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Fed Compliance

I know all of this stuff because I sell all of this stuff. I call it real-world experience, the FCC thinks it might be a conflict-of-interest.

Insight on Cloud Computing from One of Its Victims

by Joe Gleinser 28. August 2009 06:02

I needed to find a home for seven wayward servers. The prospective owner had decided to stop owning hardware just as the project to deploy these severs was underway. My job seemed easy enough - replicate a basic Microsoft stack (Exchange, MOSS, SQL, Dynamics GP) for a fixed monthly fee in a land far, far away. I've been closely following the development of hosted/managed/cloud systems for years, have built numerous virtualized environments and I have a very health monthly data center bill. Still the last few days has opened my eyes to the breadth of the cloud's offers. In the end this dynamic market, with a vast pool of options, won over a skeptic like me.

I want to put that last statement into the proper context. I own a value-added-reseller business that has generated millions of dollars in revenue selling hardware and licenses. Last year almost 40% of our revenue was equipment resold from vendors such as HP, Dell, Cisco, Sonicwall and more. I suspect that in the next few years that number will dwindle substantially.

After extensive deliberation I have come up with one singular reason to embrace the 'cloud' that applies to IT departments as well as VARs. We all have better things to do. The time spent procuring, installing and supporting hardware and software detracts from time spent integrating, training and customizing. What if a typical IT project directed a bigger part of the budget at these services? Businesses will derive more value from the technology. The employees will use more of the functionality. The system will work better with the other technology around it. It will more closely match business processes.

Far from competing against the services offered by most IT departments and VARs, cloud computing offers the opportunity to expand these organizations. Those that successfully transition their skill sets can expect to see revenues and budgets increase as businesses receive more consistent performance from existing systems and lower costs to add new systems. This transition will not occur overnight, but in next decade we will see fewer and fewer servers in offices, more servers in the clouds. Think hard about investments in on-premise equipment. There are compelling options out there.

 

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Comments

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