How do I convince my boss that RAID is a good solution? / Admins
This question and answers originated from serverfault.com
Question asked Erik van Brakel
This question and answers originated from serverfault.com
Question asked Erik van Brakel
Wrong question. Nothing to do with RAID.
How can you convince your boss that you know what you're doing.
Assuming you're a knowledgeable sysadmin with prior experience, then you should be able to set this up blindfold. If your boss (who does not have to be technical), doesn't recognise the skills you have and bring to the solution then...
You already recognise the risks, and I also assume you can describe these to your boss in a clear and understandable manner.
Remember, you need to get his buy-in, but don't short change yourself. Insist on getting decent (maybe more expensive, branded, supported) kit instead of the cheapest from eBay or PCWorld.
Test. Test. Test.
Then install and relax...
Dude, if you can't get traction on this basic stuff, just quit.
edit: if you want to try, try expressing it in dollar terms.
RAID converts a disk failure from a stop-the-world-drop-everything-event to a ill-replace-that-drive-during-the-next-maintenance-window event. It enables you to handle failure more cost effectively.
Server downtime = $$$/hour, hours == the time taken to restore from backup from a failed lun.
You need to cast your arguments in terms your boss can understand. From your description, it sounds like you've got a hard road.
You need to come up with REAL WORLD scenarios you face in your environment and then walk him through what would happen with and without RAID.
I haven't seen it work well when you start talking $$$'s right out of the gate, but you'll need to cover that eventually, so have your figures at the ready.
Good luck, doesn't sound like a good environment.
When dealing with any non-technical managers who are resistant to changes, your best bet is to speak in terms of $$$$'s. Therefore, create a spreadsheet to contrast any cost outlay of the RAID components to the potential loss of time/customers/sales down the road.
RAID does not replace a data backup solution, so you have to show the cost savings of having more fault tolerant systems. This will usually be in reduction of down time, and simplification of handling disk failures, compared to a full restore from backup.
I think that not every sysadmin is good at persuading people to do things, tinkering with servers and networks is a very different skill set from those needed to persuade people of things.
There is lots of information out there about this, it is soft skill. Some of it is innate, but you can learn techniques to help you be more persuasive. Unfortunately not everybody accepts a well thought out logical argument, in fact sometimes this can hinder you.
Express it in terms of time to restoration of services.
If you have good backups, a disk failure won't result in significant data loss, but it will disrupt your operation for hours (if you have spare parts) or days (if you're waiting for a vendor technician). If you have backups + redundancy, you theoretically have no service impact. I say theoretically because as Mr. Atwood's story about RAID with the StackOverflow servers illustrated, RAID isn't always what you think it is.
Ultimately, your boss may not care -- and that is his or her prerogative. Often as a sysadmins we have to live with business decisions that we don't care for.
Other Answers (5)