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Golf Gear Maker Survives Business Downturn by Moving Servers, Services to the Cloud Overview Country or Region: United States Industry: Manufacturing—Durable consumer goods Customer Profile Callaway Golf manufactures and sells golf clubs and balls, and sells golf apparel, footwear, and accessories in more than 110 countries. Business Situation To weather a business downturn, Callaway needed to trim IT costs and find ways to reconfigure its datacenter to gain more elasticity, scalability, and agility when business surged. Solution Callaway moved 4 million consumer records and many enterprise databases and websites to Windows Azure. The company uses Windows Intune to proactively manage sales laptops. Benefits Reduce datacenter costs by US$324,000 annually Improve scalability and agility Enhance performance and availability of core business systems Maintain revenue flow by keeping salespeople’s computers running “With web properties running in Windows Azure, we can scale our infrastructure quickly and proactively and avoid bad customer experiences that hurt our brand.” Dan Cowles, Manager of Solution Development, Callaway Golf Like many companies that faced the global recession of 2009, Callaway Golf decided that it had to cut costs. The IT organization moved many web properties and databases to Windows Azure, which delivered US$324,000 annually to the company’s bottom line. But the use of cloud computing did more than save money. It also gave Callaway unprecedented flexibility and scalability in responding to the needs of its global business. By using Windows Azure, Callaway can deliver servers to remote offices in hours versus months and scale capacity quickly to ensure great reseller and consumer experiences on Callaway websites. It has also eliminated maintenance downtime that used to plague international offices. Callaway uses Windows Intune to proactively manage sales computers and keep salespeople productive. And the company is evaluating Microsoft hybrid cloud storage as a way to further reduce costs.

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Page 1: download.microsoft.comdownload.microsoft.com/.../Callaway_WindowsAzure_CS.docx · Web viewFounded in 1982, Callaway Golf has grown from a boutique manufacturer of high-quality wedges

Golf Gear Maker Survives Business Downturn by Moving Servers, Services to the Cloud

OverviewCountry or Region: United StatesIndustry: Manufacturing—Durable consumer goods

Customer ProfileCallaway Golf manufactures and sells golf clubs and balls, and sells golf apparel, footwear, and accessories in more than 110 countries.

Business SituationTo weather a business downturn, Callaway needed to trim IT costs and find ways to reconfigure its datacenter to gain more elasticity, scalability, and agility when business surged.

SolutionCallaway moved 4 million consumer records and many enterprise databases and websites to Windows Azure. The company uses Windows Intune to proactively manage sales laptops.

Benefits Reduce datacenter costs by

US$324,000 annually Improve scalability and agility Enhance performance and availability

of core business systems Maintain revenue flow by keeping

salespeople’s computers running

“With web properties running in Windows Azure, we can scale our infrastructure quickly and proactively and avoid bad customer experiences that hurt our brand.”

Dan Cowles, Manager of Solution Development, Callaway Golf

Like many companies that faced the global recession of 2009, Callaway Golf decided that it had to cut costs. The IT organization moved many web properties and databases to Windows Azure, which delivered US$324,000 annually to the company’s bottom line. But the use of cloud computing did more than save money. It also gave Callaway unprecedented flexibility and scalability in responding to the needs of its global business. By using Windows Azure, Callaway can deliver servers to remote offices in hours versus months and scale capacity quickly to ensure great reseller and consumer experiences on Callaway websites. It has also eliminated maintenance downtime that used to plague international offices. Callaway uses Windows Intune to proactively manage sales computers and keep salespeople productive. And the company is evaluating Microsoft hybrid cloud storage as a way to further reduce costs.

Page 2: download.microsoft.comdownload.microsoft.com/.../Callaway_WindowsAzure_CS.docx · Web viewFounded in 1982, Callaway Golf has grown from a boutique manufacturer of high-quality wedges

SituationFounded in 1982, Callaway Golf has grown from a boutique manufacturer of high-quality wedges and putters into one of the world's largest makers of premium golf products. The Callaway mission has remained the same: to passionately pursue advanced, innovative technologies that help golfers of all abilities find more enjoyment in the game. Under the Callaway and Odyssey brands, Callaway manufactures and sells golf clubs and balls, and sells golf apparel, footwear, and accessories in more than 110 countries worldwide. It has 1,400 employees.

