By James Leach, Vice President Marketing, RagingWire Data Centers
Henry Ford is famous for saying, “Customers can buy a Model T car in any color they want, as long as it’s black.” His point was valid. For businesses to offer high-quality, low-cost products, they need to standardize features and optimize production. But what is good for the business is not always good for the customer.
Early colocation data centers were like Henry Ford’s Model T.
– For the large enterprise, you can have a data center in any size you want, as long as it’s 1.2 MW. If you need 1.6 MW, you get two 1.2 MW buildings and some “extra.”
– For the interconnect customer, you can have a custom-built data center solution as long your racks are in 2.4, 4, or 6 kW chunks. You need an 8 kW rack? Buy two 4kW racks.
– For the high availability customer, your only choice is dedicated infrastructure whether you can afford it or not.
Henry Ford would have hated the new colocation data centers. Why? Because the old rigid data center design and limited colocation support model are being replaced with flexible solutions and exceptional service.
Custom Builds with Pre-Fab Economics
The hyperscale cloud providers are building custom servers, storage devices, and network gear. They are writing custom software to automatically provision capacity and optimize performance. They are looking for data center providers that can build to fit their unique requirements while leveraging the cost savings of modular construction.
A Range of Sizes and Locations
Data center customers come in all sizes. On the high-end, they want vaults with a range of power options – 1 MW, 2 MW, and 5 MW. In the mid-range, they need cages with custom options for lighting, cooling, and physical security. Rack solutions now offer vertical growth options from standard 8 ft. designs to 9 ft. and even 10 ft. cabinets. Most data center deployments are part of a global infrastructure. Data center providers must offer locations around the world to balance workloads, reduce network latency, and provide application resiliency.
Dedicated and Shared Infrastructure
Customers want a choice in their infrastructure architectures. At times, they are willing to pay more for dedicated equipment so that they don’t have to worry about whether they have good neighbors or bad. Other times, they want the costs savings of shared infrastructure as long as there are virtual dividers to segment users and portals to monitor usage.
Massive Scalability with Available Inventory
Application usage is growing which is driving the need for data center scalability at the hub and in the spokes. At the hub, wholesale data center campuses are growing to over 1,000,000 square feet. On the edge, hundreds of small-footprint, “lights out” facilities will become the norm. The key is a just-in-time inventory model so that there is supply to meet customer demand while minimizing up-front capital expenses for the data center company.
Adaptive Power Configurations

Full Service and Support
Service and support are increasingly about location, skills, and bundled pricing. Data centers are staffing onsite teams of IT technicians to help with customers’ basic maintenance, problem determination and rack/stack. In-house electricians are helpful to install power whips and modify cabling. These services are bundled in with the colocation pricing for consistent month-to-month billing without usage spikes. You’d be surprised how important secured shipping and receiving is to a data center customer and no one wants to pay extra for after-hours deliveries.
Solution Selling and Contracting

Telecom Interconnects, Cloud Access, and Internet

Today’s world-class colocation data centers offer a proven and reliable design with options that can be configured to meet unique customer requirements. The days of the “Model T data center” will soon be behind us.
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