Tag: cloud migration

  • Achieving a Cloud Migration Victory: Prioritizing Human Factors

    Achieving a Cloud Migration Victory: Prioritizing Human Factors

    The aphorism “one hand washes the other,” ascribed to Seneca the Younger, underscores the symbiotic relationship between human beings and technology. Without one, the other would cease to function – or even exist.

    Human ingenuity spawns technologies that tackle complex challenges and precipitate sweeping societal transformations, exemplified by the Internet and, more recently, artificial intelligence—a true paradigm shifter.

    Jeff Bezos succinctly captured this dynamic, noting that “We co-evolve with our tools. So we invent new tools, and then our tools change us.” Similarly, cloud technology has drastically altered organizational landscapes globally, enabling instant collaboration and accelerating development cycles, profoundly impacting everything from remote gig work in the United States to vast call centers in India.

    Yet, cloud migration projects frequently falter and the best-laid plans can fall short. Reasons range from budget overruns and inadequate planning to unrealistic timelines. And a critical oversight in many of these projects is underestimating the human element.

    Successful cloud migration necessitates a holistic approach involving every organizational level. This was illustrated by Amazon Web Services, which identified stakeholder misalignment as “Pitfall #1” in cloud implementations. A cloud initiative requires a cohesive, purposeful, and unified effort.

    The article explains, “The root cause for this is usually the absence of buy-in and alignment from application and business teams. You are prematurely committing funding for a cloud migration initiative without a clear top-down mandate.

     

    Change Management – The Heart of Cloud Success

    Take Accenture, whose experiences underscore the centrality of change management in cloud migration. Their Federal Services division’s shift to the cloud, while fraught with unexpected challenges, was buoyed by astute foresight of its management and the agility of its operating teams.

    “With a detailed reskilling and change management program in place, employees were able to quickly transition to new roles, in many cases shifting their focus from simply managing workloads to optimizing performance,” the Accenture report said.

    The cloud is more than a bundle of hardware and software tools. It’s a powerful change agent for how work gets done. It impacts every area of the organization, from data storage to collaboration, IT to HR, and sales to operations. Employees across an organization will grapple with its impact.

    Prominent firms like Google, Accenture, Deloitte, McKinsey, and IBM offer bespoke frameworks and consultative services to guide this process.

     

    The Age of Anxiety, Overcoming Resistance and Building a Cloud Culture

    No matter the approach, unmanaged change leads to confusion, decreased productivity, and frustration, which can jeopardize projects. Your goal should be to communicate with honesty and directness that the organization is pivoting to a ‘cloud-first’ culture.

    Here are two human areas to focus on when implementing a cloud migration initiative:

     

    Employee Resistance to New Technologies

    Resistance to new technologies and the associated anxiety about job security are natural responses to rapid change. Managing this transition effectively is vital. Clear, honest communication about transitioning to a cloud-first culture can alleviate uncertainty and foster acceptance.

    Here are steps to mitigate employee resistance:

    • early stakeholder involvement
    • celebrating milestones
    • recognizing and identifying enthusiastic “cloud champions” to foster buy-in
    • regular updates on cloud migration progress and challenges

     

    Knowledge Gaps and Skill Shortages

    Cloud adoption often reveals gaps in knowledge and skills. A multifaceted approach to upskilling—encompassing targeted training, continuous professional development, mentoring, online courses, and workshops—is essential.

    As Seneca suggested, cooperation is fundamental to success. This is particularly true in cloud migration, where technological and human factors are inextricably linked.

  • Overcoming the Hurdles of Cloud Integration

    Overcoming the Hurdles of Cloud Integration

    There’s nothing quite like a clean slate—starting fresh, a new horizon. The baggage of the past is behind us. There’s just a blank page now to start the latest chapter. 

    If only cloud migration were that simple.

    CIOs and IT managers struggle to migrate their legacy systems to the cloud. It’s not easy, but it can be done. Indeed, it must be done despite relentless technological change and nimble competitors.

