Nov 19 2015
Software

Asset Management Software Keeps Cities Informed

IT managers use tool to maintain compliance and avoid overprovisioning software licenses.

Erin Provazek, assistant IT director for College Station, Texas, doesn’t want to overstate it, but says the city couldn’t have gone from managing 750 computers to 900 without asset management software.

In the past, building and deploying computer images used to take four hours. With

Novell ZenWorks Configuration Management, the task now takes less than 45 minutes. Provazek says the tool has allowed the IT department to manage the city’s growth without adding too many new employees. 

“Software applications are bundled, and the system does silent installs and copies,” Provazek says. “Plus, we know exactly what’s on the computer, which programs people are using and which they’re not using.”

8.8%

The percentage of organizations in the optimized stage of software license management, which links the asset management solution and information such as IT service and financial management, purchasing and capacity planning

SOURCE: IDC, “IDC MaturityScape Benchmark: Software License Optimization,” June 2015

ZenWorks also tracks software licensing and compliance. “It was too difficult managing software manually,” Provazek says. “We couldn’t keep it under control the way we wanted and be comfortable with an audit.”

Amy Konary, a research vice president for IDC, says that agencies also use asset management software to be more proactive.

“Organizations should not be looking to just avoid an audit, but also to obtain information on usage and license status that can be used to support future software purchases and negotiations,” she says. 

Cities Save Money By Staying in Compliance

Cloy Swartzendruber, senior IS manager in the Bureau of Technology Services in Portland, Ore., says the city uses Symantec Altiris to manage its software. The software enables the department to run semi-annual reports that check major software such as Adobe and Microsoft applications against purchased licenses. Reports for other licenses are done on demand, he adds.

“The asset management software helps us to ensure we are in license compliance, points out where we fall out of compliance and then helps us quickly to rectify,” Swartzendruber says. “It also tells us where we have too many licenses so we can avoid additional software spend and utilize the software we have more effectively.”

Swartzendruber estimates that staying in compliance saves the city thousands of dollars annually. Portland also avoids the cost of purchasing licenses it already owns. 

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