The server room is the one place in a small business where neglect becomes visible very fast - usually during a failure. Whether you have a dedicated server room or just a rack in a storage closet, regular inspection and documentation catches problems before they become outages. Here is a checklist.
Physical Environment
Temperature should be maintained between 18 and 24 degrees Celsius. Above that range, hardware lifespan shortens significantly. Install a temperature sensor with alerting - many UPS units include one. Check it is calibrated and sending alerts to someone who will act on them.
Humidity should be between 40 and 60 percent. Too dry creates static discharge risk. Too humid creates condensation risk. If your server room is a converted storage closet with no climate control, add a small HVAC unit or plan to move workloads to cloud before the next BC summer.
Power and UPS
Every server and network device in the room should be on an uninterruptible power supply (UPS). Test your UPS units annually by pulling the utility power and timing how long the connected load runs. Most BC SMBs discover their UPS batteries have degraded significantly and only provide a fraction of their rated runtime.
Verify that the UPS is configured to send shutdown signals to servers before the battery runs out. A server that loses power mid-write is worse than a controlled shutdown. Use UPS manufacturer software or network management cards to automate this.
Network and Cabling
Label every cable on both ends. This sounds basic because it is, but almost every SMB server room has unlabelled cables that nobody will touch because nobody knows what they do. Spend half a day labelling and documenting your patch panel layout. Photograph it for your IT documentation.
Check that all patch cables are in good condition with no sharp bends, crimped sections, or loose connectors. Run a switch port report to identify ports that are up but connected to nothing - these are either forgotten connections or ghost devices.
Access Control
The server room door should lock. It sounds obvious, but many SMB server rooms are either unlocked or have locks with keys that are never used. Physical access to your servers is physical access to your data. Install a coded lock or keycard access.
Document who has access. If more than five or six people can access the server room, that is too many. Review the list annually and remove access for staff who have changed roles or left the company.
Documentation and Labelling
Every piece of equipment should have a label: hostname, IP address, purpose, and purchase date. Keep a physical document in the room with the same information plus the last service date. This document saves hours during an incident.
Photograph the rack front and back once a year. Keep the photos in a cloud document store. When something fails and needs to be replaced, the photo tells your vendor exactly what is in the rack without guessing.
What Should Not Be in the Server Room
Cardboard boxes, paper records, cleaning supplies, and spare furniture. All of these are fire hazards in a space full of electrical equipment. If your server room doubles as storage, create a plan to move the non-IT items out before your next inspection.
Personal items, food, and beverages should not be stored in or near the server room. Spills are one of the most common causes of hardware damage that is not covered by warranty.