Aligning Business Supply Chain with Digital Supply Chain
Understanding the transition to “Cloud Computing”, “Adaptive
Infrastructure”, “Fog Computing”, or whatever you want to call it has presented
many challenges to organizations. It has
proven difficult to fumble through marketing and hype in order to understand exactly
what “Cloud Computing” or whatever you want to call it…is or actually means. However you define it, I’ve seen individuals and
executives within IT organizations recognize that there is a shift occurring
within their businesses. Over the last
few years we’ve seen massive consolidation, convergence, and modernization of
IT, all in the name of Cap Ex savings. As
a result organizations, in most cases, have seen significant cost reductions. Now we see business asking the all too common
question to their It leadership…What have you done for me lately? The way that we answer this question will
define us as IT strategists over the next few years as well as ultimately our
success within our respective industries.
True Cost of Business
Many organizations will continue to chase cost optimization
as a primary driver. We’ve seen the
market adjust accordingly for this.
Public cloud offerings like Amazon provide cloud services at a low cost
to entry. These offerings are
introducing low cost competition into the market, not only for PDS but for your
IT organization. I know what you’re
saying…there’s no way that your business could transition core IT services to
Amazon. That’s definitely true…for now. Bottom line is that in cost optimization
model you will always be competing against the lowest cost provider. Unless your IT organization has massive
economies of scale you will not be able to compete and therefor will become
irrelevant. The core belief here is that
the past was about cost savings. The
future will be represented by the strategic value that IT provides to the
business as well as innovation. So…what
is the true cost of IT? IT has
traditionally been a black hole of cost consumption. Most organizations would not be able to do a
comprehensive “build vs. buy analysis.
Also understand that when organizations procure on a per project basis
they create
“siloes” of locked capacity and inherent inefficiencies. Comparing IT costs in a traditional model with cloud services is an unfair comparison. Service providers thrive on the ability to leverage efficient process and capacity management. A critical factor to cloud computing is the concept of “right sizing”. Leverage the compute, network, and storage capacity that you actually and therefore only pay for the capacity that you are actually using. The concept of private cloud is extremely important for providing the ability to get the business accurate cost comparisons.
“siloes” of locked capacity and inherent inefficiencies. Comparing IT costs in a traditional model with cloud services is an unfair comparison. Service providers thrive on the ability to leverage efficient process and capacity management. A critical factor to cloud computing is the concept of “right sizing”. Leverage the compute, network, and storage capacity that you actually and therefore only pay for the capacity that you are actually using. The concept of private cloud is extremely important for providing the ability to get the business accurate cost comparisons.
IT as a Service
Cloud Computing presents a unique opportunity for IT organizations
to provide a service oriented approach to consuming IT’s resources. Every IT organization provides services
today, there just not formalized and or packaged into a menu of services. Start with two or three core services to the
business and develop a formalized services offering. When making this decision recognize that not
all applications will go through modernization, it’s important to throw things
out. This is a transformation and a
shift. Focus on optimizing applications
and services that can embrace the future.
Automating legacy process and procedures will not provide any
optimization. Think about creating new
processes through eliminating steps.
These new processes then provide very efficient automation and
optimization.
Similar to any other services organization you will need to
understand utilization, capacity used, capacity available, costs of resources,
SLAs, etc. This information will provide
insight into how efficient your new services are. Use this data to provide insight to the
business on costing and consumption. In
addition SLAs now become more important than ever. The performance and availability requirements
of your services will be the leading contributor to their success and or
failure. When creating SLAs around
services you must develop the requirements through the key business stakeholders
of that service. IT must not and cannot
develop SLAs within a vacuum.
Intelligent automation is the key long term. Enable the ability to make decisions based
off of metrics i.e. business requirements, performance SLAs, availability SLAs,
security, compliance, etc. Most organizations
don’t have a way to capture this information today and are delivering services
ad hoc. We usually see IT take taking a
stance somewhere in the middle of two approaches. They either provide “no guarantees” which
usually results in new leadership being hired within a couple years or they
lock down everything to the highest level which is extremely costly. SLAs need to be developed and agreed upon by
the business units with the help of IT. These
are all steps to take in order to help you understand what the true cost of IT
is and how the business is consuming those resources.
From Builder to Broker
Throughout this transition we see IT organizations shifting
from primary builder of resources to more of a broker. Think about the concept of creating a digital
supply chain for your business. As IT
develops services and continues to gather data on usage and utilization they
will begin to see what services are core to the business. As a result they will begin to see what
services or not part of their core competencies or are not primary services
that the business needs to consume. IT
can then make the decision to broker those out to providers that can help them
optimize. This allows IT to align their
resources with the needs of the business.
You then optimize your digital supply chain by creating services and
brokering services that map to business requirements. Continue to focus on the core business
services, value engineering, and innovation that are necessary for your
business.
In order to accelerate this process it’s important to have a
strategy and clear vision. The first
step is to create a definition of cloud computing that aligns with your
organizations requirements. Develop an
early phase architecture around that definition that will allow your teams to
map people, process, and technology to outcomes. Align with your business units to help them
with defining SLAs, provide them a construct and cost structure to begin making
decisions. Leveraging a gap
analysis/maturity model to understand where you are today vs. where you want to
go will greatly accelerating the ability to create and implement a project
portfolio. You should be able to design,
build, and implement a cloud computing strategy within 180 days. Don’t try to boil the ocean all at once.