Innovation starts with infrastructure
Organizations cannot innovate without a solid IT foundation.
Your IT infrastructure forms the foundation for your applications, services, and processes. A modern, flexible IT environment can help your business compete in a fast-changing digital world.
Even so, most organizations still operate legacy infrastructure that can’t simply be left behind. And adding new technologies—like cloud resources, application platforms, and management tools—can be a complicated and time-consuming process, especially when IT teams already face increased demands.
Adopting hybrid cloud infrastructure based on a common operating foundation can help you make the most of your existing investments while taking advantage of new technologies and approaches.
Does your organization have too much IT infrastructure complexity and not enough clarity?
If so, you are not alone. Over time, organizations of all sizes have evolved a complex maze of operating systems and versions, system configurations, and management tools . It often takes a large, skilled IT team to handle interoperability issues, complicated administration, and labor-intensive processes. And legacy processes created decades ago lurch on while competitors are using tools better crafted for digital-native businesses.
The consequences? Slower provisioning, more downtime, and greater security and compliance gaps. It can be difficult to deliver the services the business needs with the efficiency and speed it demands.
Define a standard operating environment
A standard operating environment (SOE) uses a defined set of platforms, components, interfaces, and processes across your entire infrastructure.
It creates a consistent, known foundation for all of your systems to help you boost IT efficiency and productivity, speed provisioning and deployment, reduce costs, and improve security and uptime.
SOEs greatly simplify your IT infrastructure to overcome many of the challenges of varied, disparate environments. Fewer variations makes it easier to provision systems, deploy applications, scale resources, troubleshoot errors, and remediate issues across your environment. An SOE also allows you to create a single, standard set of operating procedures and processes, speeding operations and allowing your current staff to manage effectively at scale.
SOEs are particularly important when adopting hybrid cloud environments, since they help to ensure consistency across physical, virtualized, containerized, and cloud infrastructure. You can deploy applications and workloads across your environment, knowing they’ll operate the same regardless of the underlying infrastructure.
Finally, adopting an SOE prepares your infrastructure and company to move forward with organization-wide automation projects that can serve as a force-multiplier for your IT teams.
Do-it-yourself versus enterprise-ready solutions
When defining your SOE, your choice of operating system and cloud provider are strategic decisions. Your operating system forms the foundation for your entire environment — security, management, portability, and life cycle planning start with the operating system. And your ability to scale flexibly, maintain availability, and deliver resilient services is greatly influenced by your cloud provider.
Even so, not all combinations of operating system and cloud provider offer the features, capabilities, and resources needed to operate effectively and efficiently in hybrid cloud environments. Consistency, security, manageability, interoperability, and support across your entire environment are critical.