Costly, Scattered DataDuring the global recession of 2009, Callaway endured a business downturn and ordered every department to cut costs. Most of the IT infrastructure was located in the company’s Carlsbad, California, headquarters, but Callaway also had a sizable third-party colocation datacenter, costing US$30,000 to $40,000 a month, and other servers scattered around the United States.

Callaway knew that its datacenters were filled with dozens of smaller web servers and databases that ran on underutilized hardware, and it had customer data scattered in multiple places. When marketing agencies developed marketing campaigns and promotions for Callaway, they gathered and stored the data on their servers.

Difficulty Scaling, Availability ChallengesNot only were all the servers expensive to acquire and maintain, but scaling the infrastructure took significant time. “During and after a high-profile golf tournament, there’s a great deal of interest in our product, and our websites receive a lot of hits,” says Dan Cowles, Manager of Solution Development for Callaway Golf. “It was difficult to scale our web hosting environment fast enough, and consumers and resellers could experience slow response times and even downtime.”

Another challenge: Callaway had to inflict weekly maintenance-related downtime on some of its global offices. Sunday mornings were the lowest-impact time to update US-based servers but that was Monday morning in Asia, and Callaway resellers there were locked out of business systems during maintenance windows.

Better Manage Field ComputersFor client-computer management, Callaway needed to upgrade its older Microsoft Systems Management Server 2003 software so that the company could manage newer desktop computers running the Windows 8 operating system. More urgently, Callaway needed a better way to manage its 350 laptops and tablets used by executives, managers, outside sales representatives (OSRs), and support staff. The OSRs used Apple iPad tablets.

“The 130 iPads never come into the office, so it was difficult to update and manage them,” says Bill Connaghan, Global Desktop System Administrator at Callaway Golf. “We didn’t let sales reps download security updates over virtual private network connections because it consumed too much Internet bandwidth.” Callaway used AirWatch software to manage the iPads, but AirWatch did not report when OSRs deployed unauthorized software, which often introduced viruses and rendered the computers unusable. “Our salespeople are our revenue pipeline,” says Connaghan. “If they can’t place orders through their computers, we don’t make money. So it’s critical that their computers be available and responsive with no interruptions.”

SolutionCallaway Golf decided that cloud computing could solve just about all these problems. Moving some workloads into a cloud environment—where virtualized compute, storage, and network resources run in public datacenters, are shared by multiple parties, and are delivered over the Internet—could reduce costs, improve scalability and business agility, and enable

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“It was difficult to scale our web hosting environment fast enough, and consumers and resellers could experience slow response times and even downtime.”

Dan Cowles, Manager of Solution Development, Callaway Golf

Page 3: download.microsoft.comdownload.microsoft.com/.../Callaway_WindowsAzure_CS.docx · Web viewFounded in 1982, Callaway Golf has grown from a boutique manufacturer of high-quality wedges

the desktop management team to manage remote computers.

Move Websites, Databases, and Web Services to Windows AzureCowles’s team evaluated cloud offerings from Microsoft, Amazon, and Google and selected Windows Azure, the Microsoft cloud platform that provides on-demand compute, storage, content delivery, and networking capabilities from Microsoft datacenters. “The other companies offered infrastructure-as-a-service but not software-as-a-service or platform-as-a-service as Microsoft did,” Cowles says. “We wanted the whole spectrum of cloud options to fit a range of cloud needs. Also, most of our developers are trained in Microsoft tools, so it was much easier for us to connect our in-house systems to Windows Azure.”

In 2012, Callaway used its consumer data consolidation project as its first Windows Azure project. It moved all of its scattered consumer data—some 4 million records—into Windows Azure SQL Database and created a web tier infrastructure that third parties, such as agencies, could use to easily access the data.

Callaway then moved many consumer-facing websites, enterprise databases, and enterprise web services to Windows Azure. “By using Microsoft global datacenters, we’re able to move infrastructure for key applications and websites closer to the people who use them,” Cowles says. For example, resellers and consumers in Japan and China previously had to use applications that ran in a Texas datacenter, and because of the distance encountered performance problems. In about an hour, Cowles’s team set up the same services in a Microsoft datacenter in Asia and completely eliminated the performance lags. “It would have been extremely difficult, expensive, and time-consuming to set up this infrastructure on the other side of the world using Callaway-owned servers,” Cowles says.

