| By John Treadway | Article Rating: |
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| June 16, 2010 01:59 PM EDT | Reads: |
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On a fairly regular basis I get into a discussion with people that starts something like this:
"Hey John, with the cloud is IT even necessary anymore? I mean, if I can buy computing and storage at Amazon and they manage it, what will happen to all of those IT guys we're paying? Do we just get rid of them?"
Well, no, not exactly. But their jobs are changing in fairly meaningful ways and that will only accelerate as cloud computing penetrates deeper and deeper into the enterprise.
It's no big news that most new technologies enter the enterprise at the department or user level and not through IT. This is natural given the disincentive for risk taking by IT managers. As a rule, new things tend to fail more often (and often more spectacularly) than the mature stuff that's been hanging around the shop. And this is not good for IT careers (CIO does often stand for "career is over" afterall).
This departmental effect happened with mini computers, workstations, and eventually PCs. Sybase and Sun got into Wall Street firms through the trading desk after Black Monday (Oct. 19, 1987) because older position-keeping systems could not keep up with the volume (effectively shutting down most trading floors). IT does not lead technology revolutions. Often times IT works to hinder the adoption of shiny new objects. But there are good reasons for that...
For many years, these incursions were still traditional on-premise systems. In most cases, over time, IT eventually found a way to assert control over these rogue technologies and install the governance processes and stability of operations that users and executive management expected.
More recently, in the SaaS era, Salesforce.com's success hinged on getting sales reps to adopt outside of the official SFA procurement process supported by IT. Marketing apps often come in through the marketing department with no IT foreknowledge, but then are partly turned over to IT when integrating them with existing systems proves to be no simple matter. I say partly because the physical servers and software running SaaS apps never gets into IT's sphere of control. Often, the level of control turns into one of customization, oversight, monitoring, and involvement in the procurement process.
Like it or not, in a SaaS world, a fair bit of the traditional work of IT is forever more disintermediated. But how about in the IaaS world??
As we move to IaaS, the level of disintermediation actually diminishes - a lot. Most people assume the opposite without stopping to think about it.
As shown above, however, in the IaaS world IT has a HUGE role to play in managing everything above the hypervisor. Vendor management, ITSM, monitoring, configuration, service catalogs, deployment management, automation, and many more core IT concepts are still very much alive and well - thank you! The only difference is that IT gets out of the real estate, cabling, power, and racking business - and most would agree that is a good thing.
What else changes?
First off, the business process around provisioning needs to change. If I can get a virtual machine at Rackspace in 5 minutes, don't impose a lot of overhead on the process and turn that into 5 days (or more!) like it is in-house at many enterprises. But do keep track of what I'm doing, who has access, what my rights and roles are, and ensure that production applications are deployed on a stack that is patched, plugged and safe from viruses, bots and rootkits.
Second, IT needs to go from being the gatekeeper, to the gateway of the cloud. Open the gates, tear down the walls, but keep me safe and we'll get along nicely (thank you). IT will need to use new tools, like newScale, enStratus, RightScale, Ping Identity and more to manage this new world. And, IT will need to rethink their reliance on decades-old IT automation tools from BMC, HP, IBM and others.
Lastly, the cloud enables a huge explosion in new technologies and business models that are just now starting to emerge. The MapReduce framework has been used very successfully for a variety of distributed analytics workloads on very large data sets, and is now being used to provide sentiment analysis in real-time to traders on Wall Street. Scale out containers like GigaSpaces enable performance and cost gains over traditional scale-up environments. And there are many more. IT needs to develop a broad knowledge of the emerging cloud market and help their partners on the business side leverage these for competitive advantage.
If there's one thing that the cloud can change about IT, it's to increase the strategic contribution of technology to the business.
Follow me on twitter for more cloud conversations: http://twitter.com/cloudbzz
Notice: This article was originally posted at http://CloudBzz.com
Published June 16, 2010 Reads 2,861
Copyright © 2010 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
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More Stories By John Treadway
John Treadway is the author of CloudBzz (http://cloudbzz.com) and is Director of Cloud Computing Solutionsat Unisys. He's a senior enterprise technology marketing and business development executive with significant experience across horizontal IT and financial technology markets. John has founded or co-founded three companies and currently consults to a variety of technology businesses on marketing, strategy and cloud computing opportunities. Sites/Blogs CloudBzz
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