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Cloud Computing and the new role of the IT manager, will ITIL and COBIT help or hinder?

Published: October 16 2009, 03:05 AM
by CA Community

In last week’s blog post  I suggested we already were at the top of the Publishing hype cycle for Cloud. Little did I know that just about every magazine to hit my doormat this week would be a dedicated special issue about Cloud Computing.  The most innovative was a double feature that  when read from front to back- gave a management perspective, while turning it upside down and reading it back to front gave a technical perspective, with the two target audiences metaphorically meeting in the middle.  Highlights included  the classification of the traditional CIO as Chief Infrastructure Officer (by Salesforce) and the conclusion that IT staff in a Cloud Environment  need to have “Know-What” instead of “Know-How.”

So how is the role of the IT manager changing? SalesForce.com has been marketing its solutions under the slogan "NO SOFTWARE" and Amazon's Elastic Cloud promises virtually (pun intended): "NO HARDWARE.”  Does this mean for the IT Manager: "NO JOB?” No, certainly not! But what does a Cloud IT Manager do then?   And will a Cloud IT manager be a Lean(er) IT Manager. First, let me state I do not have all the answers and that I welcome your ideas and feedback.  Second, to discuss the role of a Cloud IT Manager we need to distinguish different types of Cloud Computing. The often quoted NIST definition (mind you, version 15) of Cloud computing distinguishes three models: Software as a Service (SaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS) and Infrastructure of a Service (IaaS).
 
To keep this blog readable I am not going to define and describe each type here in detail but it is worth noting that with Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), users do not need to know or be aware that our Cloud IT Manager is using the IaaS cloud, while vice versa - with SaaS - the IT Manager often is not aware that users are already deploying this (so much for our Holy Grail of IT Alignment). As a result I will discuss these separately.
 
Platform as a Service (PaaS ) may very well prove to be the most interesting type of Cloud Computing, as a platform for building custom applications would allow and require the Cloud IT Manager to again actively engage with business users about what they want or need functionally. Personally I like to think PaaS may reconnect users and IT.  Unlike with IaaS - where users are often unaware - and SaaS - where IT may feel left out - PaaS enables IT to build cloud functions that the users can deploy. Something we all did and loved back in the days of bespoke (custom build) software, but somehow this became a lost art when standard packages became the norm (the time we all became “Chief Infrastructure Officers/Operators”).  But PaaS is also the area with the least practical experience and the most confusion (some may say really flexible SaaS is PaaS;  if I can freely configure my application it becomes a platform. Others feel that PaaS could be building something on a traditional platform and then deploying it on the Cloud (IaaS) . So for now we will focus on IaaS and SaaS to examine our Cloud IT manager’s role.

Look for my next post on IaaS and the role of the IT Manager.

 

By: CA Community
CA Community is the blog manager’s account used to post general updates and news items.
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6 people have left comments:

Hi Gregor,

As per your comment " To keep this blog readable I am not going to define and describe each type here in detail (I did so in a print article which I am happy to share if you’re interested" could your please provide to me at your earliest convienence these definitions and descriptions you referred to? If you could email it to:

danieldmullens@gmail.com I would greatly appreciate it and look forward to your further insight and understanding of this topic. I too thought SaaS, IaaS, PaaS. Having worked in IT for a number of years I thought after the era of "ASP's" (Application Service Providers) that this fad would fade.

I'm finding more and more though that companies are either using the above three models or incorporating them into their own IT infrastucture for internal use. Especially in the healthcare field.

Thanks in advance.

Dan Mullens

Posted by: DanM. | October 16, 2009 11:31 AM

Read Part 1 here . How does Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) impact the role of our Cloud IT Manager

Posted by: CA on Service Management | October 20, 2009 4:22 PM

Read Part 1 and Part 2 here. Cloud purists would argue that a true Cloud IT organization exclusively

Posted by: CA on Service Management | October 22, 2009 11:29 AM

Read Part 1 (PaaS), Part 2 (IaaS) and Part 3 (SaaS) here. In the previous entries we discussed the possible

Posted by: CA on Service Management | October 24, 2009 5:54 AM

Last month InformationWeek’s Bob Evans started a contest asking their readership to come up with a better

Posted by: The CA Cloud Storm Chasers | December 17, 2009 12:35 PM

This blog was originally posted at ITSMportal.com on April 19th, 2010 by CA Advisor and ITSM portal columnist

Posted by: CA on Service Management | April 20, 2010 4:59 PM

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