Client Case Study · Higher Education
How a State University Extended Server Life Four Years Past EOSL and Saved $840K
[CLIENT DESCRIPTOR] deferred a [$2.1M] server refresh by extending Dell and HPE infrastructure [four years past OEM end-of-service-life] under a WUC third-party maintenance agreement — redirecting capital to student-facing initiatives.
Client Profile
The Challenge
A capital-constrained refresh cycle meeting a wall of OEM end-of-service-life announcements
The university’s central IT team supported [Banner ERP, Blackboard LMS, research computing clusters, and campus residential networks] on an aging fleet of Dell PowerEdge R730 and HPE ProLiant Gen9 servers. [Over 40% of the fleet] was scheduled to reach OEM end-of-service-life within [18 months], with no budget allocated for replacement in the coming biennium.
OEM quotes for extended support after EOSL ran [2.3× to 2.8×] standard contract pricing. The CIO faced a choice: cut research and teaching programs to fund an unplanned [$2.1M] refresh, or find a way to responsibly extend hardware life while maintaining the uptime research faculty and students depend on.
The WUC Solution
Four-year post-EOSL maintenance coverage with pre-staged parts and research-aware SLAs
Fleet-wide EOSL risk assessment
WUC engineers audited every Dell and HPE asset reaching EOSL within [24 months], scoring each by failure risk, workload criticality, and replaceable-parts availability on the secondary market. Produced a [five-year deferral plan] extending useful life on [~85% of the fleet] with acceptable risk.
Academic-calendar-aware SLA tiers
Coverage tiered to academic operations: [2-hour onsite SLA for residential network and Banner during fall/spring terms, 4-hour for research clusters, next-business-day during summer and intersession]. Intersession windows were used for proactive component swaps to reset aging risk.
On-campus parts cache + dedicated education-sector engineers
WUC established a [parts cache in the primary data center] covering the top 90% of likely-failure components for the covered fleet. A dedicated team of [three higher-ed-specialist engineers] was assigned, familiar with FERPA constraints and university change-management windows.
Predictive monitoring for aging hardware
WUC’s monitoring platform was tuned for EOSL-risk patterns: disk SMART trends, power-supply degradation, thermal drift on aging chassis. Predictive tickets opened [an average of 11 days] before component failure — enabling scheduled replacements during academic-calendar maintenance windows instead of emergency response.
The Results
Year-one outcomes
Every dollar we don’t spend on premature hardware refresh is a dollar we can put into a research grant or a student program. WUC gave us the confidence to extend our fleet four years without betting the semester on it.
Calculate Your Consolidation Savings
See how much your organization could save by consolidating OEM maintenance contracts. Free infrastructure assessment, no obligation.
Book a Discovery Call →Client identity protected under NDA. Figures derived from [engagement documentation on file]. Results are representative of similar engagements; actual outcomes vary by infrastructure mix, contract terms, and service tier.