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Manage Your Capacity to Increase Your Availability

Maximize availability through proactive capacity management.

Managing the capacity of business services, applications, and their associated components is an ongoing challenge. A crystal ball and unlimited funding would certainly reduce or eliminate some of the challenges.

Challenges such as:

  • Infrastructure capacity planning not aligned with current business initiatives.
  • Business relies upon availability of services.
  • Difficult to anticipate departmental needs related to IT capacity.

Our Advice

Critical Insight

The quest for availability drives the need for capacity management, which matures into proactive prediction and in turn enhances availability.

Impact and Result

Observe, Manage, and Model!

  • Identify what components and services you have and add in the various initiatives that will impact those services and components. (Observe!)
  • Set thresholds, manage risk, and use your tools to take actions as capacity and availability become a challenge. (Manage!)
  • Use trending, metrics, and other insights to predict capacity requirements and reduce availability challenges. (Model!)

Manage Your Capacity to Increase Your Availability Research & Tools

1. Manage Your Capacity to Increase Your Availability deck – A document that guides you through the process to manage your capacity proactively resulting in increased availability.

The publication explains the Info-Tech process to manage capacity and availability – Observe, Manage, and Model.

Three phases take you through identifying your components and business initiatives that could impact the capacity of those components, identifying management strategies and activities to gain control of your capacity, and moving into a proactive stance with tools to predict the required capacity for your organization.

2. Capacity Management Workbook – A comprehensive group of charts and tables to assist you while you work through the activities of the publication.

The workbook will capture the output from your Business Impact Analysis, help you determine and record the most important services, define availability metrics and update them periodically, establish a trend for your capacity components, and much more.

3. Capacity Intake Workbook – A set of process steps and forms to assist with unexpected requests for capacity as well as what to do when adding components.

This workbook captures the results of two activities that work you through defining the steps to take when you are presented with an unplanned request for capacity. A form to capture the necessary details of that process is also included. A second process and form is included to help you intake capacity-related components to your environment.

4. Capacity Management Plan – A collection of inputs and outputs that walk through the process of capacity planning as it relates to your specific organization and environment.

This plan describes the process to follow and highlights the various outputs that result from following the activities that are part of the capacity management process.

5. Business Impact Analysis Tool – A comprehensive spreadsheet that helps you identify business services, determine the cost associated with an outage of that service, and rank the service on importance to the business.

The tool is part of several other blueprints and goes into great detail if followed completely from start to finish.


Availability & Capacity Management

Maximize the benefits of infrastructure monitoring investments by diagnosing & assessing transaction performance, from network to server to end-user interface.

This course makes up part of the Infrastructure & Operations Certificate.

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Academy: Availability & Capacity Management | Introduction

An active membership is required to access Info-Tech Academy
  • Course Modules: 8
  • Estimated Completion Time: 1.5 hours
  • Featured Analysts:
  • PJ Ryan – Research Director
  • Gord Harrison, SVP of Research and Advisory

Workshop: Manage Your Capacity to Increase Your Availability

Workshops offer an easy way to accelerate your project. If you are unable to do the project yourself, and a Guided Implementation isn't enough, we offer low-cost delivery of our project workshops. We take you through every phase of your project and ensure that you have a roadmap in place to complete your project successfully.

Module 1: Observe and Monitor

The Purpose

  • Establish visibility into your existing capacity and impacting initiatives.

Key Benefits Achieved

  • Visibility into the capacity of components, exiting initiatives that impact capacity, and upcoming initiatives.

Activities

Outputs

1.1

Align business initiatives and intake sources

  • Initiative list and sources
1.2

Conduct a business impact analysis

  • Business-critical application and system listing
1.3

Comprehend components

  • Application and sub-component dependency listing

Module 2: Manage Capacity and Availability

The Purpose

  • Take action! Set thresholds, manage risk, and use your tools to take actions as capacity and availability become a challenge.

Key Benefits Achieved

  • Understanding when to take capacity and availability-related actions and what actions you should take.

