

# # #
By Herman Chan, President and CEO, Sunbird Software
Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM) software has matured considerably over the past decade. Deployments are faster, interfaces are easier to use, integrations are deeper, and organizations across industries are seeing real, measurable results.
According to Gartner, DCIM software has reached a critical inflection point in the Hype Cycle: the “Plateau of Productivity.” This is a recognition that DCIM software has gone mainstream, adoption is accelerating, and proven solutions are delivering measurable value.
That’s why, if DCIM software is not yet in your plans, now is the time to take a serious look.
The Gartner Hype Cycle tracks how technologies mature from early innovation through inflated expectations, disillusionment, and eventually to sustained productivity. It is used by organizations to assess and reduce the risk of adopting new technologies.
DCIM software’s trajectory through the hype cycle began about 15 years ago. First-generation tools struggled with long deployment cycles, poor usability, and limited integration capabilities. Early adopters found a significant gap between vendor hype and the reality of slow, difficult tools. DCIM software fell into the Trough of Disillusionment, and many vendors that couldn’t close that gap didn’t survive.
Over the past decade, modern DCIM platforms have addressed those shortcomings. Deployments became faster. Interfaces became more intuitive. Out-of-the-box connectors and open APIs enabled easier integration with adjacent tools. As successful customers evangelized their results, DCIM software climbed the Slope of Enlightenment.
Today, Gartner’s placement of DCIM software in the Plateau of Productivity confirms that DCIM has earned its place as a proven, mainstream tool for data center operations.
Uptime Institute offers a complementary view. Rather than seeing DCIM software as a standalone product, Uptime Institute frames it within a broader concept called Data Center Management and Control (DCM-C): a framework in which multiple specialized tools work together across complex environments. In that model, DCIM software serves as the central hub connecting facility systems, IT operations tools, and business platforms.
At a certain point, the complexity of managing distributed infrastructure outgrows the point tools most teams are still relying on. Spreadsheet updates take too much time, manual processes break down, and inaccurate data leads to increased risk.
That’s the problem DCIM software was built to solve, and that’s why adoption has accelerated as environments have gotten harder to manage and the C-suite is recognizing the importance of data centers supporting their mission critical corporate operations.
Today, more and more organizations are deploying DCIM software to:
The business case for DCIM software is now well-documented. Real-world DCIM ROI stories include:
What drives these results is visibility. DCIM software surfaces what manual tracking misses: stranded capacity, inaccurate asset records, and operational inefficiencies.
The most mature DCIM software deployments go beyond a standalone implementation. Organizations are integrating DCIM software with their multi-vendor toolset to create a single pane of glass: one intuitive GUI with one enterprise-class relational database for all users.
Common integration points with DCIM software include CMDB and ticketing systems, server and network management tools, public and private cloud platforms, colocation monitoring tools, observability platforms, and DevOps tools. When DCIM software serves as the single pane of glass and single source of truth, assets automatically stay synchronized across systems, workflows cross team boundaries without manual handoffs, and leadership has access to real-time dashboards rather than static reports.
Published case studies of real-world deployments illustrate what this looks like in practice.
The World Bank integrated DCIM software with ServiceNow to automate provisioning throughout the asset lifecycle from purchasing through deployment. ServiceNow, in turn, is integrated with SAP, creating an end-to-end automated workflow. Assets flow from purchase orders in SAP into ServiceNow, and from there into DCIM software with cabinet locations, installation status, and lifecycle events synchronized to the other systems without manual effort.
eBay used DCIM software APIs to integrate DCIM software with ServiceNow to synchronize 600 daily activities across systems. Moves, adds, changes, and decommissions that are documented in ServiceNow automatically flow to their DCIM tool, eliminating the double manual data entry that had previously been required to keep both platforms up to date.
Brussels University Hospital integrated DCIM software with Dell OpenManage Enterprise to automatically pull key asset and configuration data into their DCIM. With DCIM software as their single pane of glass, they eliminated manual lookups and gained the ability to launch a server console with a single click from its asset record in their DCIM tool.
These integrations were built using out-of-the-box connectors and documented APIs available in modern DCIM software and reflect how far DCIM’s integration capabilities have come.
The time is now to deploy DCIM software, but selecting the right vendor for your organization is critical. When evaluating vendors, focus on:
According to Gartner, DCIM software has reached a turning point by achieving its place on the Plateau of Productivity.
The organizations that have switched to modern DCIM software are already operating more efficiently, making better capacity decisions, and achieving real cost savings.
The question is no longer whether DCIM software can deliver, but how much longer it makes sense to manage your data centers without it.
# # #
Herman Chan is the CEO and President of Sunbird Software, a global leader in DCIM software. Since Sunbird’s 2015 spin-off from Raritan, Chan has led Sunbird through a period of significant growth, scaling the organization into a global company that serves Global 2000 customers. He is recognized for his strategic leadership, focus on product innovation, and commitment to delighting customers by simplifying complex data center operations through second-generation DCIM software.
The post The State of DCIM and the Gartner Hype Cycle appeared first on Data Center POST.
