Park Place Technologies introduces DMSO

Park Place Technologies has introduced DMSO, a fully integrated approach to managing critical infrastructure.

DMSO is a simplified and automated approach to Discovering, Monitoring, Supporting and Optimising digital infrastructures to maximise uptime, create cost efficiencies, enable greater infrastructure control and visibility, and enhance asset performance. The DMSO market is expected to be $228 billion annually by 2023.


As businesses continue their digital transformations, they depend on data that resides on-premises, in public and private clouds, devices at the edge and networks and operation centres that span the globe. Managing these complex environments is increasingly becoming more difficult. Exponential increases in time, labour and cost, as well as the complexity of navigating a maze of service providers to establish clear accountability and support, requires a more intelligent and flexible approach. With DMSO, Park Place clients will maximise uptime, improve operational speed, eliminate IT chaos, and boost return on investment – ultimately accelerating their digital transformations. 

“Data centres have changed, and the concept of infrastructure continues to evolve radically as businesses move to implement digital transformation in its many forms,” said Chris Adams, CEO of Park Place Technologies. “This requires a more strategic approach to maintain physical and virtual infrastructures and gain insights through automation and analytics. This is the genesis of DMSO and we are confident that it represents a new way to deliver value and help transform critical infrastructure into a strategic business asset.”

Defining DMSO

Park Place Technologies, in consultation with industry analysts and Park Place customers, leveraged three decades of insight gained from providing global hardware maintenance for 17,000 customers in 58,000 data centres across 150 countries. Park Place has an impeccable record, delivering a 97 percent first-time fix rate and a 31 percent faster mean time to repair (MTTR) and carries a 97 percent customer satisfaction rate. This experience fuelled the innovation that developed DMSO to provide comprehensive infrastructure control and visibility. Through a single pane of glass, DMSO will offer a view up and down the technology stack, including hardware, operating systems, networks, databases, applications, and the cloud, for customers to:

Uniquely Positioned to Deliver on the Promise of DMSO Leveraging Global Infrastructure

Park Place Technologies’ aggregated service delivery platform monitors and remediates hardware, networks, operating systems and applications. Recent strategic acquisitions, such as the network operations centre of IntelliNet, and global network monitoring service Entuity, add new depth and breadth and demonstrate a commitment to advancing DMSO and the future of digital infrastructure. These are in addition to the dozen other acquisitions made in the US, UK, Latin America and APAC over the last few years.

The acquired technologies dovetail with and strengthen ParkView™, which delivers an automated monitoring service and will extend beyond the hardware layer into software to include both operating systems and virtual servers, furthering the company’s DMSO capabilities. Together with a commitment to continue to add expertise and presence around the world, Park Place Technologies is uniquely suited to advance the DMSO category for the future of digital infrastructure.

An Opportunity Underpinned by Healthy Growth

Demand for DMSO is fuelled by a healthy and growing infrastructure market, estimated by industry analysts to reach $228 billion by 2023 (inclusive of dedicated and shared equipment and services).  Additionally, the market for data centre and network maintenance is expected to exceed $185 billion annually.

“In this digital era, it is imperative that companies put an emphasis on fixing problems before they happen,” said Rob Brothers, program vice president, datacentre and support services, IDC. “This new approach to infrastructure management will enable providers like Park Place Technologies to be proactive about identifying and correcting potential problems for customers before they result in potential downtime which could cost them money.”

Information technology decision makers agree. A recent survey found that 35 percent cannot seamlessly monitor and optimise cloud capacity and configurations, and 36 percent are missing single-source visibility and monitoring. The issue of a lack of in-house expertise to act and respond to performance alerts and alarms affected 39 percent of respondents.

“DMSO is something which is a positive for the industry,” said Paul Alexander, Head of Technical Services, STEM Faculty, The Open University. “Park Place is able to lead on that because they've defined it. They understand where the industry is going. Obviously there’s a lot going into the cloud, and in some cases, it’s going to be a hybrid. I feel like the industry needed to find a new direction and DMSO is an evolution.

“It’s very clear a lot of people who run data centres don't know what equipment they have. So the first problem that you need to solve on the road map is discovery, and that's key as part of DMSO. Once you discovered it, you need monitoring. And if these things were integrated well, like through ParkView, that's a winning solution. I think then the natural progression from that is to support. Optimisation totally goes hand-in-hand from there, and it covers a multitude of different platforms. I think the industry as a whole is likely to move towards DMSO.”

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