PUE is easy to quote and easy to misread — a low number on a marketing page does not always reflect real-world performance across a full year of seasonal load.
Ask ten infrastructure leaders how they choose a data center and you will get ten different answers. Yet beneath the variety, the same handful of questions tend to decide the outcome.
The factors that actually move the needle
Headline pricing is the least reliable basis for comparison. Two facilities quoting similar rates can differ enormously once you account for power redundancy, cross-connect fees, remote-hands rates, and the small print around escalations and renewals.
Connectivity richness is frequently underweighted. A carrier-neutral facility with a dense ecosystem of networks and direct cloud on-ramps can save more over a contract term than a modest difference in the rack rate ever will.
Where buyers get it wrong
The most expensive mistake is optimising for the number everyone sees — the monthly rack rate — while ignoring the numbers nobody asks about until the invoice arrives: cross-connects, remote hands, power overage, and renewal escalators.
Treating tier level as a proxy for reliability is a common shortcut that backfires. Design tier describes redundancy on paper; actual uptime depends on maintenance discipline, staffing, and how the facility has behaved under real incidents.
What good looks like in practice
The strongest operators are transparent by default — uptime history, incident reports, and maintenance schedules are available without a special request. That openness is itself a signal worth weighing.
The best partnerships look less like a vendor relationship and more like a shared roadmap — regular capacity reviews, early visibility into expansion options, and a provider that flags risk before it becomes your problem.
Why it matters now
The market has split in two. Standard enterprise workloads still run comfortably at three to five kilowatts a rack, while accelerated-compute deployments are pushing twenty, fifty, even a hundred kilowatts. Those two worlds are priced and provisioned very differently, and conflating them is a common and expensive mistake.
Power has overtaken floor space as the binding constraint in most primary markets. Vacancy rates have fallen to record lows, and the practical effect is that capacity — particularly high-density capacity — increasingly needs to be reserved well ahead of when you actually need it.
A short checklist before you sign
- Total the full cost of ownership, including the fees that hide in the small print
- Leave headroom for growth, including higher-density racks down the line
- Ask what happens operationally when a single system fails, not just what the tier rating implies
- Request recent incident reports, not just a summary uptime percentage
- Read the exit and renewal terms as carefully as the price
The bottom line
None of this is complicated, but it does reward diligence. The organisations that treat infrastructure procurement as a discipline rather than a purchase consistently end up with better facilities, better terms, and fewer surprises.
