9 things IT managers should think about in 2007
By
Shannon T. Kalvar, Special to ZDNet Asia
Friday, January 12 2007 10:09 AM
2006 has sped by, leaving us with little time to ponder the
approach of 2007. Massive upheavals in the OS, software, and processor spaces
have left us with new, and radically more expensive, distributed architectures
to consider. Meanwhile, our operational and support environments continue to
decay under the weight of corporate neglect, since we have trouble showing
ourselves as anything other than an expense.
The following observations are intended to help keep you
grounded in the basics while dealing with the challenges of the new year.
1. Bigger is not better
We can now buy a blade enclosure with 86 cores in it. A full
rack could hold more processing power than some server rooms we were thrilled
with in the late 90s. We can hurl memory at problems for pennies on the MB, and
media access keeps scaling up to ludicrous speed.
That's all great, but it doesn't relieve us from our duties.
The ability to mask problems by overbuilding hardware does not mean we've solved
the issue--it just hides the problem for a time. Similarly, the ability to
build a data center in a rack doesn't mean that doing so is a good idea.
2. New does not mean stable
It usually means the opposite. We call the adoption of
radical new ideas "the bleeding edge" for a reason. However, in the coming year,
many of us will face the terrible challenge of choosing between remaining where
we are, with our currently stable support structures, and moving to new
platforms where our support teams will have to retool their knowledge base.
New environments do not make for stable operations and
support. Before jumping headlong into a new operating environment, determine
whether the business can endure the turmoil.
3. Virtual devices still reside on physical hardware
Virtualization has finally come into its own. We can make
one server look like five, share limited resources, and create a "logical"
environment that only vaguely resembles the physical one.
Just because we can doesn't mean we should. Always remember
that at the end of the day, all those virtual servers live on a physical box
somewhere. That box needs the same maintenance and support it always did and
more, now that we've added yet more layers of complexity.
4. Follow-though matters as much as execution
As project portfolios grow and management takes control of
all three sides of project management's iron triangle, there never seems to be
enough time to follow though with activities. We get one thing done, then jump
to the next three, hoping that somewhere in all the chaos a real change took
hold.
Rather than sprinting from failure to failure, take a few
moments to follow up on the activities of the past. You may well discover that
the thing you thought was a failure can, with just a little nudge in the right
direction, turn into a success.
5. One size fits all never fits anyone at all
We all know this, but it bears repeating. Boilerplates, best
practices, and the fabled "industry leaders" all suggest that one solution will
fit every situation. We just have to ram it into our environment and everything
will magically transform into rainbows and bluebirds.
Every IT environment represents a unique collection of people,
processes, and technology. Best practices generate terrible distortions in the
environment when we try to implement them without first accounting for the
people and how they actually get things done.
6. It's better to invest time than to spend it
Stop trying to manage time. Time is not something we spend;
it's not a resource we can horde or a precious jewel to display. Time is life;
our life, our energy, our passion as it expresses itself in the world.
Instead of treating time as a thing to spend, we should
consider our actions in terms of the kind of life they build for ourselves and
others. Every day we face choices about how we shape the world that our
co-workers, employees, and managers live in. Once we accept that, we can create
genuine change.
7. Bolster morale though consistent measurement
It is easy, even tempting, to tell people that we will know
success when we see it. I hear it all the time in my consulting practice with
predictable results. People who do not know how they will be measured perform
poorly. Those who know that the standards change from one person to another (and
depending on the manager's stress level) simply assume success is not possible.
We have to tell people what we want and expect from them.
Otherwise, how can they possibly perform?
8. Failure is always an option, so fail early and often
Motivational speakers aside, most of us know that failure
happens. Success is difficult to achieve and fleeting in the world of IT. It's
not always fun, and frankly it's pretty unpleasant, to go from meeting to
meeting in which executives chant "failure is not an option."
We should embrace failure. In fact, we can turn this reality
of our work lives to our advantage. If we cause doomed projects to fail early
in their lifecycle, we can free up resources to deal with projects that have a
chance of success. It isn't a terribly popular approach, but it does create the
opportunity for success. It also exposes all the risks we take, daily, in the
name of making a profit.
9. It's important to appreciate the difference between a target and a
deadline
A target is just that--something we aim for. If we miss the
target, odds are good someone will be embarrassed but nothing overly bad will happen.
Targets generally come from corporate political discussions and seem terribly
important at the time.
A deadline, though, carries some kind of financial or legal
consequence for the company. Failure to meet a deadline can land the team, the
department, or the corporation in some kind of serious jeopardy.
Targets we can miss from time to time. Deadlines we should
take very seriously.
And there we have it. Nine things we can focus on to make
2007 a better year than 2006, even in the face of the turmoil ahead. Good luck
and have a Happy New Year!