A crash course in disruption聽聽聽
If businesses needed a reminder of how critical it is to be able to act quickly amid volatile conditions, the coronavirus pandemic has certainly provided it.听
The outbreak and its subsequent economic impact have upended long-established business models, supply chains and consumption patterns virtually overnight. Some enterprises are being forced to grapple with demand spikes, others confronting a demand collapse. As more interaction and transactions are forced online, technology resources come under strain. Companies and workforces in many markets have been dealing with more network slowdowns and outages, which reached as the virus surged. The need for flexible, cloud-based computing architecture, and the resilience and responsiveness it can deliver, has never been more apparent.
Global network outage events


For all the distress the coronavirus has caused, most businesses would agree on a couple of things - it鈥檚 not the last crisis they鈥檙e likely to face, and in many respects it鈥檚 exacerbated pressures that already existed, but were perhaps easier to ignore. Realistically, enterprises have to be ready for disruption as a matter of course.听
Whether in technology, regulation, the competitive landscape or customer expectations, the pace of change means every business is regularly called on to manage transformation and navigate shifts to a degree that was unthinkable just a couple of decades ago. Viewed in that context, cloud doesn鈥檛 just provide the elasticity to ensure an organization can weather the pandemic and its aftereffects. It grants access to the speed, agility and collaborative capabilities that a digital business environment has demanded for years, and will demand even more in the future. These capabilities come at a cost; cloud requires significant and sustained investment, and a clearly defined strategy. But as some early adopters are demonstrating, the end result is a competitive edge.
Why cloud (sometimes) goes wrong
锘縒hen cloud is done right, that is. The caveat is necessary because for all the rapid growth in cloud adoption and high-profile success stories, it has to be acknowledged that cloud investments don鈥檛 always deliver the expected benefits.听
Research has shown up to a third of companies see few to no organizational improvements as a result of . In some cases cloud may create more problems than it solves; in one recent , 74% of enterprises reported moving an application into the cloud then back into their own infrastructure, primarily due to concerns about security and performance.
Organizations that moved applications back from the cloud


Yet the coronavirus outbreak has also highlighted the ability of some companies - take Netflix or Zoom for example - to leverage the cloud to scale into unprecedented levels of demand, with and seemingly overnight.听
So what separates a cloud adopter from a business that鈥檚 cloud-centric, or a solid cloud strategy from one that stumbles? According to 魅影直播 experts, it starts with a few guiding principles.
The cloud doesn鈥檛 stop at infrastructure
锘緼 lot of the struggles with cloud are based on a common misconception. Since many organizations are drawn to cloud initially by promises of limitless storage and processing power, the assumption is it鈥檚 a straightforward replacement for in-house hardware. So when the time comes for a cloud migration, 鈥渢here鈥檚 a tendency to say it鈥檚 the infrastructure team鈥檚 responsibility, and to leave them to it,鈥 says Kief聽Morris, 魅影直播 Cloud Practice Lead and author of the book .听
The reality is that adopting cloud architecture touches on many more layers of the organization. Unless software, networks, systems and practices are optimized for an environment where resources are more dynamic, the enterprise is likely to simply replicate old bottlenecks in the new cloud environment.听
鈥淭he cloud isn鈥檛 simply a change of infrastructure from on-premise to a virtual environment you no longer have to maintain yourself,鈥 says Scott Shaw, Director of Technology at 魅影直播 Australia. 鈥淏ecause everything becomes software-defined, you have to manage it as software. You still need all the knowledge about networking, security and infrastructure. But you have to manage it using software engineering, not infrastructure approaches.鈥
The upshot is that cloud isn鈥檛 a one-time transition, but an ongoing process. Cloud vendors may provide the backbone - but it will be down to the individual organization to ensure their systems and applications thrive in the new environment.听
鈥淪oftware makes assumptions about the kind of infrastructure it鈥檚 running on, and with the cloud everything is much more fluid,鈥 Morris says. 鈥淲hen software is built for the cloud, it鈥檚 able to handle running on infrastructure that changes without notice. This is key to getting the advantages around scale, because if you take older software and put it on the cloud so it can scale up to five times as many servers, it won鈥檛 just magically seize the opportunity. It assumes someone will come and do the installation by hand.鈥澛
鈥淎 lot of businesses invest in their cloud environments without the engineering practices that we would normally associate with a business-critical asset,鈥 Shaw adds. 鈥淭est-driven development, modularization, abstraction, encapsulation, version control, continuous integration - all these things can and should be applied to infrastructure automation if you want to maintain that asset in an optimal state over time.鈥
See cloud in terms of capabilities
锘縏he best way to conceive of cloud is beyond terabytes or units of server time, as 鈥渁n overall approach to the componentization of technology capabilities that enables developers to build software faster - and that takes away a lot of the operational management burden of those capabilities,鈥 says Ryan Murray, 魅影直播 Director of Digital Platform Strategy.听
Optimally deployed and managed, cloud doesn鈥檛 just boost computing power - it redraws the frontiers of what the enterprise can do. 鈥淭he main benefit of being on the cloud is the new operating models it can give you,鈥 says Ranbir Chawla, Principal Consultant at 魅影直播.听
Virtualization is a good example. At its most basic, cloud can virtualize a mainframe to reduce the need for maintenance or physical space - but why not take it one step further and virtualize the same mainframe many times over, so the old limitations on the number of applications the enterprise can build and manage at once are blown out of the water?
Traditional vs. Virtual Architecture


