By Adam Stern | CloudCow.com
For tech-savvy small business professionals, the need to get the cloud right has become Job #1. Although the cloud may be here to stay, there’s nothing fixed or “commodity” about it. Designing it, deploying it and operating within it are non-trivial pursuits, whatever the size and scope of your operation.
Overall, the cloud as an environment for serious business computing shows little sign of dissipating. Per market researcher IDC, about half of IT spending was cloud-based last year, “reaching 60 percent of all IT infrastructure and 60-70 percent of all software, services and technology spending by 2020.” As Paul Maritz, CEO of Pivotal Software, put it, “cloud is about how you do computing, not where you do computing.”
A well-architected cloud can be defined by any number of parameters, but three are paramount: uptime, security and data protection. Taking them in turn:
So how can a small or midsize business achieve a well-architected cloud? To an extent, it’s a process question, pegged to the quality of the people on the team – whether those tech folks are on your payroll or, more likely, in the employ of an IT firm you retain.
The first move in architecting a cloud is engaging proven storage, network and application designers and engineers. While it’s highly desirable that every member of the team think holistically, the individual at the top (again, your employee or your third-party point person) absolutely must.
For the sake of argument, let’s assume that, given the demands of running a small business, you’ll forsake the DIY option (thereby sidestepping the potential peril of an on-the-job crash course). To stretch the analogy a bit further, you don’t need to be a literal architect or a carpenter to know what you want in a house.
The elements of a well-architected cloud are immutable; it doesn’t necessarily matter who does the building as long as these fundamentals are in place. The resulting IT environment needs to be both effective (it gets the job done today) and capable of evolving as business/client/security needs change. In opting to rely on a third party to architect your cloud, you need to be an informed/smart IT consumer. That’s the case whether you’re a multi-office midsize business or a mom-and-pop firm.
A few years back, Roy Stephan, founder and CEO of cybersecurity firm PierceMatrix, offered this aspirational take on cloud architecture: “With the cloud, individuals and small businesses can snap their fingers and instantly set up enterprise-class services.” Although it may not be quite that easy for every organization, Job #1 for companies seeking cloud designers is to do some serious tire-kicking.
Consider these questions as your starting line as you embark on this quest for a well-architected cloud:
While it’s the cloud architect’s job to fashion something that you can live/compute in, it’s up to you to ensure that the resulting cloud realizes your objectives and feels like home.
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