Choosing a colocation provider is a 3-5 year commitment with real consequences for latency, compliance, redundancy, and cost. RLM acts as your independent advisor — evaluating facilities, negotiating contracts, and aligning your colocation strategy to your broader hybrid infrastructure roadmap.
Colocation decisions involve more variables than most organizations realize — power density, interconnection options, compliance certifications, contract terms, and the network ecosystem surrounding each facility. RLM brings independent visibility across 20+ colocation providers to help you make the right choice the first time.
We assess colocation facilities across availability, power density, cooling infrastructure, physical security, and geographic risk — creating side-by-side comparisons so you can evaluate providers on the dimensions that matter to your workloads.
Colocation value depends on what you can connect to. We evaluate each facility's carrier ecosystem, cloud on-ramps, cross-connect options, and peering exchanges to ensure your colocation choice supports your connectivity requirements today and as you scale.
SOC 2, HIPAA, PCI-DSS, FedRAMP — colocation certifications vary by provider and by facility. We map your compliance requirements to provider audit reports and data sovereignty constraints so that your colocation choice doesn't create regulatory risk.
Colocation contracts are complex — power commitments, cabinet counts, term lengths, escalation clauses, and SLA structures all affect total cost of ownership. RLM negotiates on your behalf, leveraging market data and provider relationships to secure competitive terms.
Most colocation decisions are part of a broader hybrid architecture. We help you design a colocation strategy that integrates with your public cloud footprint — direct cloud on-ramps, software-defined interconnects, and the hybrid topology that avoids vendor lock-in.
Moving into a new facility requires planning for downtime windows, physical logistics, network cutovers, and application dependencies. We develop migration runbooks and project plans that minimize disruption and ensure a clean transition.
A structured procurement process that starts with your requirements — not a provider's sales pitch — and ends with a contract and migration plan that serve your business for the full term of the agreement.
We document your colocation requirements — power and space needs, latency sensitivity, compliance mandates, interconnection requirements, geographic preferences, and growth projections. This becomes the evaluation framework that drives every subsequent decision.
We evaluate available facilities across your target markets — comparing providers on power availability, network density, certification coverage, financial stability, and pricing models. You receive a shortlisted set of 3-5 providers with detailed comparison matrices.
We coordinate and accompany site tours at shortlisted facilities, validating infrastructure claims against physical reality — power distribution, redundancy architecture, cooling systems, physical security controls, and the operational maturity you'll depend on for years.
We manage the commercial negotiation — term length, power pricing, cabinet reservations, SLA commitments, escalation clauses, and renewal protections. RLM's provider relationships and market benchmarks give you leverage that internal procurement teams typically lack.
We develop the migration plan — phased cutover schedules, network configuration, cross-connect provisioning, and rollback procedures. Post-migration, RLM remains your point of contact for capacity expansions, contract renewals, and provider escalations.
These are the dimensions that consistently separate strong colocation decisions from regrettable ones — and the questions RLM will help you answer before you sign a multi-year commitment.
Average power per cabinet tells only part of the story. Evaluate the facility's ability to support high-density deployments, its power redundancy architecture (N+1 vs. 2N), utility feed diversity, and whether the provider can accommodate your density requirements without costly custom builds.
The value of a colocation facility is directly tied to what's connected there. Evaluate the number and diversity of carriers, cloud on-ramp availability (AWS Direct Connect, Azure ExpressRoute, Google Cloud Interconnect), and whether the facility participates in peering exchanges that reduce your transit costs.
Not all certifications are created equal, and not all facilities within a provider's portfolio carry the same ones. Verify that the specific facility — not just the parent company — holds the audit reports and certifications your regulatory requirements demand.
Colocation contracts span years. Evaluate the provider's financial health, ownership structure, recent M&A activity, and capital investment trajectory. A provider under financial stress may defer infrastructure maintenance or change commercial terms at renewal.
Your requirements will change. Evaluate whether the provider can accommodate growth — adjacent cabinet availability, power upgrade timelines, cage and suite options, and whether the facility's campus has room for new builds that keep your infrastructure in one location.
Colocation contracts are notoriously rigid. Evaluate early termination provisions, right-sizing flexibility, power billing models (metered vs. committed), and renewal terms. The best technical fit can still be the wrong choice if the commercial structure doesn't accommodate business uncertainty.
RLM maintains direct relationships with 20+ colocation and data center providers — from hyperscale campuses to regional and edge facilities — giving you access to options and pricing that aren't available through direct engagement alone.
"RLM saved us from signing a 5-year contract at a facility that couldn't support our power requirements past year two. Their technical evaluation caught what the provider's sales team glossed over."
"We needed colocation in three markets with cloud on-ramps and HIPAA compliance. RLM shortlisted options in a week that would have taken our team months to find independently."
Start with a no-cost conversation with an RLM infrastructure advisor — we'll assess your colocation requirements, map the provider landscape, and build a shortlist tailored to your workloads, compliance needs, and growth plans.
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