TL;DR The True Data Center Bottleneck: While power and space often dominate the conversation, the real strategic obstacle facing operators is a severe lack of trusted, near-real-time visibility into their own physical, logical, and virtual infrastructure. The Demise of Static Records: Managing dense, distributed infrastructure via fragmented spreadsheets and outdated documentation is now a major
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# # #
By Herman Chan, President and CEO, Sunbird Software
Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM) software has matured considerably over the past decade. Deployments are faster, interfaces are easier to use, integrations are deeper, and organizations across industries are seeing real, measurable results.
According to Gartner, DCIM software has reached a critical inflection point in the Hype Cycle: the “Plateau of Productivity.” This is a recognition that DCIM software has gone mainstream, adoption is accelerating, and proven solutions are delivering measurable value.
That’s why, if DCIM software is not yet in your plans, now is the time to take a serious look.
The Gartner Hype Cycle tracks how technologies mature from early innovation through inflated expectations, disillusionment, and eventually to sustained productivity. It is used by organizations to assess and reduce the risk of adopting new technologies.
DCIM software’s trajectory through the hype cycle began about 15 years ago. First-generation tools struggled with long deployment cycles, poor usability, and limited integration capabilities. Early adopters found a significant gap between vendor hype and the reality of slow, difficult tools. DCIM software fell into the Trough of Disillusionment, and many vendors that couldn’t close that gap didn’t survive.
Over the past decade, modern DCIM platforms have addressed those shortcomings. Deployments became faster. Interfaces became more intuitive. Out-of-the-box connectors and open APIs enabled easier integration with adjacent tools. As successful customers evangelized their results, DCIM software climbed the Slope of Enlightenment.
Today, Gartner’s placement of DCIM software in the Plateau of Productivity confirms that DCIM has earned its place as a proven, mainstream tool for data center operations.
Uptime Institute offers a complementary view. Rather than seeing DCIM software as a standalone product, Uptime Institute frames it within a broader concept called Data Center Management and Control (DCM-C): a framework in which multiple specialized tools work together across complex environments. In that model, DCIM software serves as the central hub connecting facility systems, IT operations tools, and business platforms.
At a certain point, the complexity of managing distributed infrastructure outgrows the point tools most teams are still relying on. Spreadsheet updates take too much time, manual processes break down, and inaccurate data leads to increased risk.
That’s the problem DCIM software was built to solve, and that’s why adoption has accelerated as environments have gotten harder to manage and the C-suite is recognizing the importance of data centers supporting their mission critical corporate operations.
Today, more and more organizations are deploying DCIM software to:
The business case for DCIM software is now well-documented. Real-world DCIM ROI stories include:
What drives these results is visibility. DCIM software surfaces what manual tracking misses: stranded capacity, inaccurate asset records, and operational inefficiencies.
The most mature DCIM software deployments go beyond a standalone implementation. Organizations are integrating DCIM software with their multi-vendor toolset to create a single pane of glass: one intuitive GUI with one enterprise-class relational database for all users.
Common integration points with DCIM software include CMDB and ticketing systems, server and network management tools, public and private cloud platforms, colocation monitoring tools, observability platforms, and DevOps tools. When DCIM software serves as the single pane of glass and single source of truth, assets automatically stay synchronized across systems, workflows cross team boundaries without manual handoffs, and leadership has access to real-time dashboards rather than static reports.
Published case studies of real-world deployments illustrate what this looks like in practice.
The World Bank integrated DCIM software with ServiceNow to automate provisioning throughout the asset lifecycle from purchasing through deployment. ServiceNow, in turn, is integrated with SAP, creating an end-to-end automated workflow. Assets flow from purchase orders in SAP into ServiceNow, and from there into DCIM software with cabinet locations, installation status, and lifecycle events synchronized to the other systems without manual effort.
eBay used DCIM software APIs to integrate DCIM software with ServiceNow to synchronize 600 daily activities across systems. Moves, adds, changes, and decommissions that are documented in ServiceNow automatically flow to their DCIM tool, eliminating the double manual data entry that had previously been required to keep both platforms up to date.
Brussels University Hospital integrated DCIM software with Dell OpenManage Enterprise to automatically pull key asset and configuration data into their DCIM. With DCIM software as their single pane of glass, they eliminated manual lookups and gained the ability to launch a server console with a single click from its asset record in their DCIM tool.
These integrations were built using out-of-the-box connectors and documented APIs available in modern DCIM software and reflect how far DCIM’s integration capabilities have come.
The time is now to deploy DCIM software, but selecting the right vendor for your organization is critical. When evaluating vendors, focus on:
According to Gartner, DCIM software has reached a turning point by achieving its place on the Plateau of Productivity.
The organizations that have switched to modern DCIM software are already operating more efficiently, making better capacity decisions, and achieving real cost savings.
The question is no longer whether DCIM software can deliver, but how much longer it makes sense to manage your data centers without it.
# # #
Herman Chan is the CEO and President of Sunbird Software, a global leader in DCIM software. Since Sunbird’s 2015 spin-off from Raritan, Chan has led Sunbird through a period of significant growth, scaling the organization into a global company that serves Global 2000 customers. He is recognized for his strategic leadership, focus on product innovation, and commitment to delighting customers by simplifying complex data center operations through second-generation DCIM software.