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Tuesday, May 9th, 2017

    Time Event
    12:00p
    New Owners Pushing Vertiv to “Act Like a Startup”

    New owners of Emerson Electric’s former data center unit want the now-standalone business to behave like a startup.

    “Act like a startup, be entrepreneurial,” is the message from the top, Peter Panfil, VP global power at Vertiv (the new company’s name), said in an interview with Data Center Knowledge. “It’s hard to imagine that you’ve got a four-billion-dollar startup, but that’s what we are.”

    Since it bought the troubled Emerson Network Power unit – Emerson CEO said after making the decision to sell it that building Network Power was not an accomplishment he would “put on his tombstone” – investor Platinum Equity has been pushing the Vertiv team to think outside the box.

    Even though the presence of Emerson’s power and cooling gear is ubiquitous in data centers all over the world (from hyper-scale facilities owned by the likes of Facebook to server farms operated by big banks), it was Emerson’s least profitable unit, which caused asset write downs. The parent company made $3.8 billion worth of acquisitions to expand its data center business.

    Emerson was in improve-margins-whatever-it-takes mode when it spun off Network Power, agreeing to sell it to Platinum for $4 billion in 2015. Numerous other units were under review too. The deal was closed at the end of 2016; Network Power’s revenue that year was $4.4 billion.

    A Greenlight for Long-Term Bets

    The beauty of Vertiv’s current situation is not being beholden to the quarterly earnings report, Panfil said. Unlike many private equity investors who slash costs to maximize profitability of a business and build toward a swift and lucrative exit, Beverly Hills-based Platinum, according to him, is willing to invest in long-term bets – which are also the kind of long-term bets Network Power’s quarter-by-quarter former parent tended to avoid.

    “If the return is a little longer but it has the opportunity to have significant revenue impact for the business, we’re going to do it,” he said. “They (Platinum) have empowered everybody in the company to come up with ways to make money.”

    So far, the company has bulked up staff, including new account managers and R&D muscle, created a data center commissioning unit, and formed a new global solutions team, charged with providing as full a data center solution as the customer needs.

    New Sales Force Tackles Regional Markets

    The new account managers are looking after key accounts one tier down from the 10 or so top hyper-scale cloud and colocation customers, such as Facebook, Microsoft, Amazon, and Equinix. Those next-tier-down accounts are regional colocation players, big retailers, financial services companies, and other major enterprises. Traditionally, Emerson would let those accounts be handled by local business partners, Panfil said.

    As a result, he said, activity on those accounts was slower than it could’ve been. “In a world where people follow sales (as my sales increase, I can add people), you would never get to those folks.” With the new salesforce in place, he said he’s seen “more activity on those key accounts in the last six months than I’ve seen in the previous three years.”

    Customers have responded well to having more attention from the vendor and from knowing they have a direct line to the vendor’s executives, rather than going through partners.

    Manufacturing for Just-in-Time Deployment

    And this is part of a new competitive reality for data center vendors. That reality also includes things like reserving manufacturing slots and managing inventory for a big customer. Fewer and fewer companies are willing to wait for a vendor to manufacture their equipment after they’ve placed an order. Emerson’s “take an order, build an order” approach doesn’t work here, Panfil said, because customers want to buy as little equipment as possible upfront (just what they need), which means when they need to expand, they have to do it quick.

    That’s not the way data center vendors have operated traditionally. “You have to kind of step outside of your normal operating environment,” Panfil said.

    Single Solutions Group, from Rack to Full Data Center

    Forming the new global solutions team was one of those steps. From having separate groups for solutions of various sizes (row, rack, aisle, full hyper-scale data center), Vertiv earlier this year went to a single solutions team.

    Because it’s unusual for an equipment manufacturer to offer everything from a single rack to an entire data center (“It’s kind of foreign” for customers, Panfil said.), this is a long-term play. Panfil expects getting a full data center from a single vendor to become the norm in the future. Customers will want a vendor to “deliver as much of that solution to the site in an integrated configuration,” he said.

