we can help IT

  • Home
  • IT Leadership
  • IT Management
  • IT Services
  • Retail Community
  • Contact

View Mike Bohlmann's profile on LinkedIn

Tags in Tags

business-IT alignment career Drupal game higher education innovation IT@Illinois leadership operational IT professional development relationship management strategic IT
more tags

User login

u
M
Z
K
4
2
Enter the code without spaces and pay attention to upper/lower case.
  • Request new password

Older articles

My Thoughts: Resignation of Sally Jackson - May 20, 2011
Carr's "IT Doesn't Matter" - May 16, 2011
DIY professional development - May 12, 2011
IT@Illinois - Organizing without Organizations - Apr 28, 2011
Uncertainty: The momentum killer - Feb 21, 2011
Rationally diffuse: Aggregating from the right perspective - Jan 24, 2011
Rationally diffuse: Centralization doesn't matter - Jan 10, 2011
Anyone can be replaced, but how do you make yourself less so? - Dec 13, 2010
Leading - Managing - Doing: The Other Balancing Act - Nov 22, 2010
What would you call this job? - Nov 15, 2010
Home

The New Enterprise

Submitted by mikeb on Tue, 06/17/2008 - 12:18

With the new version of Firefox coming right around the corner and enabling web-based applications to run locally, the new enterprise might be on the verge of coming into being. This article at Systems Management News talks about the growing struggle between IT and computing in the cloud, and Andrew McAfee at Harvard Business School has been teaching and writing about the next generation enterprise for a little while now.

Computing in the cloud refers to all those applications that people use out in the wilds of the Internet - things like Google Docs, Facebook applications, and Salesforce. Many of them are free while others are not, but the main thing is that the software your organization uses is outside the control of IT. That has a lot of repercussions, but I want to focus on the opportunities for now. In order to evaluate an option, you have to know the benefits so that you can judge the costs in context.

In most scenarios, computing in the cloud shifts or changes responsibility. We don't have to worry about running servers or maintaining software, but we have to worry about how the provider does those things and whether we can live with their practices. In other words, the work becomes more front-loaded rather than ongoing. For a company that uses Google Docs for office productivity, the work primarily goes into evaluating their needs and judging the fit of Google Docs to their organization. After working with users on some best practices, it becomes largely a user support activity as opposed to a systems administration activity.

Now I don't know about you, but I'd much rather be face-to-face with users helping them with problems instead of making things happen behind the scenes. We all know that making systems run smoothly is seldom appreciated while problems draw lots of attention. It really is a question of outsourcing, now with more options. By focusing less on infrastructure and more on solutions to real problems, we gain some potential for greater impact on the organization that makes IT more visible as a valuable asset.

As Software as a Service and SOA come closer together, I think computing in the cloud will grow even more. As more applications become available and the Facebook generation joins the workforce, companies will likely struggle with how they can get the power of cloud computing while being sure they address the risks.

  • Login to post comments
Tags:
  • Andrew McAfee
  • Enterprise 2.0
  • IT Leadership

Twitter

Oldies but Goodies

  • Carr's "IT Doesn't Matter"
    4 years 31 weeks ago
  • Prototyping in expert systems development
    5 years 3 weeks ago
  • Competitive advantage from IT
    3 years 43 weeks ago
  • State of the IT@Illinois
    3 years 2 weeks ago
  • This Week in Startups Episode #13
    2 years 37 weeks ago
I love Smashing Magazine!

© 2009-2011 Michael Bohlmann

Fervens Drupal theme by Leow Kah Thong. Designed by Design Disease and brought to you by Smashing Magazine.