    To get there, many global enterprises (up to 72% of Statista respondents) utilize the hybrid cloud model to manage their legacy investments while accessing the cloud’s inherent benefits. 

    This is an age when remaining competitive with a cookie-cutter digital upgrade may not be enough. Businesses today must adopt new technologies to stay agile and scalable and ultimately transform themselves into technology companies that deliver entirely new products and services.

    Consider banking. When Capital One decided to shift to the cloud in 2016, few banks were willing to take risks associated with security and compliance in the cloud. 

    Today, Capital One views itself as a “technology company … focused on innovating the financial industry.” It leverages Amazon Web Services to enable rapid innovation, real-time fraud detection, and personalized customer services with machine learning tools. Capital One proves that cloud technology can transform traditional banks into agile, customer-centric organizations in a regulated industry.

     

    Hybrid Cloud Benefits

    According to Google Cloud, “A hybrid cloud approach is one of the most common infrastructure setups today. Cloud migrations naturally lead to hybrid cloud implementations as organizations often have to transition applications and data slowly and systematically.” The edge hybrid model combines the immediacy of edge computing with the hybrid cloud. Use cases include smart cities, remote healthcare monitoring, industrial IoT, and personalized retail experiences. 

    Hybrid cloud designs are highly customizable and can even combine multiple public clouds. Each company has unique challenges, and one size does not fit all, as IBM

     

    Upgrade as you need it. 

    With a hybrid cloud, you can migrate applications to the cloud at a pace that makes sense for your business and transforms your technical infrastructure over time.

     

    Maintain a sovereign cloud.

    The hybrid cloud model offers the flexibility to store data on-premises or in cloud environments. By strategically locating data according to local regulations and standards, it enables adherence to regional compliance and data sovereignty laws. This is an excellent means of maintaining data sovereignty by country or region.

     

    Healthcare

    Healthcare regulations are some of the most stringent in the world. These regulations dictate how patient information must be protected, which can require keeping such applications on-premise to ensure compliance in a hybrid model.

     

    Financial Services

    Financial transactions, customer data, and sensitive financial information must comply with strict data security and privacy requirements varying from region to region. To stay compliant, financial institutions typically run these applications on-premise in a hybrid scenario.

     

    Stay Innovative

    According to a paper by Microsoft, a hybrid model can accelerate development efforts. Major companies like Phillips have delivered tangible healthcare benefits with their hybrid cloud approach to helping physicians diagnose diseases with AI-powered tools.

     

    Edge Cloud Environments

    The edge hybrid model combines the immediacy of edge computing with the hybrid cloud. Use cases include smart cities, remote healthcare monitoring, industrial IoT, and personalized retail experiences.

     

    Addressing Hybrid Cloud Challenges:

     

    Legacy vs. Innovation

    Your existing IT infrastructure works, but replacement is costly and risky. However, cloud solutions offer compelling scalability, cutting-edge tools, and cost savings. Finding the right balance between maintaining legacy systems for core functions while adopting cloud innovations is crucial for long-term competitiveness.

     

    The Technical Hurdle

    As an article in ComputerWeekly.com states, “Adopting cloud computing requires careful planning and a deep understanding of how your existing applications might impede migration to a cloud-native architecture. Gartner clients often cite poor planning and inappropriate migration strategies as reasons for sub-standard cloud adoption.” Integrating cloud solutions with on-premises systems requires addressing potential incompatibilities, ensuring data security, and optimizing network performance.

     

    The Culture Shift

    As an Accenture report and a Deloitte podcast pointed out, success also hinges on harmonizing the technical with a team-focused transformation. Your staff will need training and upskilling to utilize cloud tools. That can mean the difference between a stalled transition and a company-wide embrace of cloud innovation.

     

    The Role of MSPs in Cloud Integration

    The complexities of cloud integration can be daunting, and there’s a lot at stake. Managed Service Providers (MSPs)—like ULAP Networks—have cloud expertise and vendor relationships across diverse regions and in complex jurisdictions.