    Closing the Commissioning Gap

    And adding an in-house commissioning capability closed the gap Vertiv had in being able to deliver a full data center, which was also something that would’ve been difficult to get Emerson executives to greenlight. “We wouldn’t think of doing a commissioning team five years ago,” Panfil said.

    While there could be skepticism about not leveraging the impartiality of a third-party commissioning agent who’s not beholden to the vendor, the benefit for the customer is avoiding the possibility of finger-pointing, should something go wrong. A single-vendor solution means vendors, consulting engineers, construction managers, and commissioning agents can’t blame problems on each other, he explained.

    3:00p
    Make Sure Your Data Center Backup Power is Hurricane-Ready

    Clayton Costello is Operations Manager at CK Power.

    Is your facility prepared for a natural disaster? Can you rest assured the power will stay on? This week is Hurricane Preparedness Week. The start of hurricane season is around the corner and it’s important that your facility is prepared should one make landfall near your location. These suggestions are not just for hurricanes, but also for tornadoes and other naturally occurring disasters that have the potential to knock out your prime power source.

    Backup Power Sources

    The first thing you want to do is make sure that you have a backup generator for your facility. Having the proper equipment in place and ensuring it’s functioning and regularly serviced will mitigate any risks associated with prime power failure. If you don’t have a backup generator in place, reach out to your local generator distributor to have one sized accordingly. Hurricanes or large storms don’t typically wipe out infrastructure, but they can cause widespread power outages for significant periods of time. Tornadoes on the other hand can wipe out the infrastructure and create major delays for getting prime power working again. Having power when a natural disaster occurs is not just for comfort but critical needs as well.

    Long-term Preparedness

    The facility manager needs to make sure the backup generator is getting regularly serviced according to the manufacturer and distributor’s recommendations. Having the generator serviced regularly will deter many of the potential problems that can occur, particularly when a disaster is imminent. These are the components a technician will inspect during a routine generator service:

    • Belts are inspected for wear and tear
    • Cooling system is inspected for proper coolant levels
    • Block heater is checked for ideal operation
    • Engine oil levels are checked and maintained
    • Fuel system is inspected for leaks and cracks
    • Batteries are checked for loose connections, corrosion and general condition
    • Gauges and control panels are inspected for warning lights and broken gauges
    • Battery charger is looked over for proper operation

    Annual and semi-annual services are much more detailed. These services include regular preventative maintenance of systems throughout the generator. Semi-annual services include inspection and maintenance to:

    • Cooling system
    • Fuel system
    • Air induction and exhaust
    • Lube oil system
    • Starting system
    • Engine monitors, safety controls and control panel
    • Generator / gas engines
    • Automatic transfer switch

    Annual services include (if applicable):

    • Change oil and filters
    • Change fuel filters
    • Maintain water separator
    • Scheduled oil sampling
    • Lubricate fan pulley
    • Grease generator bearings
    • Take coolant sample

    It’s also recommended that generators go through annual load bank testing if the unit does not run at 50 percent or greater load at least one hour monthly. Load bank testing will eliminate wet stacking by burning off un-burnt fuel, oil and carbon in the cylinders and exhaust system. It also will exercise and test the unit’s fuel and cooling systems and evaporate moisture from inside the generator and engine.

    Additionally, regularly test and make sure the transfer switch is functioning properly. Depending on your facility, have a plan in place to deploy mobile generators to job sites. Those mobile generators should follow the same service schedules as the backup generator.

    Imminent Danger Preparedness

    A phone call to the service provider should be the first step. They will walk the facility manager through the steps that need to be taken. This will include firing up the generator and checking for any fault codes. Whether it’s a diesel or natural gas generator, make sure it’s full of fuel or the gas line is working properly. Additional checks to the transfer switch will ensure the backup power will kick in the moment primary power goes down.

    With hurricane season starting June 1, it’s important your facility is prepared should a disaster occur in your area. Hurricanes are just a small portion of the potential disasters that can knock out the power. Ensure the lights stay on and all systems are working properly with a backup generator that has been properly serviced and maintained.

    Opinions expressed in the article above do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Data Center Knowledge and Penton.

