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Elements of a Successful Enterprise Implementation

Elements of a Successful Enterprise Implementation. Doug Dobson, Senior Manager CCS Craig Stilwell, Senior Manager CCS. Non Disclosure Agreement.

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Elements of a Successful Enterprise Implementation

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  1. Elements of a Successful Enterprise Implementation Doug Dobson, Senior Manager CCS Craig Stilwell, Senior Manager CCS Citrix Confidential

  2. Non Disclosure Agreement • This presentation is confidential. By virtue of your relationship with Citrix, you are bound to retain in confidence all information in this presentation. • Please… • No Photography • No Video Recording • No Audio Recording • Cell Phones & Pagers

  3. Introduction • This presentation reviews some of the key elements of a successful Enterprise MetaFrame deployment. This presentation demonstrates how the Citrix Implementation Methodology can help to ensure a successful roll out. This presentation reviews the following components of a hypothetical case study: • Project Management • Analysis • Design • Implementation • Readiness

  4. Case Study • ABC Company, a large enterprise organization is planning to deploy a MetaFrame server farm where they will be hosting a custom developed Order Entry application that is currently in system test in addition to MS-Office and Outlook. These applications will eventually support 5,000 users. ABC Company has budgeted 2 months for the project and is eager to begin.

  5. Project Management Checkpoint #1 • Conduct initial meeting to determine services required • Create a Statement of Work defining scope, deliverables, estimated duration and costs • Infrastructure Assessment • Proof of Concept • Agree to discuss next steps following this phase • Design • Implementation • Readiness • On-Going Support 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Week

  6. Analysis – Infrastructure Assessment • Conduct sessions with ABC to discuss: • Application Requirements • Hardware • Network (LAN, WAN, Subnets, Domains) • Systems Management • Security • Document the assessment with the following recommendations: • Unattended server build process • Pilot to 100 Shift Managers • Increased network security for Internet • Revise Testing & Migration Procedures • Several Server OS Tuning Opportunities • Identified potential MetaFrame for UNIX application on the Order Entry database server • NFuse for simplified application delivery 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Week

  7. Analysis – Proof of Concept • Determine what assumptions must be proved • Application compatibility with terminal server • Bandwidth requirements • Server resource estimates • Create Test Environment • Not production • Start with ‘clean’ server • Create test scripts • Install and test applications • Make adjustments as necessary • OS tuning • Application configuration • Document findings • Environment setup • OS & application configuration • Issues & recommendations 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Week

  8. Analysis – Summary • Benefits • Both you and the client come to an agreement on requirements and estimates • Risk mitigation • Opportunity to identify gaps early in project lifecycle • Findings & recommendations guide the project • Detailed documentation • What could be missed without formal Analysis • Clear understanding of overall technical environment • Agreement on the scope & budget for the project • Opportunity to identify need for additional products & services • Extranet 2.0 • MetaFrame for UNIX • NFuse • On-going support

  9. Project Management Checkpoint #2 • Present deliverables and recommendations from Assessment & Proof of Concept • Create a Statement of Work defining scope, deliverables, estimated duration and costs • Design • Server • MetaFrame • Network • Implementation • Readiness • Agree to discuss next steps following this phase • On-Going Support 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Week

  10. Design • Server Design • Hardware Configuration • Operating System • Based on Proof of Concept estimates 40 users can consume 80% of system memory which was determined to be primary system constraint. This translates into 125 servers for 5,000 users, 15 extra servers are added for contingency and redundancy. • MetaFrame Design • Application Publishing • Design lockdown specifications, login scripts, and profile management • Automated installation scripts for server rollouts. • Network Design • Client access • Determine how to integrate servers into ABC’s current production environment • New subnet with required redundancy on the production network for this project 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Week

  11. Design Summary • Benefits • Potential issues should be identified & resolved • Documentation of build plans • Detailed understanding of next steps • Plan of action to build the infrastructure • What could be missed without formal Design • Understanding between different project areas • Project Management • Network Group • Application Group • Operations Group • Another opportunity to agree on scope • Opportunities to introduce additional products and services • Another opportunity to fix something before it’s too late

  12. Implementation • Automation procedures • Build and test automation scripts: • OS • MetaFrame • System lockdown • Applications • Infrastructure integration • Plan and develop a strategy for adding new users • Test the integration of the new servers with the file and print services existing on the network • Build pilot servers • Build 4 servers to support 100 users 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Week

  13. Implementation Summary • Benefits • No surprises • Confidence • Maintainable solution • What could be missed without formal Implementation • Confidence in solution • Scope creep • New requirements surface that were missed during analysis phase

  14. Readiness • Scalability testing • Stress test the servers individually and then as a load balanced farm • Monitor network usage • Verify designs and estimates for the 5,000 user community • Pilot implementation • Roll the servers out to 100 user community defined during analysis phase • Verify user experience • Business functionality • Overall usability • Revise build scripts as needed • Build remaining servers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Week

  15. Readiness Summary • Benefits • Stress test numbers are verified and the server farm is observed to run successfully at “full throttle” • Verification of designs • Prepare for production • What could have been missed without formal Readiness • Without a stress test, it is difficult to accurately predict user load • Surprises and “gotchas” would surface everywhere with 5,000 users rather than 100

  16. Project Management Checkpoint #3 • Project wrap-up • Verify support structure • Discuss future opportunities 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Week

  17. Q & A Questions

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