Signs That Your Enterprise Suffers from “Cloud in a Corner”
News Release
Seven Signs
That Your Enterprise Suffers from “Cloud in a Corner”
Syndrome
Unisys diagnoses symptoms and prescribes the best way for IT to make cloud investments pay off
Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS) has advice for CIOs seeking to get the most out of their investment in cloud computing: before plunging in, consider how the proposed cloud solution can best be integrated with the organisation’s existing mission-critical systems and IT processes.
This analytical approach, Unisys says, is the surest defense against “cloud in a corner” syndrome, where new cloud solutions become isolated from the rest of the IT environment and don’t contribute the business value they should.
“By some estimates, well planned cloud computing solutions can reduce the cost of IT operations by as much as 20 percent while improving responsiveness and quality in delivery of IT services,” says John Treadway, director, global cloud computing solutions, Unisys. “However, it’s easy to become entranced by new cloud technologies and lose sight of how those can best be integrated with existing resources. By courting ‘cloud in a corner’ syndrome this way, CIOs risk zeroing out savings and even potentially increasing operational costs.”
Treadway advises IT organisations to
look out for telltale signs that they have fallen prey to
“cloud in a corner” syndrome:
1. Your team is
evaluating a “cloud stack” solution without first
putting in place a comprehensive strategy and framework for
integrating it with your existing IT environment
2. You
lack clearly articulated criteria and metrics for cloud
success from both IT and end-user
perspectives
3. You’re well into implementation before
all stakeholders agree on use cases, roadmaps and expected
changes to IT and business processes
4. The technology
underlying your cloud is so new, none of your IT people know
how to operate it and you have no readiness plan in place so
they can learn to do so
5. You need to create duplicate
service, security and risk management processes because your
new cloud environment won’t accommodate those you already
have
6. You have not defined and communicated how your
team’s roles and responsibilities will change with a cloud
service delivery model and
7. You’re already
developing a second cloud solution because the first one
didn’t meet the organisation’s needs.
Treadway says that the way to avoid “cloud in a corner” syndrome in the first place – or to approach follow-on cloud initiatives – is to raise the focus above the technology and instead create a comprehensive blueprint for cloud success. The first step in this process is to look at cloud delivery models in the context of the total IT infrastructure.
“No enterprise will move 100 percent to a cloud model any time soon,” Treadway says. “Traditional IT delivery – both internal and outsourced – is not going away. The trick is to recognise that IT is moving to what Unisys calls a ‘hybrid enterprise’ model, where an organisation makes cloud, traditional, internal and external IT delivery models all work together to lower costs, reduce risk and improve quality of IT services.”
The Unisys Hybrid Enterprise approach guides
organisations in making the best decisions when integrating
cloud delivery models into three key areas of IT:
• Applications – Assess which are best suited
to a specific IT delivery model – whether a traditional
data centre, traditional outsourcing or a particular type of
cloud – based on a range of application and data
characteristics
• Data Centre Services –
Manage a portfolio of data centre services that meets
the needs of their applications and, where necessary, build
new cloud services in a way that best matches and integrates
with existing environments while avoiding virtualisation and
automation technologies that don’t work well in
heterogeneous environments and
• Management –
Devise a consistent management approach covering policy
and governance, monitoring and service event management,
security and risk management, financial management and
service management. Avoid monitoring and management
solutions created just for cloud and not capable of easy
integration into existing systems and operations.
In a new post, “Inoculate Yourself Against ‘Cloud in a Corner’ Syndrome,” on the Unisys “Disruptive Trends” blog, Treadway provides guidelines for avoiding the pitfalls of an isolated cloud strategy and instead implementing a successful hybrid enterprise approach.
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