Inspiring the Pipeline: How 7x24 Exchange's International Data Center Day Is Evolving to Meet the Industry’s Future

As AI drives explosive demand for infrastructure, 7x24 Exchange’s International Data Center Day (IDCD) is evolving into a year-round mission to grow the industry’s talent pipeline. From hackathons to new curricula and early education outreach, in the latest episode of the DCF Show podcast we learn how the initiative is shaping tomorrow’s data center workforce.
June 5, 2025
7 min read
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As the digital economy accelerates on the back of AI and hyperscale infrastructure, the question of who will build and run tomorrow’s data centers has never been more urgent. Since its inception in 2015, International Data Center Day (IDCD), organized by 7x24 Exchange International, has steadily grown into a global campaign to answer that question by inspiring the next generation of mission-critical talent.

This year’s IDCD, observed in March but increasingly seen as a year-round initiative, was the subject of a recent Data Center Frontier Show podcast conversation with 7x24 Exchange International Chairman and CEO Bob Cassiliano and Aheli Purkayastha, Chief Product Officer of Purkay Labs and President of the 7x24 New England Chapter.

The two industry leaders outlined how 7x24 Exchange is advancing the mission of IDCD through grassroots engagement, structured resources, and a growing constellation of strategic partnerships.

A Response to the Talent Shortage

The origin of IDCD traces back to 7x24 Exchange’s recognition at a 2015 leadership event that there was not only a lack of awareness of data center careers among students, but also a vacuum of visibility in the educational system. In response, the organization launched IDCD to build a long-term pipeline by introducing the industry to students early, consistently, and accessibly.

Today, that mission is more critical than ever. As generative AI workloads surge and new builds stretch power and land capacity, the need for skilled, motivated professionals to support design, operations, and innovation across the lifecycle of data centers has intensified.

Turning Awareness Into Action

In 2025, IDCD expanded its reach through a broad range of local chapter events and partner activations. These included data center tours, educational presentations, interactive demos, 5K runs, and a hackathon hosted by the New England Chapter.

The hackathon stood out as a model for applied learning, pairing 50 high school students with industry professionals in a challenge to design a data center in space, all in just five hours. The result: heightened student interest, deeper industry engagement, and a clear illustration of the educational value these events can offer.

While university students remain a key audience, organizers have recognized the need to reach even younger learners. Initiatives are increasingly targeting elementary and middle school students through age-appropriate programming, with a special emphasis on encouraging young women to consider careers in mission-critical infrastructure.

Resources, Reach, and Real Outcomes

The IDCD campaign is more than a collection of events. It is supported by a robust infrastructure of tools, templates, and thought leadership. At the core is InternationalDataCenterDay.org, a centralized hub offering educational content tailored to different age groups, a career path “tree,” and a library of interviews with professionals across the ecosystem. These resources empower volunteers, educators, and sponsors to create consistent, high-impact programming.

The outcomes speak for themselves. IDCD has helped catalyze the development of data center curricula at both the secondary and postsecondary levels. The Carolinas Chapter, for instance, played a key role in helping Cleveland Community College secure a $23 million grant to develop a full-fledged data center program. Elsewhere, scholarships are on the rise, and growing numbers of students and faculty are attending industry conferences.

Supporting these gains are complementary 7x24 Exchange programs such as WIMCO (Women in Mission Critical Operations), STEM mentoring, and Data Center 101 sessions designed to provide clear entry points for newcomers while reinforcing the industry's inclusive, interdisciplinary nature.

Expanding the Circle

IDCD’s impact is amplified by an expanding network of partners and sponsors. This year, supporters included major players like Eaton, Cummins, ESI Neutrality, QTS, and Tristar, alongside global allies such as the Africa Data Centres Association, DCD Gulf Data Center Association, Infrastructure Masons, Nomad Futurists, and the Uptime Institute. Media partners, including Data Center Frontier, are playing an increasingly influential role by extending awareness into new audiences, from students and educators to parents and policymakers.

That broader cultural visibility is beginning to take hold. Financial media personalities now mention data centers in mainstream broadcasts, sparking curiosity in a new generation. As industry leaders continue to bridge the gap between technical knowledge and public understanding, IDCD has proven to be a vital platform.

A Vision Beyond One Day

Perhaps most notably, the leadership behind IDCD has embraced the motto: Every day is International Data Center Day. It’s not just a slogan. It reflects the program’s shift toward year-round engagement. The New England Chapter, for example, is planning a fall tech forum that will include both advanced technical discussions and foundational topics for early-career professionals. This approach supports continued education while building a sense of community and belonging in the field.

Looking ahead, the evolution of IDCD will mirror the evolution of the industry itself. As data centers become central to enabling AI, IoT, and edge computing, so too will IDCD adapt to address emerging priorities, from sustainability and resiliency to automation and cybersecurity. The infrastructure of the future will need more than power and fiber. It will need people -- and the search for them is now ongoing in earnest.

Listen to the full episode of the Data Center Frontier Show featuring Bob Cassiliano and Aheli Purkayastha for more insights into the 2025 International Data Center Day and the mission to build a stronger talent pipeline across the global digital infrastructure landscape.

 

At Data Center Frontier, we talk the industry talk and walk the industry walk. In that spirit, DCF Staff members may occasionally use AI tools to assist with content. Elements of this article were created with help from OpenAI's GPT4.

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About the Author

Matt Vincent

Matt Vincent is Editor in Chief of Data Center Frontier, where he leads editorial strategy and coverage focused on the infrastructure powering cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and the digital economy. A veteran B2B technology journalist with more than two decades of experience, Vincent specializes in the intersection of data centers, power, cooling, and emerging AI-era infrastructure. Since assuming the EIC role in 2023, he has helped guide Data Center Frontier’s coverage of the industry’s transition into the gigawatt-scale AI era, with a focus on hyperscale development, behind-the-meter power strategies, liquid cooling architectures, and the evolving energy demands of high-density compute, while working closely with the Digital Infrastructure Group at Endeavor Business Media to expand the brand’s analytical and multimedia footprint. Vincent also hosts The Data Center Frontier Show podcast, where he interviews industry leaders across hyperscale, colocation, utilities, and the data center supply chain to examine the technologies and business models reshaping digital infrastructure. Since its inception he serves as Head of Content for the Data Center Frontier Trends Summit. Before becoming Editor in Chief, he served in multiple senior editorial roles across Endeavor Business Media’s digital infrastructure portfolio, with coverage spanning data centers and hyperscale infrastructure, structured cabling and networking, telecom and datacom, IP physical security, and wireless and Pro AV markets. He began his career in 2005 within PennWell’s Advanced Technology Division and later held senior editorial positions supporting brands such as Cabling Installation & Maintenance, Lightwave Online, Broadband Technology Report, and Smart Buildings Technology. Vincent is a frequent moderator, interviewer, and keynote speaker at industry events including the HPC Forum, where he delivers forward-looking analysis on how AI and high-performance computing are reshaping digital infrastructure. He graduated with honors from Indiana University Bloomington with a B.A. in English Literature and Creative Writing and lives in southern New Hampshire with his family, remaining an active musician in his spare time.

You can connect with Matt via LinkedIn or email.

You can connect with Matt via LinkedIn or email.

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