Reducing Shadow IT in Storage Purchases

Giving different departments in a business access to software-defined storage or hyperconverged infrastructure can help cut down on shadow IT.

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

One of the most significant changes for IT is that it’s no longer just a storage administrator’s job to keep storage environments up, running and backed up.

In fact, a business may have people inside and outside the traditional storage team making storage purchases and taking care of the day-to-day issues of storage environments, says Scott Sinclair, a senior analyst with the Enterprise Strategy Group.

“You might have an application development team purchasing storage directly” from a cloud service, he says. “If a business unit needs to share files, they may just create and expense a Dropbox account. This change creates a problem for the storage team because that data isn’t part of an overall company data strategy.”

Offering those rogue departments access to software-defined storage or hyperconverged infrastructure can help reduce such shadow IT, as well as ease backup and recovery if there’s a problem.

While it won’t stomp out every instance of unmanaged cloud use, it will help a lot in the long run, Sinclair says. “It’s a way to keep pace because if there’s not an IT-approved solution, users are going to find ways to go around them."

For more on how organizations are changing their storage strategies, check out our feature, "Real-World Benefits of Hyperconverged Infrastructure."