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November 30, 2010 09:10 AM

Avoid Being Plowed by the Cloud

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #129095
Rating: (15)

Are you going to lose your job to the cloud? Well, any of us might, but you can reduce that possibility by preparing to meet cloud providers’ claims for possible, promised benefits with solid, undeniable facts about the service that you deliver right now. Put simply, decision-makers in your organization will decide whether to replace you with a cloud vendor by doing a trivial bit of math: can the cloud vendor provide your organization with the services that you do, for less money at the same or better service level?

Of course, in truth there is nothing trivial about the calculation, or at least about half—your half—of the calculation. The cloud vendors have plenty of snazzy spreadsheets and web-based calculators showing how much they can provide in the way of reliable services and how cheaply they can do it, even if some of those figures might be best characterized as “numerological proctology.” Your best chance of avoiding becoming a “nebular statistic” lies in having some well-documented numbers close to hand. The first bunch of those numbers concerns service—what does your IT department do for your organization right now, in a pre-cloud regime?

Crunch the Numbers

How many messages, and how many megabytes of messages, does the average user send and receive? How many pages of documents get printed? How many terabytes of user data sit on file servers, how frequently is it backed up, and when someone needs a lost file recovered, how long must that person wait? What sort of database and SharePoint infrastructure does IT support? How often are you called upon to create a new share, a mailbox, a SQL table, an Active Directory account, or to set up a server for a department?

While you’re doing that, be sure to take a stab at measuring response times and client-server throughput in your current network. When you access your intranet’s secure HR site or grab your email, you probably do it over a connection that runs more than a few hundred feet, and at speeds of at least a hundred megabits per second. You’ve probably never even thought to try to measure the sum total in bytes of that traffic, but you’ll want that information now, as every cloud vendor that I’ve looked at charges by the gigabyte for client-server traffic.

Why is this so important? Well, consider this: once you’ve moved your servers to the cloud, you don’t move your people to the cloud. Thus, all of those bits that used to travel between the workstations on the eighth floor and the servers in the basement did so at very low marginal cost—you already own the routers, NICs, etc.—and at near-gigabit speeds that would be ruinously expensive to try to duplicate over the Internet. In effect, when you move to the cloud you still have to keep running a high-throughput IP infrastructure inside your building (as before), but now you’ll need to acquire considerably high-speed Internet connectivity, or accept much slower response times (read: reduced worker productivity). Oh, and don’t forget that now you’re paying for part of the cost of the cloud vendor’s infrastructure.

Focus on Network Uptime

You’ll also need to take a close look at your current network’s reliability. I know, it’s a sensitive subject—we do the best that we can with the limited budgets provided—but uptime is going to be one of the big weapons in the arsenal of the cloud sales folks. The fact is that cloud vendors have to be able to quote superlative uptime numbers because the whole image of offsite computing services inevitably leads prospective buyers to think about service quality from phone, Internet, cable, and electric utilities. So how’s your uptime? If you have a change control process in place—and if you don’t, get one immediately—then you probably have a rich vein of mineable data.

If you don’t have a change control system in place, then all’s not lost. Windows has (since NT 4.0 service pack something-or-other) generated event log entries noting when the system started, when it was stopped, and so on. There’s a bunch of event IDs in every Windows box’s event log chronicling when the system stopped and started and a bit of scripting could pull out enough times and dates to get you started on reliability numbers. Heck, you can even avoid a lot of the scripting and event log spelunking by pulling down Microsoft’s free command-line tool “uptime.exe.” 

Simply seeing some solid numbers attesting to the sheer volume of can’t-live-without-it work that your department does may slow down the cloud chatter for a while, but in the end it’s the money that matters—we’ll talk about that next month.

 

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Comments
  • SPANBURGH
    2 years ago
    Dec 13, 2010

    Great Objective article Mark. It addresses some things that non tech "Mistake Makers" (Decision Makers) may assume as they see the proposed "Bottom Line". Experienced Decision makers though will look at Cloud Vendor claims with a bit more reality. If "Saving Money" is the only criteria then truly decision makers with this sole objective do not understand the value of technology and view it as an expense. Truly, if people keep on looking at the bottom they will find themselves there. The "cloud" will now be filled with all sorts of "dollar store" type offerings. I think Microsoft has so far shown the best apps in the cloud. Still over a good internet pipe the response is simply not as good as in house for a well tuned network. Citrix and Terminal server folks have known the "in the trenches" hassles for years, (For instance, Printing)
    For now, the Cloud applications can be a tool for IT to extend services to users. But to imagine all technology being offloaded to a service company for now is a big leap, and there are cost involved to make the "Savings" work. In the end, there is no cheap. There is no "Free". Cloud apps are just another way to make something easy for some while costing money somewhere else. If the Cloud application generates revenue for a firm, then I see it as worth it. But vendors use the money saving thing for virtualization as well, and we have all seen that has created new cost. Having Cloud appls will also mean we will need alternate access to the internet, even for a small firm. So how much does a T1 cost today. Imagine a ten person office with two ISPs to access their Cloud App. Then there is the wire closet in the office park that gets hit by a truck. (Believe me it happens). What do you do then? Right! You share an air card connection out to 30 people using Google Docs?

  • Dennerly
    2 years ago
    Nov 30, 2010

    Security, who has access to your data ?. In a cloud you have no idea who outside your company has access.
    Cloud Companies will come and go, over the next few years, so when your Cloud Provider sells up/closes down/liquidates. Then what ?
    (No-one will look after your money as well as you will!, This should go for your data too.)

  • LORENTZEN
    2 years ago
    Nov 30, 2010

    Company network uptimes are often really solid. Despite the growing complexity of network infrastructures, services, access control and security measures - all working to take our perfectly well-running networks down - we keep them running mer than 99% of the time. At this juncture, pencil pushers are at least as worried about losing productivity to downtime as they are to squeezing the payroll in hopes of wringing out a salary or two. Mark's points should be well-taken. You are your own best advocate. Make sure you have the numbers to back up your position.

    "Numerological proctology"? Somehow I'm having a hard time with a visual on that :-)

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