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Boston ballers tap the cloud

analysis
Jun 15, 20093 mins
IaaSManaged Cloud Services

When the Celtics couldn't stand their aging e-mail infrastructure anymore, they looked to the cloud to score a new solution

What has 27 divisional titles plus 20 conference titles plus 17 league championships plus 31 hall-of-famers? Two words: Boston Celtics.ย With more banners in the rafters than any other franchise in NBA history, theyโ€™re more an institution than a basketball team.

Theyโ€™re also a business enterprise. Ever thought about the team behind the team? Turns out theyโ€™re a pretty large enterprise, with enterprise-class revenues and IT expectations, although they donโ€™t have an enterprise-size IT department. In fact, the Celtics operate with a relatively small front office that communicates primarily via e-mail.

Jay Wessel is vice president of technology for the Boston Celtics. Since 2003 he and his team have deployed a classic set of point solutions designed to solve individual problems within their e-mail infrastructure. They started at the firewall, placing initial spam and virus checks in the DMZ. E-mail was then routed into a LAN-based spam and virus appliance before being delivered to an internal filtering server. After about a dozen different checks and processes, e-mail was finally delivered to the Microsoft Exchange server.

Eventually this complexity took its toll on the vital system. โ€œAs our overall traffic increased and our infrastructure got more complex, we began to experience problems,โ€ recalls Wessel. โ€œSometimes our main mail filter and quarantine server would hang, and weโ€™d need to restart the service.โ€

Now this wouldnโ€™t be so bad for me at home, but when the Celtics front office goes down, sometimes for up to two hours, things can get pretty ugly. โ€œMost communication takes place via e-mail,โ€ says Wessel. โ€œItโ€™s even central to our ticketing system; the vast majority of our ticket sales are online, and confirmations take place via e-mail. So if e-mail goes down, itโ€™s more than an inconvenience โ€” it can seriously impact our revenue.โ€

At one point Wesselโ€™s team was proactively restarting services to prevent outages. As Wessel puts it, โ€œIT administrators really shouldnโ€™t have to touch that stuff these days.โ€

Weary of manual intervention in an aging infrastructure, the organization looked to the cloud. What they found was Mimecast, a 24/7/365 unified e-mail management solution that hit the Celticsโ€™ sweet spot. Since deploying Mimecast, Wesselโ€™s infrastructure has shrunk to a firewall and the Microsoft Exchange server. Every single peripheral service was exchanged for the same or better functionality in the cloud.ย  Want to know the best part?

In addition to a five-fold reduction in administration time, Wessel estimates the cost of cloud hosting is 25 percent less than the annual maintenance he was paying, not including his hardware savings. โ€œIn todayโ€™s world, itโ€™s really not acceptable for an IT pro to say, โ€˜E-mail is downโ€™ or โ€˜The server is down.โ€™โ€ Wessel concludes. Not only will he not have to say those choice phrases, but he and his team gained archiving, discovery, and disaster recovery capabilities they didnโ€™t have before.

Can you imagine the uproar in Beantown if tickets werenโ€™t confirmed because the teamโ€™s e-mail system went down? Riots in the streets. โ€œWe backed up to tape before,โ€ recalls Wessel. โ€œIt was not an ideal solution โ€” it was very difficult to retrieve data. With Mimecast, I can do it in a matter of minutes.โ€

All this, and itโ€™s green to boot.ย Using Mimecast supports the organizationโ€™s green IT initiative.ย The reduction in hardware power and cooling requirements help reduce the teamโ€™s carbon footprint.