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Being Strategic: How to Convey the Value of Novell Technologies to Management . Mike Richichi Drew University mrichich@drew.edu Novell TTP EMEA 2007 Amsterdam, Netherlands. Topics. What does “Novell” mean? Misinformed perceptions Yours Management’s Being a responsible technical voice
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Being Strategic: How to Convey the Value of Novell Technologies to Management Mike Richichi Drew University mrichich@drew.edu Novell TTP EMEA 2007 Amsterdam, Netherlands
Topics • What does “Novell” mean? • Misinformed perceptions • Yours • Management’s • Being a responsible technical voice • Making the case • Conclusions
Important Disclaimers • These are my opinions, and I’m opinionated • Novell may not agree with me • You may not agree with me • It may already be too late for your institution • Sorry! • I may make sweeping generalizations based upon limited anecdotal data
Ik ben een Amerikaan • Talk too fast/too slow? • Use strange words? • Confusing idiomatic expressions? • Funny accent? • Let me know!
The Problem • University administrators (IT managers, Provosts, Presidents, Deans, etc.) want to get rid of “Novell” • Seen as outdated, primitive, inferior to the alternatives • Usually Microsoft • Sometimes, getting rid of the technology is code for getting rid of the people
The Issue • “Members of the Commission noted that Novell software is used as the desktop management system. Novell is older software with limited functionality.” (http://www.acadiau.ca/president/assets/docs/Acadia_Advantage_Renewal_Report_Dec2006.pdf) • This is a common perception
What is “Novell” anyway? • Novell is not: • A piece of software • A network infrastructure • An application platform • An email system • Novell is a company • Getting rid of “Novell” makes no sense • Unless you’re Red Hat
What do they really mean? • Usually: • Get rid of NetWare • Get rid of eDirectory • Get rid of GroupWise • Get rid of ZENworks • Because: • They’re old • They’re buggy • They’re not as well integrated as Microsoft • The Novell admins are dinosaurs
The Harsh Reality • If those reasons on the last slide are true at your institution. . . • they’re right.
An Alternative View • Novell is a software vendor providing solutions for • Enterprise operating systems (Linux) • Groupware and collaboration (OES, GroupWise) • Systems and resource administration (ZENWorks) • Identity Management (IDM, Access Manager) • Novell’s offerings work with Microsoft software and other vendors’ offerings, and make them better
But, what about NetWare? • I like NetWare, it’s fun • But there’s simply no reason for it to exist in the future, as long as Novell provides what it offers in future OES Linux offerings • Maintaining a 32-bit OS that is incompatible with Linux and Windows is not a strategic stance at this point • Your management knows this, even if they don’t know they know it
NetWare <> Novell • Problem is, they think if NetWare is bad, then all of Novell’s stuff is bad. • They assume everything with Novell’s name they see is somehow “NetWare” and thus is as end-of-life as NetWare • Where’d they get this impression?
Maybe You’re The Problem • Look in the mirror • Are you “the NetWare guy”? • Do you still make Bill Gates jokes, only they aren’t really jokes? • Do you still spell it Micro$oft? • Do you believe nothing is as good as NetWare? • Then you might be the problem
What They Want • Your bosses want stuff that works • They may think they want Microsoft everywhere, but they won’t have that anyway since Microsoft doesn’t make everything • Yet • As long as there’s no problems they’ll likely leave you alone, unless there’s some deep-seated biases and I can’t help you then. • But you need to try some things before giving up
Where to Start • You’re going to need to be an advocate, not just for Novell, but for yourself • Once you’re seen as an experienced, knowledgeable IT professional, your opinions will carry more weight • You have the ability to be a better employee than someone who only knows Microsoft solutions and isn’t thinking critically
Get your “stuff” together • Learn Linux • It’s been around since 1992 • It’s just stuff you type • It won’t kill you, in fact, it’s fun! • Novell even tries to help (http://www.novell.com/linux) • Learn Windows Server and Active Directory • You really should have an AD domain for the things it does well • Knowing Windows and being able to support Windows applications means you can handle Windows applications when necessary
Stop Being “the NetWare Guy” • In our environment, there are no “NetWare guys” • There are just systems administrators and applications specialists • Windows, Linux, NetWare are merely dialects of some fundamental language called the Network Operating System • If you know varied platforms and can discern the differences between them, you can choose the best one for the job, and people don’t think you’re a zealot
Learn Novell’s Other Products Too • Identity Manager • Integrates with your ERP/SIS, integrates AD to eDir, integrates applications together • Access Manager • Can front-end any web service you have and make it single sign-on • Can consume and produce identity information for external identities • ZENworks • Manage your desktops and servers with identity-based principles • Also, know their market competitors and be able to do some comparisons based upon marketing and technical literature
You’re Building An Environment • Novell technology should be a part of that environment • SLES is better than RH servers, IMHO • NSS does stuff no one else does • Novell’s IDM is very, very good • It will not be the whole environment • But there will be more Novell than there would be if your management is convinced that “Novell” needs to go • Your skills will still be somewhat relevant • You won’t have to sell off your BrainShare Alumni jackets to buy MCSE training • You can support whatever your management throws at you, and hopefully you can say “yes” instead of “no” due to the flexibility Novell’s solutions give you.
Novell ♥ Microsoft • They made a deal, remember? • Not going to argue metaphysical aspects of deal • What it means is that even Microsoft doesn’t want you to get rid of your Novell investment • Yet • Or vice versa • The agreement can be a negotiating tool for you
Our Environment • Windows, Linux, NetWare, VMWare • Servers, switches, SANs • GroupWise, ZENWorks, IDM, iChain/Access Manager • Windows desktops • It all works • People are happy • Well, as happy as they can be
Our Credibility • We’re technology professionals, not vendor-specific technology droids • Decisions to use one technology over another made on non-ideological bases • Cost • Functionality • Ease of integration • Ability to be adaptive • End-user benefit
Making The Case • Know your facts • Have the data (cost/benefit analyses (including hardware and other costs) • Understand and be able to predict questions about alternatives • Acknowledge the benefits of other solutions • Be professional and rational • Educate on the difference between “Novell” and “Novell”
Keep asking questions • Why do you want Microsoft? • What are our actual objectives? • What if I can meet them with another solution for less money and more functionality, that doesn’t lock us in to one vendor? • Bring in Novell salespeople, resellers, other vendors at this point • (Novell: Have salespeople, resellers, other vendors to bring in, and be responsive)
Managing Your Bosses • Have regular meetings • Try and have them understand the technology as well as a manager can • Listen to their needs and respond to them • Not necessarily by giving them what they ask for but understand what they really mean. • Having them aware of the day-to-day issues should make them less likely to want to rip out stuff that’s working
Make it work • Obviously, do your job well • If you’ve taken the steps above that will help • Your credibility is established by your results • Sometimes Novell has made it hard to keep stuff running (NW 6.5 problems) • Your responsibility is to be responsive, do the best you can, and show you’re in control.
What if it doesn’t Work? • Start working on your Active Directory skills, I guess. . . • Try looking for another job • Become a consultant • Regroup and try again • Do the best you can on the new project, with an eye towards finding a place for the technology you want to use • Keep abreast of the Novell technologies if the new solutions are incomplete
Conclusion • Improve your skills (technical and interpersonal) • Ask the tough questions • Work with your management • Understand Novell’s and other’s technologies • Present the best solutions for your environment (that will likely include Novell) • Be confident you’re doing the best job possible and are an advocate for yourself and the profession • If you don’t get what you want, then do what you can