Activities

Outputs

2.1

Initiate event management

  • Event management appreciation and root cause analysis
2.2

Establish thresholds

  • Thresholds defined and actions planned when thresholds breached
2.3

Explore management options

  • “Outside the box” capacity and availability solution proposals
2.4

Appreciate risk management

  • Capacity and availability risk and mitigation option list
2.5

Onboard new capacity requests and components

  • Intake process for unexpected capacity requests and components

Module 3: Implement Modeling

The Purpose

  • Use trending, metrics, and other insights to predict capacity requirements and reduce availability challenges.

Key Benefits Achieved

  • Predictive planning of capacity requirements.
  • Increased availability.

Activities

Outputs

3.1

Understand trending

  • Capacity utilization trends for your organization
3.2

Define availability metrics

  • Capacity and availability metrics list
3.3

Availability in the business context

  • SLA requirements
3.4

Finalize the plan

  • Capacity management plan

Manage Your Capacity to Increase Your Availability

Maximize availability throuh proactive capacity management.

Table of Contents

4Analyst Perspective
5Executive Summary
6Thought Model
32Phase 1: Observe and Monitor
33Step 1.1: Align Business Initiatives and Intake Sources
40Step 1.2: Business Impact Analysis
52Step 1.3: Comprehend Components
67Phase 2: Manage Capacity and Availability
68Step 2.1: Initiate Event Management
77Step 2.2: Estabish Thresholds
84Step 2.3: Explore Management Options
88Step 2.4: Appreciate Risk Management
96Step 2.5: Onboard New Requests and Components
102Phase 3: Implement Modeling
103Step 3.1: Understand Trending
107Step 3.2: Define Availability Metrics
111Step 3.3: Availability in the Business Context
116Step 3.4: Bring it All Together
124Bibliography

Manage Your Capacity to Increase Your Availability

EXECUTIVE BRIEF

Analyst Perspective

Capacity management directly impacts availability! No storage capacity to store that incoming email message means email is no longer available. No email now means other services are impacted. This is a domino effect that starts with a lack of capacity.

Availability is essential to any business operation. It is directly impacted by several factors, and capacity is one of the most prominent of those factors. Exceeding capacity will directly, and in most cases immediately, impact availability.

Identify what components and services you have and add in the various initiatives that will impact those services and components. That’s your insight, your visibility. Keep an eye on those components, services, and initiatives (OBSERVE).

Now establish triggers so you know when initiatives are about to overload your components and services. This overloading will directly impact your availability. Keep it within your control through a variety of options. Don’t forget about new initiatives and components. Include them in the overall process (MANAGE).

What about the next steps? Use your tools to identify trends. Predict what will happen in 12, 18, or even 24 months in the future. Establish solid SLAs because you know you can provide a reliable service. Communicate this through metrics and statistics. Now you are MODELING.

Observe, Manage, and Model! Sounds easy enough, but is it? Yes, if you have a plan and a process.

Photo of P.J. Ryan, Research Director, Infrastructure & Operations, Info-Tech Research Group.P.J. Ryan
Research Director, Infrastructure & Operations
Info-Tech Research Group

Executive Summary

Your Challenge

Managing the capacity of business service and applications and their associated components is an ongoing challenge. A crystal ball and unlimited funding would certainly reduce or eliminate some of the challenges.

Challenges such as:

  • Infrastructure capacity planning not aligned with current business initiatives.
  • The absence of a process for capacity management.
  • Difficult to anticipate departmental needs related to IT capacity.

Common Obstacles

Fighting fires, keeping the lights on, project support, and legacy debt maintenance – these obstacles prevent you from addressing current capacity and availability issues. Other common obstacles include:

  • No mechanism to manage capacity or measure availability.
  • Supply chain issues related to many components.
  • No gating or onboarding process for new components or capacity requests.

It feels like every time you overcome one obstacle, another challenge unexpectedly appears out of nowhere – but there is hope.

Info-Tech’s Approach

Observe, Manage and Model!

  • Identify what components and services you have and add in the various initiatives that will impact those services and components. (Observe)
  • Set thresholds, manage risk, and use your tools to take actions as capacity and availability become a challenge. (Manage)
  • Use trending, metrics, and other insights to predict capacity requirements and reduce availability challenges. (Model)

Use the Info-Tech approach to get your capacity under control and provide increased availability.

