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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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How to save an overwhelmed e-mail server By Becky Roberts, 0 August 07, 2003 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/insight/soa/How-to-save-an-overwhelmed-e-mail-server/0,139023731,120275946,00.htm
When the information store on one IT manager’s company’s Exchange 5.5 Standard server rapidly approached the size at which it would simply cease to function, the IT manager asked for suggestions on how to persuade upper management to either support the imposition of mailbox size limits or to provide funding for an upgrade.
Persuading upper management to support any type of proposal for upgrading the e-mail server, or for changing how it is managed, will obviously take some time. And during this time the information store (IS) will continue to grow, possibly to the point of shutting down. To address this immediate space need—and avert a crisis—members offered the following ideas:
In terms of attaining a more permanent solution, several members suggested the following strategies for approaching upper management:
But what if upper management simply refuses to cooperate? Some members, labouring under similar restrictions, shared their solutions:
And, finally, spamcracker had some excellent words of advice that are applicable to this and many other situations in which IT managers require the support of upper management: “If you go to [upper management] with issues, and then somehow always seem to find a way around the issues that temporarily fix the problem, you are only delaying the inevitable, while at the same time telling your CFO and CEO, "See! We could have fixed this all along, and we didn't have to spend any money to do it." In a way, you have dug your own hole.” The solution So what did the IT manager actually do? As many of the users suggested above, she successfully managed to reduce the size of the information store by applying several of the mentioned strategies of educating and persuading the users to cooperate. While her official appeals to upper management largely fell on deaf ears, her constant haranguing finally caught the attention of the CEO who was delighted to learn that one of the prime offenders was a VP with whom he had an ongoing conflict. Seeing this as another opportunity to make the VP’s life miserable, the CEO self-righteously cleaned up his own mailbox before engaging the VP in a very public battle over the size of his mailbox. The end result? Two of the main offenders ended up with significantly reduced mailboxes, and there was a memo from the CEO to all VPs eliciting their opinion on the imposition of limits. Limits are yet to be imposed, but with an information store now at 60 percent of capacity, the IT manager is breathing a well-deserved sigh of relief.
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