Your cloud choice: Succeed slowly or fail fast | InfoWorld – InfoWorld

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If you want proof that what Ive been advising for years is true, check out thisresearch on cloud computing from The Register: Planning pays off when it comes to cloud migration and deployments.

The Register found that most companies dont yet have meaningful cloud adoption or have truly embraced the idea of the cloud-first enterprise. The Registers report also shows that cloud adoption has been gradual over the past five yearsit didnt find the market explosion that many in the press have been writing about.

Finally, the report recommended that you get your internal systems aligned with public cloud systems. That means planning better cloud management and application, data, and platform integrations.

The report underscored what IT should already understand: Cloud computing is an incremental process for most enterprises. It takes time to get the resources aligned and more time to do something meaningful with them. My rule of thumb is that enterprises typically underestimate the amount of time by a factor of two.

Cloud migrations and deployments are hardor at least harder than most people believe.Why? Because cloud computing is systemic change in how we do computing. As you move up to 30 years of internal systems to the cloud, you'd better know what youre doing.

Unfortunately, many enterprises, especially in the United States, are run by short-term thinkers, egged on by the rosy scenarios painted by the tech press, cloud providers, and, dare I say, analyst reports.

When they decide to move to cloud, its within an aggressive timeframe thats largely unrealistic. Theyve set themselves up for failure.

No surprise then that most enterprises fail to meet their own expectations. Its those that spend the time doing upfront planning that typically do the best, fall short the least, and even sometimes meet or exceed their expectations.

My advice remains consistent: View this as the greatest IT shift since the initial automation of systems in the 1970s and 1980s. There needs to be a great deal of planning and understanding that occurs before you make the move. Only then can you find your path to success. Better a slower path to success than a fast one to failure.

David S. Linthicum is a consultant at Cloud Technology Partners and an internationally recognized industry expert and thought leader. Dave has authored 13 books on computing and also writes regularly for HPE Software's TechBeacon site.

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Your cloud choice: Succeed slowly or fail fast | InfoWorld - InfoWorld

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