Info-Tech Insight

The quest for availability drives the need for capacity management, which matures into proactive prediction and in turn enhances availability.

Manage Your Capacity to Increase Your Availability

Maximize availability through proactive capacity management.

Business Challenges

  • Infrastructure is not aligned with current business initiatives.
  • There is a lack of infrastructure resources for new initiatives.
  • Existing capacity challenges lead to availability issues.

Capacity Management Plan

  • Observe current components and business capacity requirements.
  • Manage capacity adjustment solutions.
  • Model future capacity requirements through proactive forecasting and adjustments.

Insight

The desire for better availability drives the evolution of monitoring into event management. This evolution enables better capacity management, which in turn improves availability.

Diagram of concentric circles attached to a meter. The center circle is 'Resources', the mid 'Services', and the outer 'Business Processes', each with examples of those categories. They are attached to the meter by 'Observe, Manage, Model', and the meter measures 'Capacity management and availability maturity level' between extremes 'Reactive: Unavailable due to lack of capacity management' and 'Proactive: Managed capacity and increased availability'. Logos for Info-Tech Research Group.

Info-Tech’s Approach

  1. Observe

    Identify what components and services you have and add in the various initiatives that will impact those services and components.
  2. Manage

    Set thresholds, manage risk, and use your tools to take actions as capacity and availability become a challenge.
  3. Model

    Use trending, metrics, and other insights to predict capacity requirements and reduce availability challenges.

Understand what happens when capacity/availability management fails

The goal of capacity management is to optimize organizational performance by ensuring that the right level of resources are available, while also maximizing resource utilization and minimizing costs. (Source: Day.io)

  1. Services become unavailable.

    If availability and capacity management are not constantly practiced, an inevitable consequence is downtime or a reduction in the quality of that service. Critical sub-component failures can knock out important systems on their own.
  2. Money is wasted.

    In response to fears about availability, it’s entirely possible to massively overprovision or switch entirely to a pay-as-you-go model. This, unfortunately, brings with it a whole host of other problems, including overspending. Remember: infinite capacity means infinite potential cost.
  3. IT remains reactive.

    If IT is constantly putting out capacity/availability-related fires, there is no room for optimization and activities to increase organizational maturity. Effective availability and capacity management will allow IT to focus on other work.

Save money and drive efficiency with an effective capacity management and availability plan

Overprovisioning happens because of the old style of infrastructure provisioning (hardware refresh cycles) and because capacity managers don’t know how much they need (either as a result of inaccurate or nonexistent information).

According to 451 Research, 59% of enterprises have had to wait 3+ months for new capacity. It is little wonder, then, that so many opt to overprovision.

Capacity management is about ensuring that IT services are available, and with lead times like that, overprovisioning can be more attractive than the alternative.

Fortunately, there is hope. An effective capacity management and availability plan can help you:

  • Observe your services, applications, and components as well as existing and upcoming initiatives.
  • Properly Manage your capacity.
  • Model your future capacity needs.

Balancing overprovisioning and spending is the capacity manager’s struggle.

Capacity and availability

Availability and capacity are not the same, but they are related and can be effectively managed together as part of a single process.

If an IT department is unable to meet demand due to insufficient capacity, users will experience downtime or a degradation in service.

To be clear, capacity is not the only factor in availability – reliability, serviceability, etc. are significant as well.

But no organization can effectively manage availability without paying sufficient attention to capacity.

Availability management is concerned with the design, implementation, measurement, and management of IT services to ensure that the stated business requirements for availability are consistently met. (OGC, Best Practice for Service Delivery, 12)

Capacity management aims to balance supply and demand [of IT storage and computing services] cost-effectively… (OGC, Business Perspective, 90)

Integrate the three levels of capacity management

Successful capacity management involves a holistic approach that incorporates all three levels.

  • Business — The highest level of capacity management, business capacity management, involves predicting changes in the business’ needs and developing requirements in order to make it possible for IT to adapt to those needs. Influx of new clients from a failed competitor.
  • Service — Service capacity management focuses on ensuring that IT services are monitored to determine if they are meeting pre-determined SLAs. The data gathered here can be used for incident and problem management. Increased website traffic.
  • Component — Component capacity management involves tracking the functionality of specific components (servers, hard drives, etc.), effectively tracking their utilization and performance, and making predictions about future concerns. Insufficient web server compute.

