There’s no getting away from it – PCs and notebooks are much cheaper than they
used to be. The Portable from Compaq, now part of HP, cost $3,590 in 1983.
Today, you can buy a new portable computer for a few hundred pounds. But as the
price of computers has fallen, companies have been taking a harder look at the
other costs involved in PC ownership. Things like maintenance, support,
recycling, security and energy consumption add up to a great deal more than the
initial purchase. Sometimes the cheapest computer isn't the best value.
Studies by Gartner and other analysts show that when these other costs are
added into the equation, the lifetime cost of an individual PC can be as much as
£12,000.
When you buy a car, there are guides that will tell you how much it will cost
to service, what its fuel consumption will be and how much you might get for it
when you sell it on. A car that looks cheap on the dealer’s forecourt may end up
costing you more than a dearer model that holds its value or has better fuel
economy. Then there are the car companies that advertise a low price, but after
the addition of a few accessories like air-conditioning and a CD player, it
stops looking like a bargain. Functionally all cars do the same job.
Financially, there is a vast difference between one model and the next. It’s the
same with computers.
Remote clients
Remote clients are one way in which smart companies have been saving money by
investing in IT. A remote client replaces a traditional desktop PC with a thin
client that has no moving parts. It still has a screen, keyboard and mouse, and
from the user’s perspective it still runs Microsoft Windows like a regular
computer. But the guts of the computer – the things that go wrong – move to a
data centre. This cuts IT support costs dramatically because engineers don’t
need to visit users at their desks when things go wrong. Research suggests that
this can cut the cost of providing a computer to an employee by up to 50 percent
over five years. In this context, the marginal increase in purchase cost
relative to a desktop PC is a sprat to catch a mackerel.
It ain’t what you do, it’s who you do it with
It’s no good squeezing a supplier to get a good price if they are not easy to
do business with. Process matters here as much as price, even if the cost of
dealing with a less efficient supplier doesn’t show up on anyone’s budget. For
example, a global car manufacturer worked with HP to standardise its entire PC
fleet on three models with a consistent configuration and asset tagging
throughout the world. HP created a centralised global catalogue and integrated
it with the company’s purchasing systems to give them detailed order tracking.
As a result, the car company saved on management time and support costs.
Similarly, the way PCs are managed has a big impact on their lifetime cost.
An optimised infrastructure, where standardised computers are managed and
updated remotely among other best practices, can save several hundred pounds per
PC.
Systems integrators do it over three years
One group of companies presents an interesting role model. Systems
integrators, such as Cap Gemini or Capita, provide computers to their clients on
a per-user, per-month rental basis. Their entire business model depends on
delivering IT services at the lowest lifetime cost possible. It concentrates the
mind wonderfully. What they are interested in is “product reliability, servicing
costs, transition costs at the end of life and power consumption,” says David
McLellan, an HP consultant who specialises in this sector. Purchase price,
though important, is not a primary consideration, not least because price
variations between makes are so small.
A green PC is an economical PC
When it comes to energy consumption, not all computers are created equal. The
latest U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Energy Star specification, Version
4.0, came into effect on July 20th 2007 and mandates significant
improvements in energy efficiency. Products such as HP’s DX2500 Microtower PC
already meet this standard and could reduce energy consumption by up to 45
percent. Across thousands of PCs, this saving could be a noticeable boost to the
bottom line.
Apart from the direct financial benefit to owners, greener PCs are better for
the environment too. Energy efficiency reduces carbon emissions, and recyclable
components reduce landfill. Manufacturers are also getting more ecologically
aware. For example, last year HP recycled more than 70,000 tonnes of hardware
and print cartridges.
Whose PC is it anyway?
Isn’t PC purchasing a job for the IT department? Yes, primarily. But, as
George Clemenceau said during WWI, wars are too important to be left to the
generals. The same is also true of computers and IT departments. According to
Nicholas Carr, former editor of Harvard Business Review, businesses around the
world spend around £1 trillion a year on IT. It accounts for nearly 50 percent
of capital spending by American companies. These are big numbers and big
investments, and business leaders have a duty to spend wisely.
Achieving dramatic reductions in the total cost of ownership can require
strategic decisions at a board level. Switching to a remote client model is a
big (though manageable) change. But even at a tactical level, taking the longer
term view can produce real savings at little or no cost. Choosing energy
efficient computers or switching to suppliers that integrate more efficiently
into your purchasing operation and deliver better quality products. Details
matter, but from a business perspective companies need to start by asking the
right questions, investigating their options and taking a holistic view of the
true cost of their IT.
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