London
The UK finance and banking sectors are most in need of server co-location

UK business facing data hosting time bomb

Finance and banking sectors most at risk, finds survey

Written by Guy Dixon

Almost half of UK businesses employing between 500 and 1,000 workers will face significant server co-location demands in the coming year.

The finding comes from a survey of 200 senior IT decision makers conducted by OmniBoss for virtual network operator Adapt.

Power constraints caused by the development of London Cross Rail and the Olympic site, and a lack of new data centre construction in central London, are creating significant data burdens for medium-sized UK companies.

The finance and banking sectors are most in need of server co-location, according to the report, with 45 per cent of businesses forecasting an increase in requirements over the coming 12 months.

Respondents in these sectors cited strong organic growth, compounded by industry legislation such as the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive and Sarbanes-Oxley, as the primary factors affecting data requirements.

Worryingly, 43 per cent of enterprises still have no contingency plan for addressing additional server co-location requirements.

"We have witnessed a shift in emphasis. Data centre capacity is no longer being driven by space alone, it is now about availability of power," said Peter Knight, chief executive at Adapt.

"In addition, significant consolidation of data centre operators, absorption of old capacity and a shortage of new sites being built mean that co-location now carries a scarcity value.

"With demand outstripping supply it is clearly not a buyers' market, meaning that the corporate sector will be under serviced."

See also:

reader comments

related articles

IBM

IBM floats cloud starter kit

New system aims to bring grid computing to the enterprise 15 Nov 2007

 

Dell points to 'hidden data centres'

Upgrades can reveal 'hidden powers', says Dell chief 15 Nov 2007

TechEd 2007: Microsoft touts Dynamic IT

Apps and services to provide 'seamless IT environments' 12 Nov 2007

UK data centres ignoring green policies

Nearly a third have no environmental policy in place 12 Nov 2007

Intel plans huge data centre consolidation

Chip giant to cut down 133 data centres to eight hubs 06 Nov 2007

Healthcare workers putting patient data at risk

Personal mobile devices used to store confidential information 20 Nov 2008

Cost biggest barrier to green IT

IT decision makers worried about budgets 01 Aug 2008

Car makers stand by green claims

Review of eight eco-friendly cars highlights disparity between government-backed tests and real-world conditions 20 May 2008

latest news

Novell to shuffle EMEA executive pack

Linux vendor shifts partner programme responsibilities to marketing organisation 09 Jan 2009

Ballmer highlights aims for New Year

Ballmer announces Windows 7 beta and future alliances designed to improve information sharing 08 Jan 2009

Active Storage completes UK Jigsaw

Jigsaw unveiled as Raid vendor's first non-US Platinum partner as it launches in Europe 08 Jan 2009

poll

Challenging times ahead?

Challenging times ahead?

Do you think there will be a lot of channel job cuts in 2009?

Previous poll results

Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

Vendor Q&A: Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

During this Q&A session Paul Anderson, UK country manager of Trend Micro talks about the changing threat landscape and how Trend is working with resellers in 2009

Sara Yirrell and Rick Wallis

Vendor Q&A: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

In this exclusive vendor Q&A, Rick Wallis, UK sales director at NEC Computers talks to CRN editor Sara Yirrell about his firm’s plans for the channel.

events

Channel Expo 2009 logo

Channel Expo 2009

The UK's top reseller exhibition will return to the NEC on 20 May 2009

CRN Fight Night 2009

The channel's only white-collar boxing event is back

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Primary Navigation