The C-suite cares about business capacity as part of the organization’s strategic planning. Service leads care about their assigned services. IT infrastructure is concerned with components, but not for their own sake. Components mean services that are ultimately designed to facilitate business.

Consider the relationship between component capacity and service capacity

End users’ thoughts about IT are based on what they see. They are, in other words, concerned with service availability. Does the organization have the ability to provide access to needed services?

Service

  • Email
  • CRM
  • ERP

Component

  • Switch
  • SMTP server
  • Archive database
  • Storage

You don’t ask the CEO or the guy in charge ‘What kind of response time is your requirement?’ He doesn’t really care. He just wants to make sure that all his customers are happy. (Todd Evans, Capacity and Performance Management SME, IBM.)

Manage availability and keep your stakeholders happy

If you run out of capacity, you will inevitably encounter availability issues like downtime and performance degradation. End users do not like downtime, and neither do their managers.

There are three variables that are monitored, measured, and analyzed as part of availability management more generally (Valentic).

  1. Uptime:

    The availability of a system is the percentage of time the system is “up,” (and not degraded) which can be calculated using the following formula: uptime/(uptime + downtime) x 100%. The more components there are in a system, the lower the availability, as a rule.
  2. Reliability:

    The length of time a component/service can go before there is an outage that brings it down, typically measured in hours.
  3. Maintainability:

    The amount of time it takes for a component/service to be restored in the event of an outage, also typically measured in hours.

Enter the cloud: changes in the capacity manager role

There can be no doubt – the rise of the public cloud has fundamentally changed the nature of capacity management.

Features of the public cloud

Implications for capacity management

Instant, or near-instant, instantiationArrow pointing right.Lead times drop; capacity management is less about ensuring equipment arrives on time.
Pay-as-you go servicesArrow pointing right.Capacity no longer needs to be purchased in bulk. Pay only for what you use and shut down instances that are no longer necessary.
Essentially unlimited scalabilityArrow pointing right.Potential capacity is infinite, but so are potential costs.
Offsite hostingArrow pointing right.Redundancy, but at the price of the increasing importance of your internet connection.

Use best practices to optimize your cloud resources

Two similar graphs with axes 'Capacity requirements' and 'Time'. They are titled 'Ineffective reserve capacity' and 'Effective reserve capacity' with the difference being the level of the 'Reserved instance ceiling'. The ineffective graph has a high ceiling, above the highest possible instance but far above the average, with the space between as 'Unused capacity'. The effective graph has a lower ceiling, above the average but well below the one large spike, and on the spike is written 'Spot instance'.

Even in the era of elasticity, capacity planning is crucial. Spot instances – the spikes in the graphs above – are more expensive, but if your capacity needs vary substantially, reserving instances for all of the space you need can cost even more money. Efficiently planning capacity will help you draw this line.

Evaluate business impact; not all systems are created equal

Limited resources are a reality. Detailed visibility into every single system is often not feasible and could be too much information.

Simple and effective. Sometimes a simple display can convey all of the information necessary to manage critical systems. In cars it is important to know your speed, how much fuel is in the tank, and whether or not you need to change your oil/check your engine.

Where to begin? Specialized information is sometimes necessary, but it can be difficult to navigate.

Execute a business impact analysis (BIA) as part of a broader availability plan

Business impact analyses are an invaluable part of a broader IT strategy. Conducting a BIA benefits a variety of processes, including event management, disaster recovery, business continuity, and availability and capacity management.

  • STEP 1 — Record applications and dependencies

    Utilize your asset management records and document the applications and systems that IT is responsible for managing and recovering during a disaster.
  • STEP 2 — Define impact scoring scale

    Ensure an objective analysis of application criticality by establishing a business impact scale that applies to all applications.
  • STEP 3 — Estimate impact of downtime

    Leverage the scoring criteria from the previous step and establish an estimated impact of downtime for each application.
  • STEP 4 — Identify desired RTO and RPO

    Define what the RTOs/RPOs should be based on the impact of a business interruption and the tolerance for downtime and data loss.
  • STEP 5 — Determine current RTO/RPO

    Conduct tabletop planning and create a flowchart of your current capabilities. Compare your current state to the desired state from the previous step.