鈥淭he advantage of that is that you can start thinking about innovative release and software development cycles that couldn鈥檛 exist when your infrastructure was physical,鈥 Chawla says. 鈥淵et companies don鈥檛 take advantage of that virtuality, or ability to experiment.鈥澛
Cloud also opens 鈥済reat opportunities for companies to unlock future businesses by understanding their data,鈥 Chawla adds. More cloud providers are developing platforms that give companies on-demand access to artificial intelligence and machine learning solutions, enabling a 鈥榩lug and play鈥 approach with components that they might struggle to develop in-house. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to do machine learning and AI on premise - it takes knowledge, it takes hardware and it鈥檚 a different skill-set. But on the cloud, it鈥檚 literally at your fingertips.鈥澛
That access paves the way for more data-driven approaches to development where customer feedback is seamlessly collected, analyzed, and directly translated into product enhancements or even new products; and that makes it feasible to spot customer or market trends while they鈥檙e still taking shape. In volatile times, anticipatory intelligence of this kind can rapidly become a business鈥檚 biggest asset.
Drive organizational change to produce under pressure
锘縔et these advantages will remain out of reach if teams and workflows aren鈥檛 realigned around the cloud environment, to ensure they can tap its speed and agility when it counts. Becoming cloud-native entails organizational as well as technological change.
Take technology governance. Left to manage cloud alone, some infrastructure teams may fall back on the practices that controlled access to on-premise data centers, immediately slamming the brakes on any potential gains.听
鈥淲e鈥檝e had clients spend millions on a major cloud investment or buy API-driven, cloud native software, and then put a whole team and tickets in front of access to those systems,鈥 says Chawla. 鈥淎ll of a sudden all those benefits of innovation, of immediate accessibility, of experimentation are gone.鈥澛
This can be prevented by setting up a governance 鈥榯riangle鈥 that also involves the security and engineering teams, creating a mix of opposing interests that ensures the approach to cloud strikes the right balance of managing risk and enabling innovation. 鈥淚nfrastructure is interested in stability, the security group is interested in protecting assets, while the engineering group is trying to go fast and stands to reap significant benefits in terms of speed, agility and capability from cloud,鈥 notes Murray.听
Needless to say, any attempt to rope together these - at times competing - actors requires strong support from senior management. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way you can actually make those three organizations come together and function effectively if you don鈥檛 have a C-level mandate that drives the incentives down, as well as the message that the goal of the organization is to ship software as fast as possible within risk, reliability and security constraints,鈥 says Murray. 鈥淵ou also need to change the operating model to allow this decisioning to happen in day to day work.鈥
In essence management has to ensure that transparency and collaboration are not just the new watchwords for governance, but permeate the development process.听

