| These days research analysts are falling all over themselves projecting how enthusiastically the cloud is going to be adopted by corporate America. Most recently, Gartner went to far as to assert that cloud computing will become so widely used that 20 percent of all businesses will have no IT assets in two years.
None. Zip, Zero. Okay, maybe a printer or two, but you can kiss those servers and data management centers goodbye.
There’s one potential flaw is this assessment: IT doesn’t want the cloud.
The reasons for this are both stated and, I suspect, unspoken. Let’s start with the first. A survey that came out earlier this week indicates that almost half (45 percent) of U.S. IT professionals canvassed believe that the operational and security risks of cloud computing outweigh its benefits.
That finding comes from the first atnnual "IT Risk/Reward Barometer” report put out by ISACA, or Information Systems Audit and Control Association, a trade group consisting of enterprise IT administrators and IT audit specialists.Of the more than 1,800 IT professionals responding to the survey, only 17 percent were bullish on cloud computing.
The remaining 38 percent indicated that they thought the risks were appropriately balanced.
More tellingly, only 10 percent of respondent organizations plan to use cloud computing for mission-critical IT services. And more than one-fourth of the respondents (26 percent) do not plan to use the cloud at all.
"The cloud represents a major change in how computing resources will be utilized, so it's not surprising that IT professionals have concerns about risk vs. reward trade-offs," said Robert Stroud, vice president of IT service management and governance for the service management business unit at CA Inc.
Risk maybe the overriding objection, but I suspect fear and plain old foot dragging may be the other factors in thisequation. If in a year and a half, twenty percent of American business will have jettisoned all their IT assets. the IT managers and staffers at those organizations may well be wondering so what’s going to happen to their jobs?
If the bullish scenarios about the cloud are on the mark, those companies getting rid of their IT resources are likely to pink slip a good portion of their workforce as well.
No wonder IT personnel don’t get all warm and fuzzy when talk turns to the cloud.
Of course, acceptance of the cloud is likely inevitable whether IT gets on board or not. Another recent study of IT professionals, this one sponsored by Symantec and conducted by the Ponemon Institute, found that users and business departments are making decisions about moving to the cloud without input,approval or even the knowledge of IT and IT security. CIOs and CSOs are being excluded from the loop.
But, hey, not to worry. If there’s a major IT security disaster in your organization, they’ll always
be work for IT cleaning up the mess.
Only registered users can write comments. Please login or register. |