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Good, Fast, and Cost Effective Priceline Tries to Do All Three

Good, Fast, and Cost Effective Priceline Tries to Do All Three. Ron Rose Chief Information Officer SIM CT Chapter April 10, 2003. Priceline’s Speed and Execution The Data Center Operating System Web Services (Good News, Bad News) Technological Excellence Portfolio Management

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Good, Fast, and Cost Effective Priceline Tries to Do All Three

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  1. Good, Fast, and Cost Effective Priceline Tries to Do All Three Ron Rose Chief Information Officer SIM CT Chapter April 10, 2003

  2. Priceline’s Speed and Execution The Data Center Operating System Web Services (Good News, Bad News) Technological Excellence Portfolio Management Expense Reduction Steps Offshore Lessons IT Goals Framework Agenda

  3. Hundreds of Boxes Separate Operating Systems Multiple Tiers Multiple Security Architectures No control of objects among the tiers No synchronization of the object/database interface Very difficult diagnostics between tiers Usually different monitoring tools among tiers Intra-tier failures and the correlation among them is problematic No synchronized software distribution among tiers No synchronized rollback and recovery among tiers Configuration management among architectures is problematic In other words, if this was sold as one product, no CIO would buy it! The N-Tier Ecosystem Challenge

  4. Diagnostic and Alerting (Wily, Xtremesoft, BMC, Relicore, etc.) Configuration Enforcement (Bladelogic, Altiris, etc.) Management Tool Integration (HyperNOC, Netuitive, etc.) Transaction Integrity (Bristol, etc.) Software Distribution (Bladelogic, etc.) Security (Approva.net, etc.) Work Distribution & Control The Data Center Operating System

  5. Just because it’s called “SOAP”, doesn’t necessarily mean it’s clean Just enough holes to keep it from inter-operating cleanly The “X” in XML is for Xtensible, not Xtremely fast Not designed for high velocity interfaces Bandwidth-intensive to pass around CPU-intensive to parse Memory-intensive to parse Loosely Coupled – guaranteed messages are a problem – this is not MQ Series If timed-out, did you get message, was the data received, should you retry? Credit card Authorizations - need to build duplication detection at the target site to prevent duplicate authorizations Reliable web services will address this, but specifications are still evolving Tightly Connecting to Suppliers means your uptime is the aggregate of theirs Continuous Reporting/Alerting/Diagnostics become very important Web Services Lessons

  6. Security – Very Mature Supported and Maintainable without programming; common tools SSL – privacy for data Authorization – use digital certificates Network – TCP segments Basic password – username/password Fully leverage Web Infrastructures SSL accelerators HTTP load balancers Proxy servers Web Services Lessons, The Good News

  7. Web/DB transactional speed and high levels of availability (>99.99%) that are fully competitive with Airline/Mainframe levels Web Architecture which masks failures, Session State Servers Web Architecture which finds surviving database, DPM Proven Scalability - 20 million customers+ One of the most scalable and reliable database architectures in the Fortune 1000 Primary Secondary Tertiary Quaternary, 2 forms of replication Horizontally Scalable Replication SUN link is http://dcb.sun.com/practices/casestudies/priceline_part1.jsp 3 6800’s on line and usable by middle tier at any time ETL pulls and data warehouse queries don’t compromise the speed or integrity of the primary or secondary DB servers Rolling upgrades supported without downtime Technological Excellence – Web and Database Architecture

  8. Technological Excellence - Disaster Recovery Architecture • Two Hot sites, not merely a theoretical failover site • Load Balancing across both sites, using BGP, to insure both sites are truly operational • Each site is on a separate power grid & separate communications grid • Sites are connected with redundant 8 GB dark fiber connectivity across diverse paths • Tertiary Quaternary customer databases at 2nd Site • Redundant forms of Redundancy in replication to databases • ATT to one building, MCI to the other, high speed network between • Disk SAN, Tape backup, operations monitoring all operate as though local to one site • Remote connectivity, with security, allow remote support if NOC building is compromised

  9. Portfolio Management – Capital • Most significant problem for Internet CIO’s • Candidate is brought forward under review process, PIF • Passes ROI examination • Revenue • Costs (Development + Maintenance + Customer Service + Marketing) • Man-Days (as function of cost And complexity) • Estimated Margin • Applies to all projects greater than 50 man-days or $100k • Ask the Business folks to comply Every project • Ask the Business folks to comply Audit Every result

  10. Determine your Cost/Hour for each major component failure Determine how many incidents per month and average duration Understand your MTTR Alerting Lag Diagnostic Time for NOC Level One Support Escalation Lag for Level Two Engineering Call Engineering Time to Respond Diagnostic Time for Level Two Engineering Support Action Time for Level Two Engineer to recover the major component Analyze the ROI for the toolsets Predict which tools can help which step above to reduce MTTR Predict the reduction in incidents, and thus manpower Keep an eye out for automation to recover from the outage automatically The ROI of MTTR Reduction

  11. Prioritize by highest ROI Treat expense reduction like a project/process PM, Accountant, Negotiator, Vendor Coordinator, etc. Centralize contracts around your best negotiator Good requirements (eliminate confusion on number of CPUs, etc.) Competitive Knowledge (Gartner) Competitive Bidding (DB2) Competitive Threats (Gartner  DB2 & Redbrick) Get ready early (Last week before end of Quarter/Year Take 3 weeks to 3 months to prepare for that week Subtract any irrelevant intrinsic product features/services Develop a training methodology Always “Name Your Own Price” Top Ten List of Expense Reduction Steps

  12. Vendor Selection is Very Important Large enough for adequate bench strength, (>1000) Multiple capabilities (customer service) Hiring and recurrent training methodology Use technology to help you Workflow software Web-enabled Project Management software Secure Network topology VPN’s that access Source Control, (SecurID can help) VOIP phones, Cheap Videoconference tools Offshore Lessons Learned – Best Practices

  13. Anticipate the Inefficiencies (and adjust for them) Combination of Onsite and Offshore initially for Knowledge Transfer Cross train India resources in America Team reverts to India and develops Offshore Program Management Office at Priceline.com Priceline Lead at HCL’s Offshore Center Weekly Status Reports & Reviews Send American managers to India Train American managers to build relationships Offshore Lessons Learned – Best Practices (con’t)

  14. Traditional Perceptions The savings are illusory due to inefficiencies Priceline Experience Over $25 million saved thus far among all 5 companies Traditional Perception “Offshore partners can only can do maintenance, simple projects, legacy projects well. Not strategic partners.” Priceline Experience Rapid Development and Deployment is possible Offshore extended priceline development capacity and helped strengthen the company Offshore has increased sharing of priceline IP among affiliate companies Our offshore strategy/partner has been fundamental to our continued success Offshore Lessons Learned – Common Myths

  15. IT Goals Framework (for enhancing Shareholder Value) • Build and Launch New Products • Help with the Business Prioritization Process • (Do the right things) • Increase the effectiveness of product development • (Do the right thing, the right way) • B1. Increase Development Speed • B2. Increase QA Speed • B3. Increase teamwork within IT • B4. Increase teamwork between IT and Business • Project Management Archaeology • (Estimate and control effectively)

  16. IT Goals Framework (for enhancing Shareholder Value) • Exceed Financial Targets • Prioritize contracts and renegotiate each downward • Examine supply chain for meaningful optimizations • Maintain Stability and Scalability Needed • Anticipate business and initiatives • Progress DR initiatives • Enhance Professional Development • Increase Security • Enhance security from attacks from the external networks • Enhance security form attacks from the internal networks • Progress customer data security

  17. Q & A

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