鈥淕iven cloud provides such a wide range of utility services, talking about ROI on a cloud investment is a bit like trying to calculate ROI on your electricity investment.鈥
Ryan Murray,
锘Director of Digital Platform Strategy, 魅影直播
鈥淚n the past, once an application was delivered it was handed over to an operations group which would have ways of escalating incidents, and it wasn鈥檛 until the very end that the team responsible for maintaining that application might get involved,鈥 says Shaw. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to need to get involved much more quickly. Development teams will have to change, to add operations into their skillset, to understand how to build software so they can find out what鈥檚 going on with it in production and fix problems.鈥澛
Business leaders should also be aware of the changes cloud can bring to operating cost models. The assumption is often that cloud will generate savings by reducing the expenses associated with maintaining (and constantly expanding) on-premise infrastructure, but the reality is more complex. What鈥檚 more, excessive focus on costs may blind companies to cloud鈥檚 more compelling opportunities.
Chawla notes that cloud tends to absorb parts of the budget that companies don鈥檛 anticipate, such as software licenses. It also doesn鈥檛 necessarily adhere to old annual budgeting cycles. Costs may not be fully visible until projects are up and running, and can (and should) be optimized on a rolling basis.听
鈥淭here鈥檚 much more of a learning curve for finance,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey can鈥檛 just show up once a year. They should be part of the feedback loop, part of your cloud center for excellence, immediately.鈥澛
鈥淐loud delivers primary value as an accelerator, not as a cost savings engine,鈥 says Murray. 鈥淢any enterprises will see rising costs unless it鈥檚 carefully managed - some due to lack of oversight and some due to seizing delivery acceleration opportunities that use more resources than would have been available on-premise. But given cloud provides such a wide range of utility services, talking about ROI on a cloud investment is a bit like trying to calculate ROI on your electricity investment.鈥

鈥淲hen people ask me what infrastructure tools they should have or what cloud features they should use, the questions I have are: What you are trying to achieve, and what do you need to be delivering to users?鈥
Kief Morris,
锘緾loud Practice Lead, 魅影直播
锘
Ultimately in the cloud journey, as in product development, questions about where or how much to invest, and which projects to prioritize, have to be examined in terms of value to the customer or end-user.听
鈥淲hen people ask me what infrastructure tools they should have or what cloud features they should use, the questions I have are: What you are trying to achieve, and what do you need to be delivering to users?鈥 says Morris. 鈥淚f that鈥檚 not clear, you need to stop and work out the user journeys, the offerings and the products first. Then bring it down to identifying the software you need to build to deliver on those things.鈥澛
Considering the degree of change involved in a cloud transition, particularly for large enterprises, an incremental approach where transformation is pursued in 鈥渧ertical slices鈥 can be less jarring - and reduces the chances of problems only becoming apparent when it鈥檚 too late to alter course.听聽
鈥淩ather than starting with a piece of infrastructure or particular application, start with a customer need, whether it鈥檚 to add a new product or feature, or improve an existing product,鈥 Morris explains. 鈥淧ull together all the people that are needed to make that happen from across the stacks. Tackle a slice that鈥檚 small enough to start with and tractable. The important thing is to get the feedback cycles, to get something out into users鈥 hands so you get their input and find out whether it worked and what could be better.鈥
Deliver value in thin slices to support your cloud strategy


Learn to look at security differently
锘縏he cloud also necessitates new security practices - though perhaps not in the way business leaders expect. Research shows security vulnerabilities remain by far the biggest concern for companies contemplating a cloud transition, particularly when it comes to the public cloud (that is, cloud services provided by third-party vendors via the public internet). Most fears center on possible data loss and breaches of .
The reality is the formidable resources deployed by major vendors make public cloud services far more secure than the typical enterprise systems. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no one on the planet doing infrastructure security better than the major cloud providers,鈥 says Murray. 鈥淭hey know more about security and threats than anyone else ever could, because they鈥檙e operating a large part of the world鈥檚 internet infrastructure and seeing the attacks first.鈥澛犅
Enterprises need to learn to distinguish between infrastructure security - most of which is outsourced to cloud vendors - and application security, which they must address as they build and manage software on the cloud. Historically, enterprise security teams have been more infrastructure-focused and may lack the software capabilities needed to achieve security outcomes in the cloud environment.
Security in public clouds


