Cloud Computing: The Democratization of IT, Part One

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Cloud computing has enabled one of the most significant disruptions of the computing world in history. But to understand its magnitude, let’s look at the pre-Cloud world. Step into my time machine (ripply, wavy visual effects at no extra charge)…

Welcome to the pre-Cloud world! Here, storage and computing power can only be had by purchasing very expensive hardware and by paying through the nose for maintenance and support staff. Operating systems? Oh, you have to purchase those and pay for IT support, too. Databases are even more expensive and also require their own hired mercenary army of techies. But after you’ve spent ridiculous amounts of money and time to get your hardware, software and database, you can finally get down to running your dream startup.

Oh, right. I forgot about the annual maintenance fees you’ll have to pay every vendor for using their software/hardware/database, equal to 15% to 20% of the purchase price. All in all, you’ll need at least one million dollars just to turn the lights on. Isn’t nostalgia wonderful?

Okay, the past sucked. Let’s get back to today.

As a startup CEO, I found the old model excruciating. The margins of profitability were incredible for the hardware and software companies, and the maintenance fees were icing on the cake. Then, once you thought you had it all nailed and could move on with business, you suddenly had to upgrade your hardware, which meant upgrading the software. You needed more staff to transition to the new computing environments. It was a huge racket. Vendors made monster profits while startups got screwed and innovation was buried in favor of making more unnecessary stuff to keep the customers hooked: hardware, software and database companies as high-tech dope dealers.

No wonder Cloud computing and software-as-a-service (SaaS) took off like a rocket. When Amazon came out as the first company to offer SaaS, the world started changing. The protectors of the old, decaying model of course ridiculed Amazon initially as being only for mom and pop shops. But that was whistling in the dark. The ability to access storage, computing power, bandwidth, operating systems, applications and databases any time and anywhere shattered the computing paradigms that had held so many businesses in bondage. It changed EVERYTHING.

Now, the rebels run the country. Companies of all sizes say, “Why would I buy hardware, databases or applications when I can have access to what I need, when I need it and how I need it?” This has allowed hundreds of new players to enter the infrastructure market. Now the legacy players are struggling to hang onto their customers, not realizing that those customers are looking to SaaS options.

This is classic disruption. It overturns the established way of doing things, causes some chaos and anger for a brief time, causes pain for some…but creates infinitely more opportunity. Today, Cloud is encouraging innovation at an unprecedented rate. It’s creating a new world. We’ll look more closely at that world in Part Two.

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2 Comments

  1. David Diaz on February 13, 2012 at 11:17 am

    The incredible thing is that so many people still don’t even know about or trust the “Cloud.” I think it is a generational thing. Some people who have only ever known in-house infrastructure mock the idea of storing your data with another company and accessing it over the “insecure” (wrongly so) internet. They insist on buying and maintaining the expensive servers and software just so they can sleep at night knowing their data is safe (even though a fire or flood to the building could destroy everything).

    Even worse, the folks who support all that hardware and software risk losing their jobs if their clients move to the cloud. They perpetuate the downsides of the cloud to their clients and literally scare them into keeping the legacy systems so they still have a paycheck. I’ve seen this happen firsthand and it’s an extremely frustrating state of affairs. I suppose it’s just time that will change the tides but it seems like to a lot of companies, the cloud is still not a real option.



  2. Eric Blow on February 22, 2012 at 5:52 pm

    I ran into my first issue with “cloud” storage this week when our head quarter IT went down. This stalled all of our processes and made it impossible to gain access to data needed for my job. Before going to the cloud everything was hard wired and we did not run into these issues. I am sure cloud will get better in the near future however my current experience is frustration.