As a result, says Bernard Golden, executive withe Dell's cloud
computing group, says it's high time IT leaders stop trying to compete
with the outside services. In a recent CIO post,
he says "the rapid rise of cloud computing means corporate IT may no
longer be the cheapest purveyor of application hosting, infrastructure,
storage and other services."
As he put it, the cloud challenge "threatens to topple [corporate
IT's] position as monopoly supplier of computing to the larger
enterprise."
And he has a message for corporate IT leaders: the sooner you come to terms with this, the better.
Golden is on to something, of course. The dedicated cloud providers
have gigantic economies of scale they can bring to engagements. They
have armies of specialized talent who can keep things humming with the
latest software and security tools.
What Golden is telling us cuts right to the heart of corporate IT's
role in the world. It isn't just rolling out machines and doing the
coding. It's about understanding what the business needs to move
forward. It's about researching and understanding the most
cost-effective and secure solution to accomplish that. That solution may
still be in the corporate data center, or it may be available from a
third party. Amazon and Rackspace have a lot of incredibly smart people,
but they know very little about your business. Enterprises need their
own IT people more than ever to make the right calls.
The key takeaway here: IT is not a "competitor" to outside cloud
services. It is a guide to finding the best path for the business. And,
sometimes, the enterprise becomes a cloud provider itself, but again,
not as a competitor to the big cloud combines, but as specialized
providers within industry niches or customer networks. But that's
another story for another post.
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