| By Treff LaPlante | Article Rating: |
|
| August 28, 2009 02:45 PM EDT | Reads: |
8,116 |
When my friend who works at an electronics retail store emphatically affirmed he knew what cloud computing was, it made me both nervous and excited.
Cloud computing is becoming a ubiquitous concept. It has mass-market implications for the technology industry, and it is advancing at speeds rarely seen with any major technological evolution.
As a business leader, do you know why cloud computing is important to you? What parts of your business should you be migrating to the cloud? Do you know what you don't know about cloud computing?
First, cloud computing is about reducing complexity. In the cloud, most of the technology you had to deal with in the past now remains behind the scenes. What used to be command lines and code is, in many cases, replaced with a lot of pointing and clicking.
Second, cloud computing is about flexibility. With cloud-based solutions, you can add or remove Web server hardware and bandwidth, virtually on demand. For example, you can order more computing "horsepower" to match a cyclical business cycle or a big new marketing promotion, but you don't actually have to purchase or deploy physical servers ... it all happens in the cloud. Also, the software platforms you use in the cloud are often designed to enable nondevelopers to rapidly customize your software's functionality.
Third, cloud computing is about speed. A regional firm recently won a contract in which they were required to have a custom business-management system online and functional in three months, something that easily could have taken them a year or longer using traditional tools. Another customer leveraged cloud-computing tools to completely automate a previously all-manual business. In doing so, the business increased its back-office productivity by 80 percent. They accomplished this in only five weeks with a payback period of not much more.
In the cloud, if you need to acquire servers and connect them to the Internet, this takes minutes. If you need to get your company using an off-the-shelf software application, you can do that in minutes. If you need to build a custom application from scratch, you are looking at days or weeks -- not years.
Time is money. The cloud is about your bottom line. It's about transitioning from large, risky capital expenditures to manageable operating expenditures. And it's about empowering people do a lot more than they could.
Visit the gadget cube for these posts in the next four weeks:
Week 2: Reduced complexity/increased empowerment in the cloud
Week 3: Hardware scaling in the cloud
Week 4: Software flexibility in the cloud
Week 5: Time and Cost Reductions in the cloud
Originally posted at The Central Penn Business Journal Gadget Cube
Published August 28, 2009 Reads 8,116
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
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More Stories By Treff LaPlante
Treff LaPlante has been involved with technology for nearly 20 years. At WorkXpress, he passionately drives the vision of making customized enterprise software easy, fast, and affordable.
Prior to joining WorkXpress, Treff was director of operations for eBay's HomesDirect. While there, he created strategic relationships with Fortune 500 companies and national broker networks and began his foray into the development of flexible workflow software technologies. He served on the management team that sold HomesDirect to eBay.
During his time at Vivendi-Universal Interactive, Treff was director of strategy. In addition to M&A activities, Treff broadly applied quantitative management principles to sales, marketing, and product line functions. Treff served as the point person for the management team that sold Cendant Software to Vivendi-Universal.
Earlier positions included product management and national sales trainer for Energy Design Systems, an engineering software company. Treff began his professional career as a metals trader for Randall Trading Corp, a commodities firm that specialized in bartering and transporting various metals and coal from the then-dissolving Soviet Union.
Treff received his MBA from Pepperdine University and a BS in chemical engineering from The Pennsylvania State University.
http://www.workxpress.com
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