Info-Tech Insight

Engaging in detailed capacity planning for an insignificant service draws time and resources away from more critical capacity planning exercises. Time spent tracking and planning use of the ancient fax machine in the basement is time you’ll never get back.

Combine historical data with the needs you’ve solicited to holistically project your future needs

Predicting the future is difficult, but when it comes to capacity management, foresight is necessary.

Critical inputs

In order to project your future needs, the following inputs are necessary:

  1. Usage trends: While it is true that past performance is no indication of future demand, trends are still a good way to validate requests from the business.
  2. Line of business requests: An understanding of the projects the business has in the pipes is important for projecting future demand.
  3. Institutional knowledge: Read between the lines. As experts on information technology, the IT department is well-equipped to translate needs into requirements.

Graph titled 'Projected demand' with axes 'Demand' and 'Time', a value line curving to the top right, and a vertical red line bisecting it labelled 'Present'. A note says 'Note: confidence in demand estimates will vary by service and by stakeholder.'

Info-Tech Insight

If the factor, unit, utilization rate, etc., is trending upward or downward over time, it will continue in that direction unless something changes to impact that trend. Learn form your historical data!

Establish visibility into critical systems

You may have seen “If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it” or a variation thereof floating around the internet. This adage is consumable and makes sense…doesn’t it?

It is wrong to suppose that if you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it – a costly myth. (W. Edwards Deming, statistician and management consultant, author of The New Economics)

While it is true that total monitoring is not absolutely necessary for management, when it comes to availability and capacity – objectively quantifiable service characteristics – a monitoring strategy is unavoidable. Capturing fluctuations in demand, and adjusting for those fluctuations, is among the most important functions of a capacity manager, even if hovering over employees with a stopwatch is poor management.

Three steps to manage your capacity and increase your availability

  1. Observe

    Identify what components and services you have and add in the various initiatives that will impact those services and components.
  2. Manage

    Set thresholds, manage risk, and use your tools to take action as capacity and availability become a challenge.
  3. Model

    Use trends, metrics, and other insights to predict capacity requirements and reduce availability challenges.

Maximize availability through proactive capacity management.

About Info-Tech

Info-Tech Research Group is the world’s fastest-growing information technology research and advisory company, proudly serving over 30,000 IT professionals.

We produce unbiased and highly relevant research to help CIOs and IT leaders make strategic, timely, and well-informed decisions. We partner closely with IT teams to provide everything they need, from actionable tools to analyst guidance, ensuring they deliver measurable results for their organizations.

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A blueprint is designed to be a roadmap, containing a methodology and the tools and templates you need to solve your IT problems.

Each blueprint can be accompanied by a Guided Implementation that provides you access to our world-class analysts to help you get through the project.

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Guided Implementation 1: Observe and Monitor
  • Call 1: Scope requirements, objectives, and your specific challenges.
  • Call 2: Align business initiatives and intake sources.
  • Call 3: Business impact analysis.
  • Call 4: Component breakdown.

Guided Implementation 2: Manage Capacity and Availability
  • Call 1: Establish thresholds.
  • Call 2: Address capacity risks.
  • Call 3: Understand trending.
  • Call 4: Capacity intake process.

Guided Implementation 3: Implement Modeling
  • Call 1: Metrics.
  • Call 2: SLAs.
  • Call 3: Bring it all together.

Author

P.J. Ryan

Contributors

  • Richie Mendoza – IT Consultant, SMITS Inc. Interview
  • Todd Evans – Capacity and Performance Management SME, IBM. Interview
  • Fred Chagnon – Principal Research Director, Info-Tech Research Group
  • Nabeel Sherif – Principal Advisory Director, Info-Tech Research Group
  • Scott Young – Principal Advisory Director, Info-Tech Research Group
  • John Annand – Principal Advisory Director, Info-Tech Research Group
  • Jeremy Roberts – Workshop Director, Info-Tech Research Group
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