Why More Companies Are Investing In Database Professionals

Saving Time, Saving Money, and Expanding Profitability

Database professionals are sometimes secured as employees of a given corporation, and sometimes outsourced through an MSP of some variety. Which alternative best fits your particular operation will depend on the sort of profit you sustain on average; even so, one thing is sure: it’s better to have a database professional, than not to have one.

If you’ve just got generalized technology people working for you, and learning how to manage your databases as they go, then though you’ll save money on the front end, you’ll lose it on the back end. With technology, database professionals play a sort of trans-temporal role in overall operations.

Why More Companies Are Investing In Database Professionals
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Technology develops along exponential segues. The technology of the nineties is quaint and antiquated in 2020. The technology of 2020 will be as quaint in 2030. Yet in regions of industry like agriculture, tractors developed in the thirties and forties have barely changed in the iterations seen today, except for slight refining alterations.

Since the sixties, computer technology, by contrast, has been doubling on itself at predictable intervals of a year to two years, depending on the region. In the highest echelons of power, available technology is decades ahead of what John Q. Public understands. A database professional gets this, and so we’ll cover a few more reasons why you might want one.

Reducing Time in Acquisition and Set Up

If you get the wrong sort of server array in place, your database will be less useful to your business than it could be. For many businesses today, cloud-based databases are the way to go. But that’s not the case for all operations. For example, at the Pentagon, any cloud-based computing must be on-site and proprietary; meaning it’s just a much larger server array.

That said, the applications and potential existing in massive server arrays like those of Amazon and Microsoft predicate some level of crossover even for government agencies. As a business, large or small, you’ve got to decide the best way to manage your database. Should you do it on-site, use a public cloud, use a private cloud, use a hybrid cloud, or what?

It’s hard to know! Database professionals involved in an MSP can examine your operation from without, observing aspects of operation otherwise invisible to you, then provide you the best course of action. Internally-based database professionals might be able to render such services, but they’ll be hampered by their general operational duties.

If you’ve got a dedicated employee, then they’re beholden to your budget. They’ve got to put out hardware and software “fires”, troubleshoot employee difficulties, focus on upgrades, and more. Accordingly, they can’t focus as well on total network database optimization. An outsourced database professional can more effectively concentrate on such things.

Reducing Operational Expenses and Expanding Profitability

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Accordingly, database professionals who are acquired from companies external to your own can save a lot of time while enhancing overall operations.

Instead of, say, having a server array of twenty or thirty servers “floating” your network on-site (and costing you tens of thousands a month in employee, hardware, software, and troubleshooting), you can simply outsource to dedicated servers by AccuWeb.

Such dedicated servers are automatically maintained at a monthly rate that’s predictable, and in a competitive way that’s viable for multiple businesses owing to the necessary profit model of outsourced professional database services.

So you can ultimately fractionalize operational expenses via outsourced database services at the professional level. Simultaneously, you get better database management, access, and operation. Instead of having to pay to maintain cutting-edge technology on-site, the outsourced service you use does that for you.

Making the Best Choice for Your Business

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Whether you’re best served using on-site server arrays to host your databases, or outsourcing them, will ultimately depend on the sort of business you’re running, and its overall scope.

However, generally, to save time and money while retaining cutting edge viability of a competitive kind in terms of software and hardware, it’s wise to outsource database management.

Run the numbers, seek consultation, and look at what those with whom you compete on a peer level are up to. That said, what many businesses find is that it’s wisest to outsource such an operation.


Interesting related article: “What is Database Marketing?”