Survey shows companies are stepping up their datacenter investments even as they cut back in other parts of their businesses Many companies are stepping up their datacenter investments even as they try to make cutbacks in other parts of their business, according to survey released Monday by AFCOM, the association for datacenter professionals.The investments are a sign that company executives recognize the important role datacenters play in their business, particularly as more services and processes go online, according to AFCOM founder and former president Len Eckhaus.[ Learn more about how the financial crisis is affecting IT and the high-tech industry, plus what IT can do to help, in InfoWorld’s special report. ] Half the respondents to AFCOM’s survey said their datacenter budget had increased this year compared to 2007, while a third said it stayed flat and 18 percent said it declined. Forty-three percent expected their budget to increase again next year, in most cases by about 10 percent.“Part of it is because of the Internet and everything going online. Part of it is that executives these days have a better idea what their datacenter is doing for them,” Eckhaus said.The investments are also being driven by efforts to improve power efficiency, which can lead to savings. About 80 percent of the respondents said they expect to do more “greening initiatives” this year and next. The results are based on responses from 312 datacenter professionals working mostly in the U.S., with a few in Canada, Asia, and Europe. About two-thirds work in IT and one-third in facilities. The survey was conducted in May, before the U.S. financial crisis, but one datacenter manager said the results hold true for his company today.Tom Roberts is director of datacenter facility management at Trinity Information Services, which supports the IT needs for Trinity Health System and its 17 hospitals around the United States. His datacenter budget increased for this year and next and he expects it to increase again in 2010, he said.Trinity Health has been moving clinical systems and patient administration systems out of its hospitals and centralizing them in its main datacenters. The company’s senior leadership, who he described as “avid investors in IS,” have seen several benefits from the centralization but also realize the need for additional investment to ensure the systems are always available when needed. “It comes down to putting in very hard and fast DR [disaster recovery] systems for all the main systems we have for our hospitals, and making sure they are available when they’re needed,” he said. The new investments at Trinity will also go towards meeting increased power and cooling needs, he said.The survey results are being presented Monday morning at AFCOM’s Data Center World conference in Orlando.CIO.com is an InfoWorld affiliate. Technology Industry