ExxonMobil Travel Guide this week begins the process of migrating newly developed travel-planning and database applications for its Mobil Companion service to IBM, which will host and maintain them on a mainframe running Linux. The arrangement works like a cell-phone calling plan: ExxonMobil Travel Guide essentially rents mainframe, storage, and networking capacity from IBM and agrees to pay a minimum monthly fee per service unit--which represents the combined usage of mainframe, storage, and networking resources at an IBM data center. If ExxonMobil Travel Guide uses fewer service units, it pays the minimum; if it uses more, it pays for each service unit above the minimum. Although ExxonMobil Travel Guide wouldn't disclose how much it will pay IBM over the next five years, IBM generally charges about $300 per service unit for Linux Virtual Services.
CIO Paul Mercuro wasn't specifically looking for a utility computing setup, but he thought Linux Virtual Services was a good fit. "We're a relatively small entity with a big name," he says. "I expect we'll have to ramp up dramatically, but I didn't want to invest in the infrastructure up front." Instead, IBM creates a virtual server on one of its mainframes that will run ExxonMobil Travel Guide's IT resources, including the customer-relationship software the company developed in conjunction with GuestClick Inc. that offers mapping, hotel reservation, call-center, and personalization capabilities.
ExxonMobil Travel Guide is one of the first customers of IBM's Linux Virtual Services, which comes with its own set of risks. But Mercuro says the greatest risk was of missing out on a good opportunity. "Anytime you do something the first time, you expose yourself to the risk of something not going exactly the way you planned," he says. "That's fine. You need to know that going in and to prepare yourself."
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