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E2IT The Energy Efficient IT Report: What Works and What Doesn't in IT Energy Reduction
Energy consumption and costs remain a top focus for Information Technology (IT) executives across all industry sectors.
E2IT found that while most organizations care about reducing energy consumption - and that significant savings are realistic - success comes only with sharp, persistent focus on energy-efficient opportunities across the IT organization.
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To view an in-depth analysis of the study "E2IT: The Energy Efficient IT Report, What Works and What Doesn't in IT Energy Reduction," please complete the information form at the link below.
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CDW-G surveyed 778 IT professionals in U.S. organizations (mid-size and large businesses; Federal, state and local government agencies; and K-12 and higher education institutions) to identify:
- The importance organizations place on IT energy use/costs
- The measures organizations take to reduce energy use
- Why some organizations see better results than others
- What IT professionals need in order to improve energy efficiency in IT operations
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- CDW-G hired O'Keeffe & Company to survey IT professionals in mid-size and large organizations (100+ employees) in June 2008 on the state of IT energy consumption and costs
- Data collection: A national online survey through e-Rewards
- Total sample size: 778
- Business: 150
- Federal government: 150
- State/Local government: 157
- Higher education: 169
- K-12: 152
- Margin of error for total sample: ±3.49% at a 95% confidence level
- Margin of error for industry samples: +/-8.00% at a 95% confidence level
- Demographics
- Organization Size:
- 27%: 100-499 employees; 52%: 500-10,000 employees; 21%: More than 10,000 employees
- Title:
- 6%: CIO/CTO; 3%: Deputy CIO/CTO; 21%: IT Director/Supervisor; 21%: IT Manager; 16%: Network Administrator; 3%: Data Center Manager; 3%: Procurement Specialist; 27%: Other IT Manager
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