    Industry Perspectives is a content channel at Data Center Knowledge highlighting thought leadership in the data center arena. See our guidelines and submission process for information on participating. View previously published Industry Perspectives in our Knowledge Library.

     

    4:36p
    Dell: Put Off by Cloud Costs, Many Clients Resume Buying Data Center Gear

    Brian Womack (Bloomberg)Michael Dell said his company is seeing some customers return to buying equipment after discovering that working with the giant cloud-computing providers is more complicated and costlier than they thought.

    Hardware from Dell Technologies Inc. is getting a second look from companies finding that outsourcing their computing needs to the public cloud—big providers such as Amazon.com Inc., and Microsoft Corp.—can be twice as expensive or more as running it themselves, Dell said Monday. While he didn’t provide specifics, Dell added “it’s not small numbers; it’s large numbers.”

    “We’re not saying public cloud is not going to happen or it’s not going to grow—it is. It’s just not perfect for all workloads. And everything is not going to go to the public cloud,” said Dell, who had earlier referred to the phenomenon as sort of a “boomerang” effect.

    See also: Dell Venture Arm Has Been Quietly Funding Data Center Startups

    The chief executive officer spoke during the Dell EMC World gathering in Las Vegas with more than 13,000 attendees from more than 100 countries.

    Dell Technologies, which has partnerships with Microsoft and Amazon, is overhauling the company’s equipment and bringing out new products even as customers add projects with the public cloud providers. Dell merged with EMC Corp. last September to create a company with a wide variety of servers, data storage equipment, software and other products that offer a large portfolio to potential customers. That may minimize the need for acquisitions. he said.

    “One of the things that I haven’t heard from those folks is ‘Hey, we’re already selling everything we have; can you get us more stuff?'” Dell said. “We’ve given them an incredibly broad portfolio. We don’t actually need more things to sell right now.”

    Still, he didn’t close the door on potential acquisitions.

    “We can make acquisitions if we need to, and certainly if there are opportunities that make sense, we’re open for business,” he said.

    10:41p
    Cisco, NetApp Invest in Business Cloud Backup Startup Datos IO

    Cisco and NetApp have invested in Datos IO, a business cloud backup company that says its technology simplifies the process of backing up data from enterprise data centers and public cloud environments, working across both legacy and new database technologies.

    The three-year-old startup announced the investment this week but stopped short of saying how much the two enterprise data center technology behemoths have put behind it. In its announcement, Datos said the investment was “strategic” for NetApp and Cisco.

    While investing in tech companies is common for Cisco, this is the first time NetApp has made this kind of investment, according to Forbes.

    Traditional IT vendors like them have been disrupted by public cloud, but there is still opportunity for them in leveraging their deep enterprise expertise and decades-long customer relationships to help companies set up and manage hybrid infrastructure that consists of both cloud services and internal corporate data centers. Datos’s business cloud backup technology appears to be particularly strong in this hybrid play, having recently secured well-known customers like Home Depot, Macy’s, ACI Worldwide, eBay, and OpenTable.

    A recent Uptime Institute survey of enterprise data center operators found that many companies still have plans to meet new demand for data center capacity by building new facilities and leasing colocation space, in addition to deploying workloads in the cloud. About one-third said they would build new data centers and one-fifth said they would lease colocation space, which means not only is a lot of enterprise IT capacity is staying in existing data centers, there will be more of it in the future.

    Datos says its architecture differentiates in the market for business cloud backup in the following three ways:

    • An elastic data management engine that can be scaled up or down based on load and provides direct transfer of data from data sources to secondary storage thereby eliminating the inherent shortcomings of media-server or appliance-based backup and recovery solutions
    • Industry-first semantic deduplication that provides an order of magnitude higher storage savings enabling Datos IO to protect and move data to the cloud far more efficiently than other solutions for both traditional and third platform applications
    • Rich data services (e.g. BI, search) built on top of a globally distributed metadata catalog. This completely eliminates any restriction on how data can move between clouds allowing customers to use whatever cloud is best suited for their application requirements

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