鈥淚f your security organization doesn鈥檛 have a development team that can go in and build and execute the guard rails, or doesn鈥檛 know how to leverage the APIs, they won鈥檛 be able to secure your cloud,鈥 Chawla notes.听聽
Cloud calls for a more iterative, risk-based approach where security isn鈥檛 a series of constraints introduced at the beginning or end of the process, but a shared responsibility, integrated into development through exercises like threat modeling workshops.听
鈥淪ecurity people need to be going into development teams and working with them to understand what they see as the important threats, and providing the tools they need to respond,鈥 says Morris. 鈥淎s a developer, I shouldn鈥檛 have to wait until I鈥檝e got a release ready to go for it to be tested to find out whether it鈥檚 secure. It鈥檚 too late by then - and it鈥檒l be very expensive to fix.鈥
As with development, security in a cloud environment may require teams to be more collaborative, dynamic, and even to learn new or retool existing skills. But despite that, it shouldn鈥檛 be viewed as problematic, or a burden that鈥檚 likely to slow the company鈥檚 progress - in fact, the opposite is true.

"In the cloud-native world, the faster you can move, the more secure you are."
Scott Shaw,
锘緿irector of Technology, 魅影直播 Australia
鈥淚n the old world of hardware and large monolithic assets, it was considered more secure to throttle change with toll gates and security reviews under the assumption that your existing site was secure and any change might introduce a vulnerability,鈥 says Shaw. 鈥淏ut in the cloud-native world, the faster you can move, the more secure you are. The assumption is that you鈥檙e fundamentally vulnerable all the time and an attacker may have already gained access. By continually renewing and rebuilding your hosting environments, you鈥檙e always returning to a safe state and able to quickly roll out patches when vulnerabilities are discovered.鈥
鈥淐loud (providers) are becoming much more effective at giving sensible defaults or even higher-order services that reduce some of the risk, but there are fundamentally still some spaces in which developers will have access to new tools that they don鈥檛 know how to use securely,鈥 says Murray. 鈥淗owever the solution to that can鈥檛 be to not go to the cloud, because inherently the cloud can only be more secure.鈥澛
鈥淭he way to respond is organizational education, organizational structure and making sure operating models get updated for the speed of delivery and tooling cloud provides,鈥 Murray adds. 鈥淵ou should never look at the cloud as a risk to security - only an opportunity.鈥
Base the vendor and cloud mix on business realities聽
锘縏he rapid growth of the cloud space means enterprises have more options then ever when it comes to cloud structures they can adopt, from private clouds delivered over dedicated networks, to hybrid models that blend private, public and on-premise infrastructure, or multi-clouds that spread resources over multiple vendors and hosting environments.听
The optimal choice for any given organization, says Morris, should emerge naturally based on business requirements. 鈥淭he first thing you need to do is build up the capability and competence in cloud, then start to tackle the bigger picture. It鈥檚 rarely a good idea to start at the strategic level and say you鈥檙e going to make everything run on a certain cloud, because you don鈥檛 necessarily know the best answer in advance.鈥澛
Decisions can be dictated by regulatory, business or other conditions. In some markets, only one viable cloud vendor may be available. Multi-cloud strategies can also make more sense in highly regulated industries like finance, where certain mission-critical applications or kinds of data warrant different levels of access or security controls.听
The other big choice is which vendor (or mix of vendors) to engage. The dominance of a handful of massive cloud providers has fueled much agonizing over the balance of power between vendors and customers, and driven a shift to as more companies seek to hedge their bets.
Worldwide IaaS Public Cloud Services Market Share


Multi-cloud strategies can also benefit the business by providing access to a particular vendor鈥檚 strengths, or better pricing arrangements. At the same time, as many firms have discovered, juggling or switching between multiple vendors can significantly complicate the many challenges of cloud deployment and management.听
Ideally the enterprise and its primary cloud vendor forge 鈥渁 very intimate relationship,鈥 Chawla says. 鈥淵ou want the vendor to understand your business, and to care. If you do it right you鈥檙e going to have a great opportunity to leverage them again to help you build what you want to build. Managing any cloud vendor, getting your systems up and running, teaching everyone a new way of working is complex. And it鈥檚 not linear when you take on the next provider. You have to learn a whole new suite of concepts and processes.鈥澛
鈥淪trong commercial and architectural relationships with your cloud vendor can yield a lot of聽value,鈥 agrees Murray. 鈥淎lways engage your cloud provider as a strategy partner in your efforts. Large organizations with significant spend can be marquee customers, getting significant discounts and technical support, even driving the cloud provider鈥檚 product roadmap.鈥澛
Shaw points to business criticality as another important factor to consider. For projects with a defined start and end that aren鈥檛 likely to require ongoing maintenance - a website set up for a special event, say - companies can entrust everything to a single vendor and take advantage of all the associated productivity gains with near-complete peace of mind. Longer-running, business-critical assets may be a different story.
Biggest challenge of managing multiple cloud providers


