March 2026 - Digital Infrastructure | Data Center

Infrastructure Intelligence for the Next Generation of Data Centers

In an interview with dotmagazine, James Stuart, Head of EMEA & APAC at Nlyte Software, explains how infrastructure intelligence is transforming data centers by enhancing visibility, resilience, sustainability, and regulatory compliance.

Infrastructure Intelligence for the Next Generation of Data Centers-web

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As digital transformation accelerates and AI workloads place new demands on infrastructure, data centers are becoming increasingly complex to operate. Data center infrastructure management (DCIM) is therefore evolving from a documentation tool into a real-time intelligence platform.

In this interview, James Stuart, Head of EMEA & APAC at Nlyte Software, explains how infrastructure intelligence can improve visibility, strengthen operational resilience, and support organizations in meeting growing sustainability and regulatory requirements.

dotmagazine: The demands placed on data centers are evolving rapidly – driven by digital transformation, hybrid IT, and increasingly data-intensive workloads such as AI. How is the role of data center infrastructure management changing in this context?

James Stuart: Data center infrastructure management is evolving from a static documentation tool into a real-time intelligence layer for hybrid and high-density environments. As AI and digital services drive higher power densities and operational complexity, DCIM must provide accurate visibility across physical, virtual, and edge infrastructures. Operators increasingly rely on DCIM to support faster decision-making, risk mitigation, and capacity optimization across distributed environments. In this context, DCIM becomes a strategic platform that connects infrastructure operations directly to business and sustainability objectives.

Many organizations struggle with transparency and capacity planning across complex environments. From your experience, where do operators most frequently face operational bottlenecks?

Stuart: Operational bottlenecks most often arise from fragmented data and disconnected operational processes. Many organizations lack a single, trusted source of truth for assets, power, cooling, and space, which limits accurate capacity planning. Manual workflows and inconsistent data updates further increase the risk of errors during moves, adds, and changes. Without end-to-end visibility, teams are forced into reactive operations rather than proactive planning.

Nlyte Software focuses on visibility, lifecycle management of physical and hybrid infrastructures. How can DCIM contribute to improving resilience and reducing operational risk?

Stuart: DCIM improves resilience by providing continuous visibility into infrastructure conditions, dependencies, and utilization across the entire asset lifecycle. By understanding how power, cooling, space, and connectivity interact, operators can identify risks before they impact availability. DCIM also standardizes workflows and change management, reducing human error during critical operations. This combination of intelligence and process control significantly lowers operational risk while supporting higher availability.

Sustainability and regulatory compliance are becoming core strategic priorities. How can infrastructure intelligence support organizations in meeting energy efficiency and reporting requirements?

Stuart: Infrastructure intelligence provides the data foundation organizations need to comply with increasingly prescriptive sustainability regulations such as the EU Energy Efficiency Directive (EED). The EED requires data centers above defined power thresholds to report standardized energy and sustainability KPIs, including energy consumption, power utilization, water usage, and waste heat metrics. Nlyte’s Data Center Sustainability Compliance Reporting supports these obligations through real-time sustainability dashboards and structured reporting aligned to regulatory KPI definitions. In markets such as Germany, where the Energy Efficiency Act (EnEfG) introduces additional requirements around efficiency targets, waste heat reuse and management systems, infrastructure intelligence enables consistent measurement, auditability, and evidence-based compliance across sites.

Looking ahead, which developments in data center infrastructure management do you expect to shape the market over the next five years?

Stuart: Over the next five years, data center infrastructure management will increasingly shift from static reporting to real-time, AI-driven operational intelligence. Solutions such as Nlyte Intelligence Operational AI demonstrate how conversational, natural-language interaction can replace dashboards and manual analysis with immediate, trusted insight across assets, power, cooling, space, and network data. This evolution broadens access to infrastructure intelligence beyond traditional DCIM users and accelerates decision-making across operations, finance, facilities, and compliance teams. As environments grow more complex, the ability to ask questions and act on live data will become a defining capability of modern DCIM platforms.

 

📚 Citation:

Stuart, James (March 2026). Infrastructure Intelligence for the Next Generation of Data Centers. dotmagazine. https://www.dotmagazine.online/issues/data-centers-digital-infrastructure/infrastructure-intelligence-data-centers

 

James Stuart is a senior sales leader and trusted advisor in Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM), supporting organizations across EMEA and APAC to optimize, scale, and de‑risk their digital infrastructure. At Nlyte Software, he drives regional growth by aligning DCIM strategy with customer outcomes across asset, capacity, power, and environmental management. James is passionate about helping organizations gain full visibility and control across data center, hybrid, and edge environments to enable resilient, future‑ready operations.

FAQ

What is changing in data center infrastructure management as data center environments become more complex?

James Stuart explains that data center infrastructure management is evolving from a static documentation tool into a real-time intelligence layer. This helps operators manage hybrid, edge, and high-density environments with better visibility and faster decision-making.

Why do operators often struggle with capacity planning in modern data centers?

According to James Stuart of Nlyte Software, many operators lack a single, trusted source of truth for assets, power, cooling, and space. This leads to fragmented data, reactive operations, and increased risk of errors during planning and changes.

How can infrastructure intelligence improve resilience and reduce operational risk?

The article highlights that infrastructure intelligence provides visibility into dependencies between power, cooling, space, and connectivity. This enables operators to identify risks earlier, standardize workflows, and reduce human error in critical processes.

How does DCIM support sustainability and regulatory compliance?

James Stuart notes that infrastructure intelligence provides the data needed for energy and sustainability reporting, including metrics required by the EU Energy Efficiency Directive and Germany’s Energy Efficiency Act. As highlighted in dotmagazine, published by eco – Association of the Internet Industry, this strengthens transparency and supports evidence-based compliance.

Please note: The opinions expressed in articles published by dotmagazine are those of the respective authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, eco – Association of the Internet Industry.