centre infrastructure requirements?
And who’s going to scale down?
Anthony Foy Group Managing Director Data Centre Expo March 23-24 09
www.interxion.com Source: The 451 Group and Tier1 Research (2008)
What is the rest of the market thinking?
2009 2010 2011 2012
13%
15%16%
17%
Demand for Data Centre Space is increaceing
www.interxion.com Source: Gartner (January 2009)
Why is demand for data centre space growing?
33%Enough
space for the next
36 months
24%Out of capacity
now
17%Out of
capacity within 12 months
20%Out of
capacity within 24 months
6%Out of capacity
within 36 months
More the 40 percent of companies runs out of space in next 12 months percent of
www.interxion.com Source: Gartner (January 2009)
Why is more capacity required?
General shortage of space in large cities such as London, Paris and Frankfurt
Server and Data Centre Consolidation
New Projects
Changing power and cooling requirements
Growth of:
Cloud computing including software-as-a-service
Managed hosting services
Online gaming
Social networking...
www.interxion.com Source: Gartner (January 2009)
What type of data centre can be served?
Co-location
10%Long-term
lease
6%
In house
84%
www.interxion.com Source: The 451 Group and Tier1 Research (2008)
How much do data centres cost to build?
A data centre shell and associated land costs an average of Euro 59 per square meter
A completed data centre costs on average Euro 10,900 per square meter to build - average density NOT high density
Pricing variables depend on power and cooling system density and levels of equipment redundancy
www.interxion.com Source: Gartner (January 2009)
Average data centre footprint ?
15% More than 5000 sq.
mt17%
Less than 300 sq. mt
44%300 to 1000 sq. mt
24%1000 to 5000
sq. mt
www.interxion.com Source: Gartner (January 2009)
How much Colocation space will you use in the next 24 months?
12%More than 1000 sq. mt
34%Less than 100
sq. mt
36%Between 1,000 and 300 sq. mt
18%Between 300
and 1000 sq. mt
www.interxion.com
What is Colocation?
Colocation facilities could be described as ‘internet’ data centres and are shared facilities managed by service providers
Data centre space is sold by individual rack/cabinet or cage (average: 5 - 50 cabinets)
Typical customers include hosting providers, ISPs, telcos, internet content, entertainment and social networking suppliers and mid market enterprise across vertical sectors
Most contracts are 3-5 years in length
www.interxion.com Source: IDC (2007)
Why outsourced Colocation?
Compa
ny P
olicy
Compli
ance
Acces
s to
Con
nect
ivity
Bette
r Skil
ls
Mor
e Sec
ure
Right L
ocat
ion
Flexibi
lity
Resilie
nce
Mor
e Cos
t-Effe
ctive
13%17% 20% 20% 22% 24% 27%
36%43%
Reasons for Using Colocation
www.interxion.com
Colocation – More cost-effective
Expenditure moves from CapEx to OpEx budgets – important during a credit crunch due to lack of available capital
Investment moves from high costs upfront to predictable, fixed term subscription payments
Improved total cost of ownership, leading to enhanced return on investment, especially in complex environments where power intensive equipment is deployed e.g. enhanced security, reduced utility bills etc
www.interxion.com
Colocation – Increased resilience
Guaranteed levels of uptime under stringent Service Level Agreements – of growing importance due to increasing regulations around business continuity
Partnerships with multiple network carriers to ensure failover for time-critical, high latency applications
Source: IDC (2007)
www.interxion.com
Colocation – Enhanced flexibility
Customers can be up-and-running quickly – building their own facilities takes between 12-24 months
Modular infrastructure/services, which can be provisioned and de-provisioned swiftly as required
Organisations can chose to selectively outsource elements of their IT infrastructure to handle short-term requirements for overflow capacity
Contracts generally last from between 1-3 years on average
www.interxion.com Source: Gartner (January 2009)
What do customers want their Colocation providers to look like?
16%Same
carrier as for tele-commu-nications services
35%Carrier-neutral
data cen-tre com-
pany
8%Same provider as for other
outsourced IT services
41%Best of breed
www.interxion.com Source: Gartner (January 2009)
Where do Customers want their Colocation data centres to be?
5%Anywhere in the world
59%Within easy driv-ing distance of IT operations staff
25%Within a days
drive or non-stop plane flight
11%Anywhere in the country
www.interxion.com
What Interxion provides – customer service
Largest reach of any European provider – 24 operational data centres located in 13 cities across 11 countries
Only operator with a centralised, multi-lingual European customer support centre providing:
24x7 coverage without additional costs
A single point of contact to optimise efficiency
Customer ability to use multiple sites if required
www.interxion.com
What Interxion provides – quality infrastructure and partnerships
Modular Infrastructure to support current and future customer requirements and ensure optimum energy efficiency
Carrier-neutral network services so customers can make the most cost-effective choices for themselves
Proactively managed partner community to ensure integrated, seamless service provision (500, including systems integrators, carriers ISPs and content providers)
www.interxion.com
19www.interxion.com
Interxion Market Position
11 Countries
13 Cities
24 Operational Data Centers
15 Internet / Peering Exchanges
1,100 + customers
500 + carriers
220 staff
Over 40,000 m² facilitated Space
Interxion is uniquely positioned to leverage its assets, customers, people and expertise to deliver
Premium Data Centre Services across Europe