Setting up and maintaining an in-house hosting infrastructure is expensive, complex, and time-consuming. If you operate on a budget or have an inexperienced IT team, data center outsourcing might be a better choice for your business. Outsourcing enables you to set up a reliable hosting environment without steep equipment or staff investments.

This article is an intro to data center outsourcing (DCO), a cost-effective alternative to running an in-house hosting facility. We provide all the info you need to evaluate whether to go for an external data center or keep servers on-site, so read on to learn how your business can benefit from a third-party data center.

Outsourcing data center needs

What is Data Center Outsourcing?

Data center outsourcing (DCO) is the practice of partially or fully outsourcing IT infrastructure and hosting management from a third-party data center. The main goal of DCO is to provide top-tier hosting equipment and staff members that clients do not have on an in-house level due to financial constraints or strategic budgeting.

DCO is a broad term and can include various services, such as:

Most providers will allow you to pick and choose between these services to create a tailored hosting arrangement ideal for your use case. A DCO contract typically runs on an annual or multi-year basis, but some vendors also offer a per-month payment model.

Data center outsourcing leads to various advantages, such as:

  • Lower capital and operational costs.
  • High levels of physical and digital security.
  • The lack of need for an expensive in-house IT team.
  • Access to on-demand storage and computing capacity.
  • High availability, system resilience, and uptime.

However, data center outsourcing can also have certain drawbacks compared to in-house hosting. Some significant risks are:

  • Lack of direct control over hardware.
  • Customization limitations (especially in terms of security procedures and disaster recovery).
  • Vendor lock-in concerns.

Luckily, siding with a reputable partner and defining a strict Service Level Agreement (SLA) is typically enough to counter these risks.

The data center tiering system helps identify the best hosting facilities in the industry. Our article on data center tiers teaches all you need to know about the tiering system and explains what you can expect from each facility type.

Data center services

Reasons Why Companies Choose DCO Over On-Site Hosting

Typical clients of data center outsourcing are companies that:

  • Have rapidly evolving data center and hosting needs.
  • Do not have the in-house expertise or the equipment needed to host apps and data on-premises.
  • Have data center operations that are not cost-competitive.

However, SMBs and growing businesses are not the only candidates for data center outsourcing. Large enterprises often rely on DCO to partially outsource their data center needs, either to:

  • Host CPU-hungry processes at a third-party facility while keeping mission-critical apps in-house.
  • Host a set of apps and databases at a geographic location close to a customer group.

Here are the top five reasons businesses decide to use DCO over an on-prem hosting environment:

  • Cost: A new data center takes years to build and costs millions to maintain (building construction, gear purchasing, fiber installation, taxes, staff expenses, electricity costs, maintenance, etc.). Outsourcing resolves most budgetary problems of an on-site data center.
  • High performance: DCO enables access to all the resources you need to create a high-performing system that does not suffer from network latency, congestion, or connectivity issues.
  • Compliance: A high-tier data center and experienced staff help satisfy regulatory requirements (typically obligations related to data privacy laws (such as GDPR and CCPA) or strict industry-specific regulations like PCI and HIPAA).
  • Improved security: Not only do data center vendors offer high-level cybersecurity, but these facilities also rely on top-tier physical security measures (biometric scanning, video surveillance, alarms, mantraps, 24/7 guards, etc.).
  • Expertise shortage: Running a well-oiled, profitable on-prem data center requires seasoned operators that are expensive to hire, hard to find, and even harder to keep.

Our article on data center migration explains everything you need to cover to relocate your hosting equipment quickly and effectively.

Data Center Outsourcing Models

There are two main data center outsourcing models:

  • Colocation (setting up privately owned IT equipment at a third-party data center).
  • Data Center as a Service (renting the physical infrastructure from a provider).

Some DCO providers are also willing to manage customer-owned or leased hosting equipment on the client's premises. While not a full-blown DCO model, you should be aware of this type of on-site technical support (especially if you want to modernize a legacy infrastructure with virtualization). 

Let us take an in-depth look at what colocation and Data Center as a Service can offer to your business.

Colocation pros and cons

Colocation

Colocation enables a client to rent or lease space in a third-party facility and move in privately owned computing, storage, and networking gear. Choosing colocation eliminates the expense of building and operating a hosting facility, but you need to own storage and server units.

A colocation provider offers clients access to:

  • Physical space within a data center (a room, cabinet, rack, or cage).
  • Supporting equipment (power, cooling, ventilation, etc.).
  • Connectivity and bandwidth.
  • Telco access for WAN support.
  • Dedicated meet-me rooms.
  • Physical security.
  • High levels of equipment redundancy.