鈥淚f you鈥檙e building a core system that you鈥檙e going to have to maintain for 20 years, you have to understand the relationship you鈥檙e entering into. Do you really want to put all your eggs in that one basket? Or put structures in place that lower the risk of having to move the asset to a different vendor some place down the road? You鈥檙e going to pay now to build in the portability necessary, or pay later to re-platform, which almost never goes well.鈥澛
The guiding principle, says Chawla, should be to pursue portability when there鈥檚 a business need - not simply for the sake of it.听
鈥淒on鈥檛 put half your e-commerce system on one platform and half on another based only on the notion that you might get mad at a cloud provider and walk away,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ngineering leaders tell us all the time they spent millions of dollars and hours to be portable and never left - and now they look back and see it as a waste. If you鈥檙e going to be multi-cloud that鈥檚 cool - but there has to be a case, and you鈥檝e got to be able to manage the complexity.鈥
Brace for more change - for the better聽
锘縊verall 魅影直播 experts feel companies are just beginning to grasp cloud鈥檚 full potential - and in many ways, that鈥檚 a great thing.听
As cloud technologies develop, the opportunities will multiply. After the coronavirus epidemic has passed, businesses are almost certain to face further upheaval, but cloud will continue to evolve and support the gains in resilience, speed and performance that enterprises need to stay ahead.听
Some of the more exciting possibilities will emerge around the expanding frontiers of data - particularly edge computing, the trend of cloud decentralizing and moving closer to data sources to enhance agility and velocity. The massive proliferation of data sources will have consequences for complexity, but will also open new paths for enterprises to build their knowledge of and connections with end-customers.
鈥淭he edges of the cloud are going to get a lot less distinct,鈥 Shaw says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 moving into our houses; it鈥檚 going to be in our pockets. We鈥檒l see the emergence of a lot more edge devices, as the devices that generate data get more prolific and the quantities of data that we need to gather, store and understand store get bigger and bigger.鈥澛
Cloud providers are also hard at work refining higher-level services, whether cloud-based AI or containerization systems like Kubernetes that can vastly simplify the development and management of multiple applications.听
鈥淭he components that developers can assemble from cloud vendors will get more and more macroscopic, and more and more powerful over time,鈥 says Murray. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l continue to see vendors start to create more verticalized solutions that solve specific business problems.鈥
The upshot will be massive growth in the technology resources and capabilities companies can access on an on-demand basis, without necessarily needing to know everything about the coding and architecture that underpin these services.听
In other words, Morris says, the whole promise of cloud as a versatile, ubiquitous self-service platform will move a lot closer to reality. 鈥淚f I can write an application, package it, get my configuration, store my data in very standard ways, then I don鈥檛 need to go and ask somebody every time I decide to make a new one,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 know exactly how to do it in a way that鈥檚 secure and works correctly.鈥澛
This means even as companies grapple with a pandemic, each step to building a cloud strategy now is an investment in future capacity to change and innovate at speed and scale - the ultimate toolkit for an environment that will likely never again be quite 鈥榖usiness as usual.鈥 For all the challenges associated with cloud, that makes inaction an even bigger risk.听
鈥淎cross major industries, everybody is scared now,鈥 says Chawla. 鈥淚f in your industry there are a lot of companies left to go on the cloud and you're the next one to do it successfully, you鈥檙e magnitudes ahead of the organizations that you left behind. It's a massive competitive advantage and it takes just that one courageous C-level executive to pull the plug out and get it done. Make it happen.鈥
By JoJo Swords
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