Callaway currently uses approximately 45 SQL databases, 40 Windows Azure Cloud Services applications and services, half a dozen Windows Azure Web Sites, about 30 Windows Azure Storage accounts, and Windows Azure Traffic Manager.

Callaway is backing up mobile computers to the cloud using Datacastle RED, a third-party software solution that works with Windows Azure. Datacastle RED installs on client computers and copies user data to Windows Azure.

At some point, Callaway plans to migrate its business-to-business (B2B) website to Windows Azure. “This site is used by our retailers to order products, pay invoices, and track orders, and is hosted internally today,” Cowles says. “We get about $50 million in sales a year from that site, so it has to be robust.”

Callaway would also like to transition its outside sales representatives to Windows 8 tablets that would access line-of-business applications running in Windows Azure.

Manage Mobile Computers with Cloud-Based SolutionWith its successful ventures into Windows Azure, Callaway decided to use Windows Intune, a cloud-based PC and device management solution from Microsoft, to manage its 350 laptops and tablets. Using Windows Intune, which includes Microsoft System Center 2012 Endpoint Protection, the Callaway desktop management staff can proactively keep all mobile computers up-to-date with security updates, catch malware before it infects computers, and receive notifications of computer health and software installations.

To improve the management of its 850 desktop computers, Callaway is upgrading to Microsoft System Center 2012 R2 Configuration Manager. “We’ll have a central authentication server in Carlsbad and deploy secondary servers to global subsidiaries for local computer imaging,”

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“By using Microsoft global datacenters, we’re able to move infrastructure for key applications and websites closer to the people who use them.”

Dan Cowles, Manager of Solution Development, Callaway Golf

Page 4: download.microsoft.comdownload.microsoft.com/.../Callaway_WindowsAzure_CS.docx · Web viewFounded in 1982, Callaway Golf has grown from a boutique manufacturer of high-quality wedges

Connaghan says. “Systems Management Server 2003 didn’t support this architecture. We’ll get better visibility into our PC software and hardware, whether those computers are in headquarters or in the field.”

Consider Flexible Hybrid Cloud Storage With Callaway’s investment in Windows Azure came a StorSimple appliance from Microsoft. The company is considering how it might use the Microsoft hybrid cloud storage system. The on-premises StorSimple appliance interoperates with Windows Azure to provide primary storage, backup, archiving, and disaster recovery.

“StorSimple would be a good fit for a couple of scenarios that we see right now,” says Sarwat Siddiqi, IT Infrastructure Manager at Callaway Golf. “The first would be in a small virtualized environment in our DMZ [perimeter network] that runs web servers, email servers, and other external-facing services. We have not clustered the servers in this environment because of storage costs, but StorSimple would give us a lower-cost way to provide storage for a DMZ cluster versus using enterprise SANs [storage area networks].”

A second scenario for StorSimple would be as a way to provide lower-cost storage for the Callaway marketing department to store and back up marketing and media content. “All these videos and images are being stored on expensive SAN arrays, though most are accessed infrequently,” Siddiqi says. “By moving this content to StorSimple, we could have frequently used content on higher-performance storage and less frequently used content stored less expensively in the cloud.”

BenefitsBy integrating Microsoft cloud solutions into its datacenter strategy, Callaway Golf has been able to reduce IT costs by $324,000 a year while gaining greater datacenter scalability and datacenter agility. The IT team can respond to server

requests in hours instead of months and “turn off” servers when they are no longer needed. With servers running in Microsoft datacenters around the world, Callaway can provide better application performance and availability to offices and customers that are located far from the company’s California datacenter. By managing mobile computers with Windows Intune, Callaway can better protect those critical systems, which are the conduits for millions of dollars in orders.

Reduce Datacenter Costs by $324,000 AnnuallyThe IT organization was able to contribute more than its share of mandated cost cutting by moving IT assets to Windows Azure. “We’re down from $30,000 a month for colocation fees to $3,000 a month for the same number of servers in Windows Azure,” Cowles says. “That savings goes right to our bottom line. It includes not just servers but also server management time. Over the past four years, we’ve trimmed our staff by one-third so we don’t have the people needed to manage all our servers. With servers running in Windows Azure, we don’t have to worry about them.”

If Callaway uses StorSimple as storage for its perimeter network and marketing content, it could save further.