Depending on your needs, you can colocate an entire facility (wholesale colocation) or reserve a room, a rack, or space within a rack (retail colocation). The more space you take up, the higher the colocation price, which is why retail colocation is the choice for most clients.

While some companies that use colocation rely on their in-house team for management, most data centers offer managed colocation. The provider's staff can handle basic to advanced maintenance at the clients' request, such as:

  • Moving cables.
  • Changing gear configurations.
  • Cycling power and rebooting.
  • Removing or installing gear.
  • Monitoring the environment.
  • Updating software.

This data center outsourcing model is ideal for companies that:

  • Have their own IT equipment.
  • Operate in an office that is close to the data center.
  • Have the in-house expertise to fine-tune and manage the setup.
  • Already have an established data center but do not wish to invest in additional space.
  • Want to get specific workloads and data geographically closer to users (either to ensure high performance or regulative demands).

Our colocation services enable you to set up equipment at an enterprise-grade facility in Arizona and rely on various managed services to streamline day-to-day operations.

DSaaS pros and cons

Data Center as a Service (DCaaS)

Data Center as a Service (DCaaS) is a hosting offering in which a client rents or leases the provider's physical data center infrastructure (servers, networking, storage, etc.). Besides the hosting essentials, a DCaaS vendor can offer custom plans that also include:

Depending on your needs, a provider can offer physical rack servers, blade servers, or virtual servers. Some vendors also offer a hybrid configuration that relies on a physical unit and provides access to public cloud resources.

Like with colocation, a DCaaS client can either outsource the entire or a part of the data center. Either way, the client's team can access the computing resources remotely across a wide-area network (WAN).

DCaaS offerings tend to have a pay-as-you-go model, so clients only pay for what they actively use. This cloud-like flexibility enables clients to scale the setup up or down to adjust current usage and eliminate overhead.

This data center outsourcing model is ideal for companies that:

  • Do not own any hosting equipment.
  • Wish to run mission-critical apps in-house and outsource the rest to a third-party provider.
  • Want to boost operational efficiency and improve cost-effectiveness during scaling.
  • Can no longer expand its private data center (due to a lack of power, rack space, capital, bandwidth, experienced staff, etc.).

A virtual data center (VDC) functions like a DCaaS service, but a VDC relies on cloud resources instead of hardware. PhoenixNAP's virtual private data center offering enables you to create a software-defined hosting environment that is highly scalable, agile, and custom-tailored to your use case.

Benefits of data center outsourcing

Benefits of DCO (Data Center Outsourcing)

Data center outsourcing offers a range of benefits that can improve the way a company operates, scales, and meets user demands. Key benefits include:

  • Lack of upfront investments: DCO eliminates large-scale hardware and staffing investments. DCaaS also ensures you never overspend on resources as you can expand or shrink the data center footprint on an as-needed basis. The bandwidth costs are also significantly lower than what you would have to pay for an on-site setup.
  • Access to otherwise unavailable resources: Data center outsourcing enables a business to leverage the people, processes, and equipment usually unavailable on an in-house level.
  • Cutting-edge tech: A leading data center provider is typically an early tech adopter ahead of the curve in deploying new IT technologies. If you want access to new tech and staff with the skill to use them, DCO is for you.
  • Create an optimal hosting environment: DCO clients can quickly increase resources to match their needs as the business grows. In addition, most reputable data centers have carrier neutrality that offers even more flexibility.
  • Better all-around security: Data centers offer top-tier physical safety and protection from cyber-attacks. Most businesses cannot afford the same level of protection in-house. Additionally, high levels of redundancy (with uninterrupted power supplies (UPS) and backup generators) help keep you online in most scenarios.
  • Easier compliance: Data center providers are responsible for meeting legal and regulatory compliances, relieving some of the pressure from your company.
  • Free up the in-house team: Managed IT services reduce the day-to-day maintenance chores and allow your team to concentrate on core apps and revenue-driving deliverables.

PhoenixNAP's managed services enable you to free up your IT staff from time-consuming infrastructure management and focus the team on driving business success.

A Cost-Effective Way to a Reliable Data Center

For organizations without the budget or in-house expertise to run an on-prem data center, DCO is a no-brainer. Whether you rely on colocation or DCaaS, you will be able to create a reliable hosting environment that by far exceeds any system you can realistically set up on-prem.