Case Study: Nebraskaland
Cloud and IT services improve customer service and reduce IT costs and downtime for growing meat distributor
About the customer
Nebraskaland is New York metro’s largest distributor of boxed beef, chicken, pork, lamb, veal and variety meats, and has served the meat industry for five generations. As the company name and logo suggest, the values of the early American heartland, such as a focus on building strong relationships and working hard and efficiently to meet customer needs, are very important to this family-owned business.
Challenge
Costly on premises IT infrastructure
Sophisticated pick-and-pack, mobile delivery technology malfunctioned often
Dissatisfaction with unreliable small third party IT services provider
For quite a while, Nebraskaland was serving a dual role of distributing meats and managing its own IT infrastructure on premises. But as capital expenses grew and technology became more sophisticated, Nebraskaland decided it was time to transition the company from its in-house IT operation.
Nebraskaland was in a situation common for many companies today. The costs of managing, maintaining and supporting its own IT infrastructure heavily outweighed the benefits. A third-party IT provider could improve efficiency, decrease costs and remove risk. The company just had to find the right partner.
Nebraskaland had a server room in its Bronx facility equipped with an IBM® iSeries® production system and four full-time IT staff making sure all the hardware and software was up and running. But production boxes are expensive—running anywhere from $200,000 to $250,000 in equipment lease costs—plus the expense of internal IT salaries.
Then there were the critical overnight hours in the warehouse when orders were selected and loaded on trucks for morning delivery from their Bronx, New York facility. Approximately 50 Nebraskaland warehouse employees used radio-controlled, wireless devices to select and load the orders from the cooler and freezer each night. They received orders via headphones and use hand-held scanners to confirm that they were picking the correct product. If any of these systems go down, they need immediate support.“
Selecting orders in the middle of the night is a critical time for us. If a printer loses connection, a queue jams or some other obstacle occurs that the warehouse management is not familiar with how to fix, we will have a production delay,” said Dan Romanoff, executive vice president of Nebraskaland. “We’d have to wake up our IT department to come in or give instructions over the phone to get things moving again. In either case, there would be delays that impact our business.”
Additionally, the Nebraskaland IT staff maintained all the desktop computers throughout the organization. “We had outgrown our internal IT capabilities. We chose to move into the cloud and find a third-party provider to manage these services for us to make our systems and processes more efficient,” said Romanoff.
Nebraskaland conducted a search and selected a small New Jersey IT company for its initial foray into outsourced IT services. They moved Nebraskaland’s iSeries production box (that was still under lease) to a New Jersey facility and took over day-to-day IT services. However, it became evident that the provider wasn’t equipped to provide the seamless support and dedicated resources that complex IBM i systems require, and that Nebraskaland expected.“
This was a step in the right direction, but the provider was just too small,” said Romanoff. “There was a limited number of people we could count on in their company. If we needed help in the middle of the night, there was a short list of contacts to call. If we couldn’t reach them, we were left to fix it ourselves.”
Solution
“The Ricoh technicians were on the dock and in the freezer with us, analyzing what caused our problem and got it fixed. They really came through for us.”
Dan Romanoff
Executive Vice President
Nebraskaland
IBM Power6, IBM Power7, IBM iSeries and IBM i management and hosting
24/7 core desktop support
High availability, disaster recovery
As Nebraskaland searched for a new IT partner, one name emerged from the pack—Ricoh, one of the largest IT services providers in the U.S.
With two years remaining on its iSeries production box lease, Nebraskaland reached out to Ricoh to learn more about their IBM i managed services. When that lease expired, Nebraskaland chose to migrate everything to the cloud.
“We wanted to eliminate our server room and all of the hardware costs,” said Romanoff. “Ricoh seemed like the right partner to help us do that.”
Ricoh created a roll swap plan to replicate the production box in New Jersey and eventually move it to their Commack, New York data center. Nebraskaland could test the operations model until its lease expired and gain comfort in the partnership. If all went as planned, Ricoh would then replicate the Commack production box to a high availability IBM Power7 solution in their Minnesota data center for disaster recovery. This plan was successful and Nebraskaland ended up with a fully managed, cloud-based IT services model for their IBM i system.
“Ricoh helped make our company run more efficiently—from warehousing to delivery,” said Romanoff. “We operate much more seamlessly now.”
With the plan in place, Ricoh took over complete responsibility for Nebraskaland’s IT infrastructure, from hardware to networking to wireless access in the company’s warehouse. Ricoh provides on-premises support, manages and hosts the IBM Power6 production system and Power7 backup box and provides desktop support for the entire operation.
Recently, when some of the orders weren’t coming through on the warehouse’s voice picking system in the middle of the night, Nebraskaland contacted the Ricoh help desk. Since the issue couldn’t be resolved remotely and immediately, two Ricoh technicians rushed to the warehouse to get the system back online.
“The Ricoh technicians were on the dock and in the freezer with us, analyzing what caused our problem and got it fixed,” said Romanoff. “They really came through for us.”
Results
Improved IT infrastructure
Real-time backup
Monthly defined IT managed services costs
Greater efficiency from purchasing to warehouse to delivery
After two years of testing, Nebraskaland is now operating fully in the cloud and has an ongoing managed IT services partnership with Ricoh. Its on-premises production box is gone and only three servers remain on-site for cameras and various other non mission-critical functions. All mission critical servers have been shifted to Ricoh data centers, and Nebraskaland now has a rock-solid disaster recovery solution via the Ricoh data center in Minnesota.
Disaster recovery and high availability was something Nebraskaland definitely needed. It replicates the box located in Commack in real time and if something happens to the company’s system there, the Minnesota box assumes the roles and responsibilities of the Commack box almost instantaneously.
“We went from having no backup to a vastly improved program that is very reliable and efficient,” said Romanoff. “We eliminated our server room and all hardware costs— and I have one defined monthly cost for managed services with Ricoh.”
Nebraskaland has most, if not all, of its IT infrastructure in place with Ricoh. Going forward, they may look to Ricoh for guidance on an additional server to handle internal IT projects within their operations department.
Every month, Ricoh technicians meet at Nebraskaland to go over routine open items and discuss any issues with the company’s controller and CFO. During these visits, Ricoh staff talks with employees to see if any problems exist, and performs maintenance and updates to ensure that everything is working the way it should.
The benefits of having an efficient, reliable IT infrastructure extend beyond mere hardware. The systems work seamlessly, and many of Nebraskaland’s employees are probably unaware that they are now doing business through the cloud.
“Our mobile proof-of-delivery is a big advantage for us,” said Romanoff. “Our IT infrastructure gives us so many benefits, from helping us deliver a high quality product to controlling output and coordinating the time we deliver— and how fast we deliver—our products.”