Improve Scalability and AgilityCallaway has gained a level of IT scalability and agility that it never before had. “Previously, when our web traffic spiked, we either had slowdowns or crashes,” Cowles says. “With web properties running in Windows Azure, we can scale our infrastructure quickly and proactively and avoid bad customer experiences that hurt our brand.”

Cowles’s team can respond much faster to requests for IT resources. “With Windows Azure, we can respond to business requests in hours versus the months that it took before,” Cowles says. “It’s especially valuable in responding to requests in non-

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“We’re down from $30,000 a month for colocation fees to $3,000 a month for the same number of servers in Windows Azure. That savings goes right to our bottom line.”

Dan Cowles, Manager of Solution Development, Callaway Golf

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US regions, because it’s difficult to set up infrastructure in Carlsbad and provide remote access to those applications.”

Enhance Performance and Availability of Core Business SystemsSince moving important pieces of its infrastructure to Windows Azure, Callaway has enjoyed higher overall availability of critical applications and web properties. “With Windows Azure, we no longer have maintenance-related downtime that negatively affects our business around the world,” Cowles says. Additionally, mobile computer data is better protected by backing it up to Windows Azure.

By migrating its business-to-business website to Windows Azure, Callaway will eliminate the cost of that on-premises infrastructure and also realize reliability and performance gains. “It’s a lot easier to load-balance virtual machines in Windows Azure than physical servers in our datacenter,” Cowles says. “We can also mitigate the impact of server security updates. By moving the B2B infrastructure to Windows Azure, we can apply updates only to the regional servers that need them without affecting uptime in all of our offices.”

Maintain Revenue Flow by Keeping Salespeople Computers RunningNow that it proactively manages its mobile computers with Windows Intune, Callaway has much better visibility into outside sales representatives’ computers and can keep them up-to-date and safe from malware. “OSRs no longer have to send their computers to headquarters because they’re infected or broken,” Connaghan says. “Now, we get proactive notification if a computer’s virus definitions are out-of-date, the computer is infected, or the OSR has installed unauthorized software. We can fix these problems before they cause a computer to fail in the field.”

As just one example, in the course of accessing the company’s order tool, an OSR computer sometimes replicates massive

amounts of data and fills up the hard drive. The OSR would see that his or her computer was slow but wouldn’t report it until it became unusable. Now, the Carlsbad desktop team immediately sees in Windows Intune that the hard drive is filling up and remotely fixes the problem.

“These are high-value people to Callaway,” Connaghan says. “Our outside sales representatives are our revenue source; they are constantly meeting with our customers and taking orders. With Windows Intune watching over their computers, we can keep orders and money flowing into the company.”

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“Our outside sales representatives are our revenue source; they are constantly meeting with our customers and taking orders. With Windows Intune watching over their computers, we can keep orders and money flowing into the company.”

Bill Connaghan, Global Desktop System Administrator, Callaway Golf

Page 6: download.microsoft.comdownload.microsoft.com/.../Callaway_WindowsAzure_CS.docx · Web viewFounded in 1982, Callaway Golf has grown from a boutique manufacturer of high-quality wedges

Microsoft Cloud OSMicrosoft Cloud OS helps businesses benefit from converging technology trends such as big data, cloud services, and 'bring your own device' initiatives. From rapidly building and deploying applications to supporting real-time analytics across all forms of data, IT can drive efficiency and deliver new value with Cloud OS.

For more information about Microsoft Cloud OS, go to:www.microsoft.com/en-us/server-cloud/cloud-os/default.aspx

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This case study is for informational purposes only. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, IN THIS SUMMARY.

Document published March 2014

Software and Services Windows Azure− Windows Azure SQL Database− Windows Azure Storage− Windows Azure Traffic Manager− Windows Azure Web Sites

Windows Intune

Microsoft Server Product Portfolio− Microsoft System Center 2012 R2

Configuration Manager

For More InformationFor more information about Microsoft products and services, call the Microsoft Sales Information Center at (800) 426-9400. In Canada, call the Microsoft Canada Information Centre at (877) 568-2495. Customers in the United States and Canada who are deaf or hard-of-hearing can reach Microsoft text telephone (TTY/TDD) services at (800) 892-5234. Outside the 50 United States and Canada, please contact your local Microsoft subsidiary. To access information using the World Wide Web, go to:www.microsoft.com

For more information about Callaway Golf products and services, visit the website at:www.callawaygolf.com